Forget the Error

Forget the Error

A new study shows that newspapers make a lot of mistakes, even in the limited instances when they publish a correction.

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The source: “How Complete Are Newspaper Corrections?: An Analysis of the 2005 ‘Regret the Error’ Compilation” by Michael Bugeja and Jane Peterson, in Media Ethics, Spring 2007, and “Reign of Error,” by Jack Shafer, in Slate, Aug. 15, ­2007.

Newspapers constantly call for more vigilance and trans­par­ency in government and other institutions, but in the one realm over which they have total control—their pages—they have failed their own test, according to a study of 600 corrections from 70 newspapers conducted by Michael Bugeja and Jane Peterson of Iowa State University. In fact, if editors con­fessed to everything that was wrong in their news columns, they would have to devote 50 times more space each day to ­corrections, says Jack Shafer, editor at large of Slate.

Moreover, pub­lished corrections, as highlighted on the website Regret the Error, main­tained by Canadian free­lance writer Craig Silverman, were them­selves often full of blunders. Only 30 percent specified when the error happened, very few described how it occurred, and virtually none suggested what the paper was going to do to prevent future occurrences, according to Bugeja and Peterson, director and associate director, respectively, of the jour­nalism school at Iowa State. A 1986 study found many of the same ­problems.

Shafer writes that Scott R. Maier, who teaches journalism at the University of Oregon, sent accuracy questionnaires to major sources noted in 3,600 articles in newspapers including The Phila­delphia Inquirer, The Mercury News of San Jose, and The Tallahassee Democrat. Roughly 70 per­cent of the recipients com­pleted the survey. They spotted 2,615 factual errors in the stories for which they served as sources. No paper cor­rected more than 4.2 percent of its flawed articles. Maier re­ports that when 130 of the sources he queried asked for corrections, only four were ­published.

Even if some of the errors were relatively minor, such as a wrong age or title, or were out of the newspaper’s control (such as faulty information from sources other than those evaluating the facts), the results are shocking to even the “most jaded” of newspaper readers, Shafer writes. And worse than the papers’ sloppiness is the ­cover-­up they perpetrate on a daily ­basis.

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