In this article distributed by the 黑料不打烊 Writers Syndicate, Associate Professor Amanda Sturgill writes about her resolution to do what she can to stem the spread of fake news. The article was published by the Burlington Times-News and the Greensboro News & Record.
By Amanda Sturgill
I admit I won鈥檛 be sad to see 2020 slip away into the pages of history. As we stand on the brink of a new year, I resolve to be a better critical thinker about news, and I hope you will, too.

It鈥檚 been hard to tell what information is reliable and true. Like most people, the news I see often finds me. It shows up in notifications on my phone or in my social media feeds.
That鈥檚 convenient, but it can also steer me wrong. When you take bits of news out of their contexts, it鈥檚 hard to assess the quality. Someone鈥檚 unsupported opinion can look a lot like a verified fact when I see it in a Facebook group or in an Instagram video. A channel offers daytime shows with information gathered by qualified journalists who follow codes of ethics. The same channel offers evening shows with opinion-makers who want to get me to think a particular way. Sometimes, the opinion-makers call their show facts or real truth.
It鈥檚 confusing, to say the least.
It鈥檚 also hard to know how to check if something is true. I鈥檝e seen a lot of folks encouraging others to 鈥渞esearch it鈥 on topics from vaccine safety to child abuse. These are important and serious topics, but the best way to research them isn鈥檛 always clear. For most people, it will involve turning to a search engine like Google or Bing. But when you type in your words there, the answer isn鈥檛 always the true one. The rules search engines use to decide the best answers to your questions depend on a lot of things other than the underlying truth. How well the page鈥檚 computer code is written might be one. How popular the result, another.
Sometimes things become popular because they are correct. Sometimes, it鈥檚 because people聽want聽to believe them. I work in news and information, and even I have sometimes been fooled.
So here鈥檚 my resolution for 2021.
Check first. Before I share a piece of news that has found me, I鈥檒l ask myself the following three questions:
Who shared this?
People sometimes have good intentions when they share information, but don鈥檛 understand the information they are sharing. They鈥檒l post something they read from someone who said it came from a source like 鈥渁 doctor my cousin knows鈥 and so on. You are right to be skeptical if the source isn鈥檛 clear.
When you ask who shared it, you are trying to make sure that the person would actually be someone who could know and understand the information. If you can鈥檛 tell, that鈥檚 a good reason to not share.
Why did they share it?
Viral posts are often that way because they make you feel something. That strong feeling can short-circuit your common sense 鈥 can silence the voice that might make you think better of it.
This can affect you in two ways. First, bad actors may share false information in a way that makes you feel happy or angry, hoping that you鈥檒l pass it on without thinking. Second, your own friends and contacts may share things with you as a way of passing along the feeling they have.
In either case, the fact that you feel strongly about what is said is a good clue that you need to get an answer to the third question.
Do they give convincing evidence?
I can prove a whole lot of things by citing online research. Health cures abound online. One article I saw advised on the best way to apply onions to your scalp to help with a skin condition. I鈥檓 not running to the root cellar quite yet because the evidence just isn鈥檛 convincing.
Convincing evidence tends to be first-hand, which means people telling facts saw or studied it themselves. It tends to come from experts, which means people who are trained enough to evaluate the evidence.
Here鈥檚 an example: flu shots. I鈥檝e heard the myth that the flu shot causes the disease many times. It鈥檚 not true 鈥 shots are made from inactive things that just can鈥檛 cause illness. They can cause your body to make the antibodies to fight the disease and that鈥檚 what makes you feel sick.
If my friend on social media says the shot gave them the disease, it鈥檚 firsthand, but they aren鈥檛 an expert. My doctor has firsthand knowledge of immunizing thousands of people and is an expert. That鈥檚 whom I should trust.
So for 2021, I鈥檓 resolving to use a three-question test before I share something I found online. And if the tidbit doesn鈥檛 pass all three, I鈥檒l keep it to myself.
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Amanda Sturgill is an associate professor of journalism at 黑料不打烊. Views expressed in this column are the author鈥檚 own and not necessarily those of 黑料不打烊.聽