Chapter 13 The Culture of Journalism: Values, Ethics, and
... – Moves beyond “telling the news” to a broader mission of helping public life go well… – Moves from detachment to being a fair-minded participant in public life…. – Moves beyond only describing what is “going wrong” to imagining what “going right” would be like…. – Moves from seeing people as consum ...
... – Moves beyond “telling the news” to a broader mission of helping public life go well… – Moves from detachment to being a fair-minded participant in public life…. – Moves beyond only describing what is “going wrong” to imagining what “going right” would be like…. – Moves from seeing people as consum ...
What is mercantilism and why did its supporters want to see the US
... peoples. It supporters advocated imperialism because they felt that the best way to accomplish this was through conquest. ...
... peoples. It supporters advocated imperialism because they felt that the best way to accomplish this was through conquest. ...
Issues in Journalism
... and activist public … what makes something journalism?” (page 115) Truthfulness, commitment to the public and watchdog role. ...
... and activist public … what makes something journalism?” (page 115) Truthfulness, commitment to the public and watchdog role. ...
a particular tendency or inclination, especially one that prevents
... Letter to the editor a letter sent to a publication about issues of concern from its readers. Can be a reponse to a news story, editorial or previously published opinion piece. Usually, letters are intended for publication. Fair and balanced publications will publish letters from multiple perspecti ...
... Letter to the editor a letter sent to a publication about issues of concern from its readers. Can be a reponse to a news story, editorial or previously published opinion piece. Usually, letters are intended for publication. Fair and balanced publications will publish letters from multiple perspecti ...
To be taught fall 2016 by Joe Stephens, Ferris Professor in
... how the critical thinking skills used by the best investigative reporters, and the research strategies that they employ, can be used to advantage in other fields and in everyday life. Students will discuss current events with some of the most successful and innovative investigative reporters in the ...
... how the critical thinking skills used by the best investigative reporters, and the research strategies that they employ, can be used to advantage in other fields and in everyday life. Students will discuss current events with some of the most successful and innovative investigative reporters in the ...
Megan Cole
... stopped caring whether the information they were reading online was true or false, as long as it fed their confirmation bias and verified what they wanted to be true. The popularity algorithms of Facebook and Google did exactly what they were programmed to do – push the popular stories to the top, m ...
... stopped caring whether the information they were reading online was true or false, as long as it fed their confirmation bias and verified what they wanted to be true. The popularity algorithms of Facebook and Google did exactly what they were programmed to do – push the popular stories to the top, m ...
Subject: 2016 Adviser Academy – Professional Development
... Academy is also offering the opportunity to take the Certified Journalism Educator (CJE) exam, which is an industry-recognized certification from the Journalism Education Association that demonstrates advisers’ knowledge of the basics in journalism advising. The conference includes in-depth training ...
... Academy is also offering the opportunity to take the Certified Journalism Educator (CJE) exam, which is an industry-recognized certification from the Journalism Education Association that demonstrates advisers’ knowledge of the basics in journalism advising. The conference includes in-depth training ...
1920`s Advertisements
... Total advertising volume in the United States few from $200 million in the 1880s to about $3 Billion in 1920s. Reasons for the growth include the introduction of radio, motion pictures, and more ...
... Total advertising volume in the United States few from $200 million in the 1880s to about $3 Billion in 1920s. Reasons for the growth include the introduction of radio, motion pictures, and more ...
Inside Reporting
... The birth of journalism The 1765 Stamp Act • An attempt by the British to control what was being printed in colonial newspapers • Editors united against the tax, causing it to be repealed • They began publishing anti-British articles which led to the Revolutionary War ...
... The birth of journalism The 1765 Stamp Act • An attempt by the British to control what was being printed in colonial newspapers • Editors united against the tax, causing it to be repealed • They began publishing anti-British articles which led to the Revolutionary War ...
NEWS RELEASE - European Publishers Council
... “Whilst the CESR almost certainly did not set out to undermine financial reporting, the wording in its proposals is entirely inappropriate for the regulation of journalism. Issues of concern to the CESR such as conflict of interest are already dealt with in the media sector in most cases under emplo ...
... “Whilst the CESR almost certainly did not set out to undermine financial reporting, the wording in its proposals is entirely inappropriate for the regulation of journalism. Issues of concern to the CESR such as conflict of interest are already dealt with in the media sector in most cases under emplo ...
a professional - Brazilian Journalism Research
... What kind of professional is a journalist? What kind of individual is he at work, what kind of collectivity in a society? When the scientific community started looking at this question again in France more than 25 years ago (it had already been raised on a legal level in 1935 when the law on the sta ...
... What kind of professional is a journalist? What kind of individual is he at work, what kind of collectivity in a society? When the scientific community started looking at this question again in France more than 25 years ago (it had already been raised on a legal level in 1935 when the law on the sta ...
Media Ethics - Donald W. Reynolds School of Journalism
... “A mechanism to divorce fact from opinion” (Patterson & Wilkins) “A refusal to allow individual bias to influence what is reported or how it is covered” (Patterson & Wilkins) ...
... “A mechanism to divorce fact from opinion” (Patterson & Wilkins) “A refusal to allow individual bias to influence what is reported or how it is covered” (Patterson & Wilkins) ...
The Fourth Power under Pressure
... In addition, the advertising market is reacting, too. Online advertising has a decisive advantage over advertising in print. The internet protocol makes it possible for every click on the worldwide web to create a data track. This is how user profiles can be obtained, and advertising campaigns can ...
