Book Review – When Religion Meets New Media

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When Religion Meets New Media. Heidi A. Campbell. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. 232 pp.

Computers had scarcely been networked before users began to use them for religious reasons. In 1983, religious discussions so dominated the miscellaneous discussion group section of Usenet that net.religion was set up as a forum for exchanges on religious and ethical subjects. Net.religion begat net.religion.jewish and then net.religion.christian. Ecunet, H-Judaic, and BuddhaNet followed. A variety of cyberchurches and cybertemples emerged soon thereafter. Many believers encountered networked computers and saw that they were good.

Of course, religious communities do not always embrace new communication technologies. As late as 1957, the president of evangelical Houghton College proclaimed, “Christians do not attend the movies.” An evangelical minister thirty years later decried television as unwholesome and addictive in his remarkably entitled booklet, “What Jesus Taught About Television.” Some Amish still limit their access to telephones by sharing community telephones located in shanties at the intersection of several farms.

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Book Review – Skyful of Lies and Black Swans

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Skyful of Lies and Black Swans: The New Tyranny of Shifting Information Power in Crises. Nik Gowing. Oxford, UK: Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, 2009. 84 pp. £13 pbk. Free download from http:// reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/ publications/risj.html.

Nik Gowing’s career as a media professional, pundit, and scholar gives his insights into how news works considerable credibility. In this 2009 paper for the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, the longtime BBC commentator wonders and wanders through new media’s impact on public policy, and ponders “the new fragility and brittleness” of social institutions. Are government, military, and corporate bosses powerless or ineffectual when what Gowing calls “fast proliferating and almost ubiquitous breed of ‘information doers’” can set and frame the debate before the institutions of power can in gear?

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Book Review – Mediacology: A Multicultural Approach to Media Literacy in the Twenty-First Century

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Mediacology: A Multicultural Approach to Media Literacy in the Twenty-First Century. Antonio López. New York, NY: Peter Lang Publishing, 2008. 178 pp.

To be media literate is to possess the tools and critical skills necessary to analyze and produce media content. The ability to deconstruct the production process and effects aspects of media is a survival skill not only for media educators, but also — and perhaps most important — for us all. According to the Journal of Media Literacy Education, learning to do this “helps individuals of all ages develop habits of inquiry and skills of expression needed to become critical thinkers, effective communicators and active citizens in a world where mass media, popular culture and digital technologies play an important role for individuals and society.”

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Book Review[s] – The Obama Victory & Blogging the Political

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The Obama Victory: How Media, Money, and Message Shaped the 2008 Election. Kate Kenski, Bruce Hardy, and Kathleen Hall Jamieson (2010). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 378.

Blogging the Political: Politics and Participation in a Networked Society. Antoinette Pole (2010). New York: Routledge. pp. 161.

Political communication scholars and educators are well aware of how new developments in social media, e-mail, blogging, and the microtargeting of messages to niche audiences have altered American politics and political campaigns. Two new books delve into these topics, one by focusing on the presidential campaign of 2008 and the other by examining political blogging by minorities, women, and political elites.

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Book Review – TV News Anchors and Journalistic Tradition: How Journalists Adapt to Technology

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TV News Anchors and Journalistic Tradition: How Journalists Adapt to Technology. Kimberly Meltzer. New York, NY: Peter Lang, 2010. 215 pp.

Their audience may be declining—and old enough that most advertisers avoid appearing on their programs—but we can’t seem to read enough about television network evening news anchor people. Over the years, they have been subject to their own shelf of analytic studies, let alone show-business gossip.

Comes now Kimberly Meltzer, a visiting professor at Georgetown University, with a revision of her Annenberg School (Pennsylvania) dissertation to add to the accumulation.

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Book Review – Newsonomics: Twelve Trends That Will Shape the News You Get

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Newsonomics: Twelve Trends That Will Shape the News You Get. Ken Doctor. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2010. 219 pp.

Ken Doctor is a “Leading Media Industry Analyst.” It says so right under his name on the cover of his new book, Newsonomics. A former managing editor of the St. Paul Pioneer Press, Doctor spent twenty-one years with Knight Ridder. Now, as an analyst for a company called Outsell, he has joined the cottage industry that proclaims the future of media for all who will pay to listen.

How does he foretell the future? Mostly, it seems, by reading blogs. Apparently that is where all the wisdom required to understand the future of the mass media can be found. What method do bloggers use? “We build on each other’s ideas,” explains Doctor, “engage in intellectual battles.”

