NYT public editor addresses errors made in Cronkite article; some basic advice for preventing errors


nytbanner1New York Times public editor Clark Hoyt has weighed in on the paper’s recent, error-riddled story about Walter Cronkite. The story, written by television critic Alessandra Stanley, resulted in two corrections, one of which was for seven mistakes. I wrote about the mistakes, and Stanley’s history of error, in a recent column for Columbia Journalism Review.

Hoyt’s column offers new information, such as how five different editors reviewed her story and missed the mistakes. This is a classic example of how easy it is for mistakes to end up in print. It doesn’t matter how many people look at an article; they have to know what they’re supposed to be looking for.

The most interesting revelation in Hoyt’s piece was that, after attention was drawn to Stanley’s errors in 2005, the Times introduced a program to increase the fact checking of her work:

For all her skills as a critic, Stanley was the cause of so many corrections in 2005 that she was assigned a single copy editor responsible for checking her facts. Her error rate dropped precipitously and stayed down after the editor was promoted and the arrangement was discontinued. Until the Cronkite errors, she was not even in the top 20 among reporters and editors most responsible for corrections this year. Now, she has jumped to No. 4 and will again get special editing attention.

The extra scrutiny helped. Then things regressed, and that’s the lesson here. The gap in the plan for “special editing attention” is that it doesn’t include a training component. Stanley could, with a little bit of effort, improve her level of accuracy. Additional oversight isn’t going to train her to be more accurate. It will make her more careful, but it won’t fix the source of the problem. Eventually she will stop receiving special attention and things will go back to the way they were.

It’s kind of a variation on the old “give a man a fish” saying: Give an error-prone reporter special editing attention and you’ll publish fewer of her errors. But train her how to be more accurate and she’ll make fewer errors. That’s a big difference.

I concluded my CJR column by writing that “whatever system [Stanley] has for checking her work isn’t sufficient. The same goes for how the copy desk is handling her articles. The Times can let her twist in the wind with errors like these, or realize this situation is hurting the organization and come up with a training program that helps her stop making simple factual errors at such an alarming rate.”

This is, as they say, a teachable moment. It’s an opportunity for the paper to create a newsroom-wide program that will help all reporters. After all, you can’t give everyone special editing attention. But you can teach good habits that prevent the need for special attention. Eliminate or at least reduce the errors at the source and suddenly there are less things that can slip through the cracks.

After my CJR column appeared online, I received an email from an editor asking me for some error-prevention advice. Here’s what I sent to him:

1. Self-Diagnose: Are you making or missing the same kinds of errors. Do you misspell names? Garble numbers? Etc. Take a month and track your mistakes. Write them down. Note how they happened and any other relevant information. At the end of the month, tally up your errors. Now you know your pain points. I recommend keeping an error journal; just create an Excel doc or Google Doc spreadsheet and keep track of your errors. This is hugely valuable data. (The Times has an internal errors database, so it already keeps some of this data.)

2. Create Good Habits: If you have a tendency to misspell names, then you need to start every interview by asking the person to spell their name. If, as an editor, you tend to overlook misspelled names, then the first thing you do with a new story is check the names. The key is to create habits/actions that are mapped to your mistakes. The best way to do this is to…

3. Use A Checklist: Whether you’re writing or editing, you should use a checklist to guide your fact checking process. I have a sample checklist available as a free download here. And if you need convincing, read this column about why checklists are so powerful.

I know one thing for sure: if Alessandra Stanley started using a checklist to review her work prior to sending it for editing, her level of accuracy would improve.

UPDATE August 3: Steven A. Smith has some good thoughts about this situation over on his blog. A sample:

Reporters with fact-error issues have to work a bit harder, have to develop personal double-checks that can be time-consuming and frustrating, especially on deadline. But that is the only way reporters can work themselves out of an accuracy funk. Some take on the challenge because of professional pride and a genuine desire to do their jobs as well as they can.

Others require a bigger stick. That’s just the truth of it.

