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ENG 102 Advanced Research Library Tutorial 2023-2024

Lateral Reading

Watch this video to learn about how you can incorporate lateral reading into your research assignments or everyday information-seeking needs! This strategy is used by professional fact-checkers and follows the strategies of the SIFT Method.

The SIFT Method: Stop, Investigate, Find, Trace

SIFT is an evaluation strategy developed by digital literacy expert Michael Caulfield (Washington State University Vancouver) to help determine if online content is reliable. When seeking online information, follow these steps to consider the quality and credibility of sources you find! The strategy can be applied to all kinds of electronic information, such as social media, statistics, blogs, news outlets, videos, memes, and much more. 

SIFT stands for:

Stop

Investigate the source

Find better coverage

Trace claims, quotes, and media back to their original context 

Related: Read Web literacy for student fact-checkers


When using the SIFT Method, look carefully at the information presented and answer the following questions:

1. Who created the content? Is the author clearly identified? What are their credentials or qualifications? What kind of website domain is the content on (.com, .org, .edu, .gov, etc.)? 

2. How is the content presented? What is the purpose (inform, persuade, sell, entertain, solicit donation, etc.)? Do you see information sources quoted or identified? Can these be verified through other sources? 

3. Is the information biased, or opinion-based? Is the content presented with emotionally-charged language? 

4. Is the content current, or could you be missing the most updated information on the topic? Is the information comprehensive, or does it focus on one aspect of a topic or issue? 

Remember:

1. Do not look at what an organization says about itself - do further research outside of the organization's website.

2. Investigate the original sources quoted in an article or work to verify the information. 

3. Evaluate information with logic, NOT EMOTION! Consider what you BELIEVE (or want to believe) compared to what you can VERIFY. 

 

Want to know more? Read Media Bias 101: The Difference Between News, Analysis and Opinion by Allsides.