... In addition, the advertising market is reacting, too. Online advertising has a decisive advantage over advertising in print. The internet protocol makes it possible for every click on the worldwide web to create a data track. This is how user profiles can be obtained, and advertising campaigns can ...
File
... Students are to follow directions on assignments given and grading rubrics for articles will be available in advance. Just like the real journalism world, assignments are due at the beginning of the hour on the due date unless otherwise specified. Late Assignments: ...
... Students are to follow directions on assignments given and grading rubrics for articles will be available in advance. Just like the real journalism world, assignments are due at the beginning of the hour on the due date unless otherwise specified. Late Assignments: ...
Chapter 23
... Your Power point slides and question sheets Your structured class notes To do well on this exam, you must be able to understand and explain: What is imperialism? What is isolationism? What is expansionism? Why did President Millard Fillmore send Commodore Mathew Perry to Japan? How did ...
... Your Power point slides and question sheets Your structured class notes To do well on this exam, you must be able to understand and explain: What is imperialism? What is isolationism? What is expansionism? Why did President Millard Fillmore send Commodore Mathew Perry to Japan? How did ...
What Can I Do with a Major in MASS COMMUNICATIONS?
... What Can I Do with a Major in MASS COMMUNICATIONS? Mass communication plays an influential role in modern society. Mass communication is a process in which a person, group of people, or an organization sends a message through a channel of communication to a large group of anonymous and heterogeneous ...
... What Can I Do with a Major in MASS COMMUNICATIONS? Mass communication plays an influential role in modern society. Mass communication is a process in which a person, group of people, or an organization sends a message through a channel of communication to a large group of anonymous and heterogeneous ...
Gatekeeping | Gatewatching
... use Twitter or not Editor level: She had to decide whether to let the journalist twitter or not Distribution level: Haiti and Twitter have to decide whether to block communication Receiver level: The receiver has to decide whether to subscribe to the tweets or not ...
... use Twitter or not Editor level: She had to decide whether to let the journalist twitter or not Distribution level: Haiti and Twitter have to decide whether to block communication Receiver level: The receiver has to decide whether to subscribe to the tweets or not ...
Proclamation - The Denver Post
... WHEREAS, freedom of the press in America has been cherished since at least 1733, when John Peter Zenger, a New York publisher, criticized the newly appointed colonial governor of New York, was sued by him for libel and was famously acquitted in a defense mounted by Alexander Hamilton; and WHEREAS, t ...
... WHEREAS, freedom of the press in America has been cherished since at least 1733, when John Peter Zenger, a New York publisher, criticized the newly appointed colonial governor of New York, was sued by him for libel and was famously acquitted in a defense mounted by Alexander Hamilton; and WHEREAS, t ...
Mapping the future: news, data and automation in the Nordic region
... Saving journalism? • "Journalists have a lot to win with automation. Above all, we see this as a possibility to free resources for deepening journalism since reporters don't need to waste their time on manual tasks“ Journalism++Stockholm ...
... Saving journalism? • "Journalists have a lot to win with automation. Above all, we see this as a possibility to free resources for deepening journalism since reporters don't need to waste their time on manual tasks“ Journalism++Stockholm ...
Journalistic Style Copy 101
... places the most important information at the beginning of the story and the least important information at the end. ...
... places the most important information at the beginning of the story and the least important information at the end. ...
Name
... Mrs. Svetik U.S History 7th Name: ___________________________________________ Date/Period: ______________________________________ ...
... Mrs. Svetik U.S History 7th Name: ___________________________________________ Date/Period: ______________________________________ ...
INSTITUTE FOR RURAL JOURNALISM AND COMMUNITY ISSUES ANNUAL REPORT 2008
... freedom-of-information issues in Lexington and Madisonville. The Institute co-sponsored the Kentucky Diabetes Summit, recruiting from counties with high rates of the disease journalists who returned home and wrote stories about its local impact. The newspaper in the No.1 county did a four-part serie ...
... freedom-of-information issues in Lexington and Madisonville. The Institute co-sponsored the Kentucky Diabetes Summit, recruiting from counties with high rates of the disease journalists who returned home and wrote stories about its local impact. The newspaper in the No.1 county did a four-part serie ...
Muckraker
The term muckraker was used in the Progressive Era to characterize reform-minded American journalists who wrote largely for all popular magazines. They relied on their own investigative journalism reporting; muckrakers often worked to expose social ills and corporate and political corruption. Muckraking magazines–notably McClure's of publisher S. S. McClure–took on corporate monopolies and crooked political machines while raising public awareness of chronic urban poverty, unsafe working conditions, and social issues like child labor.The muckrakers are most commonly associated with the Progressive Era period of American history. The journalistic movement emerged in the United States after 1900 and continued to be influential until World War I, when the movement came to an end through a combination of advertising boycotts, dirty tricks and ""patriotism.""Before World War I, the term ""muckraker"" was used to refer in a general sense to a writer who investigates and publishes truthful reports to perform an auditing or watchdog function. In contemporary use, the term describes either a journalist who writes in the adversarial or alternative tradition, or a non-journalist whose purpose in publication is to advocate reform and change. Investigative journalists view the muckrakers as early influences and a continuation of watchdog journalism.The term is a reference to a character in John Bunyan's classic Pilgrim's Progress, ""the Man with the Muck-rake"" that rejected salvation to focus on filth. It became popular after President Theodore Roosevelt referred to the character in a 1906 speech; Roosevelt acknowledged that ""the men with the muck rakes are often indispensable to the well being of society; but only if they know when to stop raking the muck...""