I remember one reporter who worked on my regional staff at The Pioneer Press in St. Paul. He had experienced a terrible run of corrections, all the result of careless reporting practices. Working with him, we developed a series of steps he was urged to take before moving any story to his editors. Within days his desktop computer was covered in yellow sticky notes reminding him to check phone numbers and addresses, use the city directory, and so on. He took responsibility and his hard work produced results. His correction rate dropped dramatically and the new habits stuck with him.

But the reporter knew his job was on the line. ‘Fix it or lose it” was the message.

Was such a message delivered to Stanley at the time her editors developed a personalized editing program? If so, does the latest debacle mean she will lose her job? Should she lose her job?

Does “intellectual heft” in reporting compensate for inaccurate reporting?


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  • I totally agree with the power of checklists to catch factual errors. This is particularly true when working on a long piece that has been done over a period of months or something involving many reporters.
  • Great post and excellent ideas. You say, however that "Until the Cronkite errors, she was not even in the top 20 among reporters and editors most responsible for corrections this year" then follow that with "Then things regressed, and that’s the lesson here." Technically, they only regressed as the result of that one, error-ridden article which skewed the numbers. Wouldn't the fact that she wasn't in the top 20 actually indicate that she did *not* regress, that having a feedback loop did, in fact, instill good habits, to your point? The Times, which has always vaunted it's "voice" as being accurate and trustworthy, would do well to follow your advice.
  • All Reporters & Ms. Alessandra Stanley specifically should be Charged for every Error they makes in a Story. Anyone can make a mistake but you still need to he held responsible for those mistakes. My English Professor dropped my grade a half a point for every error in: ( Spelling , Punctuation, Grammar) Ms Stanely would make fewer mistakes if it cost her money. Re: The Cronkite story; she would have to give her whole paycheck Back? "And Thats the Way it was"
    (Oh BTW I got a C+ on my paper) - ---(Ms Stanely & NYT You got an F )
  • Garrett Guillotte
    Out of curiosity: Haven't reporters been fired from much lower-profile positions for making fewer, less egregious errors? Why is Stanley never (re)trained, suspended, reassigned or fired?

    Doesn't the practice of giving Stanley special treatment for being consistently inaccurate encourage other writers at the NYT to underachieve? After all, what's the worst that could happen?
  • Ray Belew
    Ms. Stanley's improved performance until the one article is laudable, but it amazes me that a reporter for the NYT needs and is supplied with training wheels. It is beyond me how anyone could commit as many simple errors as were in the Cronkite obit without working to fabricate them. I spent nearly 30 years in the business and I had my share of errors while working for lesser-known papers, but they are but a pale imitation.
  • Ray Belew
    I can't conceive of running a business with the reputation of the NYT where employees need and get training wheels. It is simply beyond me that someone can reach the pinnacle of newspapering and still needs someone to follow them around to make sure they don't set fire to their master's house.
  • devika_melora
    The most ridiculous thing about most of these errors is how simple it would have been to research or check. I realize she copied down the information incorrectly, but if I were short on time, I would at least take the 5 minutes to check the dates of major events. And I agree with other comments regarding the increased level of scrutiny the reporter/editors should face from the higher ups, since since a draft was written it so far in advance.
  • elle p.
    "Does 'intellectual heft' in reporting compensate for inaccurate reporting?"

    Sure, for about as far as you can throw 'intellectual heft.'

    What kind of 'heft' can you possibly be packing if you can't get the date of the moon landing right, or suggest Cronkite stormed Normandy?

    There's been another correction, by the way, dated Aug. 1.
  • DorothyP
    Surely the NYT had Cronkhite's obit prepared, oh say, a decade in advance? And why have Stanley do it? She might be their go-to-gal for television criticism (and god knows why) but he was a newsman and as such, outside of her purview.

    I never see her intellectual heft, either.
  • jennifer104
    Does “intellectual heft” in reporting compensate for inaccurate reporting?
    Absolutely not. Your job as a reporter is to report the facts. If you can't get that right, then you should consider another line of work.
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