| Channel | General Tone | Corrections Policy | Fact-Checking Resources | Political Lean |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Channel Name | Neutrality Score (Out of 5) | Publicly Available Correction Log | Third-Party Fact-Check Ratings | Typical Audience Perception |
| Example Channel A | Moderate | Yes, search their corrections page | Partnered with independent fact-checkers | Slight left skew |
| Example Channel B | High | Yes, detailed archive | Rated balanced by nonpartisan groups | Slight right tilt |
| Example Channel C | Low | Limited public record | Occasionally disputed claims | Strong partisan branding |
- Media Bias/Fact Check website – rates outlets on multiple dimensions.
- AllSides – shows how stories differ across the political spectrum.
- Snopes – verifies rumors and viral claims.
- CrowdTangle – tracks share patterns across platforms.
- Newspapers’ own ombudsperson pages – address reader concerns openly.
- Poynter Institute courses on journalism ethics.
- Coursera classes in media literacy.
- NPR’s media guides explaining reporting techniques.
- University libraries offering access to academic databases.
- Workshops hosted by press freedom organizations.