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*Social Sciences: Evaluation and bias

Evaluating articles

Evaluating articles

Below is a simple method for evaluating articles, adapted from "How to Evaluate Journal Articles" by Naomi Lederer of Colorado State University:

 

Evaluating journal articles

Determining bias

Determining bias

It is crucially important to recognize bias in sources we use.  To some degree, there will be at least a slight amount of bias in every message; the real question is whether the author/speaker acknowledges their bias and takes steps to minimize it through fair and respectful language, balanced argument, etc.  Below is a set of questions we can ask to detect bias in messages, adapted from rhetorica.net:

  • Does the author/speaker acknowledge their political or social perspectives on the subject matter?
  • Does the publisher indicate a political or social bias?  For example, a piece from Fox News is going to have a conservative bias because that is the nature of the organization.
  • Does the author's/speaker's language seem to be slanted towards a particular perspective?  For example, do they use noticeably negative language when discussing the topic itself or to they "trash" alternative perspectives?
  • Does the author/speaker even acknowledge other perspectives or is their message one-sided?
  • Does the author/speaker stand to gain or lose anything from our accepting their perspective or following their suggestions?
  • Who is sponsoring the message?  Do they have anything to gain or lose?
  • Does the author/speaker cite their sources of information, sources of statistics, etc.?  Are those sources credible themselves?  Are they timely or possibly too old?
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