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The Economics of Curricular Convergence

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By Michael Bugeja, director, Greenlee School, Iowa State University

Several years and re-accreditations have passed since journalism and communication schools began revamping their curricula to incorporate convergence. Given the economic downturn, it is time for curricular re-assessment—this time because of budget cuts. Many programs face two choices: lose courses or lose people.

Accredited journalism and mass communication programs may be suffering more than other academic units because seats in our skills classes and laboratories should be set at 15 and should not exceed 20, according to the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. Moreover, those classes usually must be taken sequentially to meet pre-requisites for students to advance in the degree program. Colleges can demand higher enrollments in disciplines with relatively few majors, or cancel those classes. In our discipline, all that does is extend graduation rates.

There is another specter related to convergence troubling or being overlooked by administrators of journalism and mass communication programs: curricular expansion. A few institutions (to remain nameless) were early adopters, adding a bevy of new media courses to catalogs that, for the most part, focused on technology, software and audio/visual/text presentation. Some schools added a “new media” sequence to their stable of old media ones, especially programs offering Bachelor of Science journalism degrees (BSJ).

Many programs added new media to existing courses. The Greenlee School of Journalism and Communication fell in that last category. In anticipation of a new Ph.D. in science, technology and risk communication, the faculty at the Greenlee School opted to streamline courses and add digital techniques to existing courses such as Fundamentals of Photography taught by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Dennis Chamberlin whose syllabus states:

“Photojournalism is a technology-driven medium and has always been very dependent upon advancements made in the photographic industry. In the past few years the computer and digital technology have played an important role in changing the way photojournalists work—and we will focus on improving digital photo skills so that you will be able to move on to the next level if you should choose. These recent changes have changed the profession to the extent that single images printed on paper have become overshadowed by the need for images and multimedia packages for electronic distribution. We will address this. …”

In introducing computer and Internet technologies into photojournalism, we didn’t have to add to our existing curriculum a course such as “Pixel Painting” or “Multimedia Packaging for Photojournalists.” Ours was a flexible curriculum with a relative few core courses such as Reporting and Writing for the Mass Media and Law of Mass Communication. We had emphases, though, in print (newspapers and magazines), electronic media, public relations, science communication and visual communication.

In general, curriculum grows without curtailment. Emphases aspire to be sequences, sequences to majors, majors to departments, departments to schools and schools to colleges. New hires often invent courses to feed research, and promotion and tenure documents usually reward those who add courses to the curriculum in the name of innovation, overlooking those who innovate in existing courses. As a result, curriculum spreads like kudzu through catalogs.

If you’re interested in other ways curriculum grows, read “How to Fight the High Cost of Curricular Glut” in The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Here are ways to streamline curriculum in response to the economic downturn without increasing teaching loads for your faculty:

  1. Restrict enrollment to non-majors in skills classes. Otherwise they take seats in low-enrolled courses, requiring you to add more sections.
  2. Uphold standards such as an English Usage Test or other pre-major or grade requirement to eliminate students unsuited to our disciplines, freeing up seats for those willing to do the work.
  3. Revisit or adjust for articulation agreements with community colleges with easier standards, such as no English Usage Test, allowing students to progress in your program until a graduation check indicates that they still need to fulfill basic requirements, but cannot.
  4. Invest in academic advising so that your first-year majors or pre-majors have undergraduate plans of study before their sophomore year. Advising takes time but is the most effective way to ensure that classes have sufficient and/or optimal enrollment.
  5. Encourage innovation in existing rather than in new or experimental courses. That may allow you to cut those early adopter stand-alone convergence courses or new media sequences whose methods by now are being duplicated in other, more traditional classes.
  6. Cut or schedule less often courses with minimal enrollment or high drop rates that often indicate lack of interest in the subject matter.
  7. Use the rubrics of seminars, workshops and independent studies for timely topics or ones that may generate enough enrollments only if offered once every few years.
  8. Encourage your students to take classes in other disciplines to exceed (rather than merely meet) the accreditation minimum of 65 semester hours or 94 quarter hours in the liberal arts and sciences.
  9. Eliminate the silos of sequences and use Occam’s razor to simplify degree programs in the name of academic truth: the more courses in the catalog, the more we have to teach them.
  10. Remind faculty that curricular streamlining not only will decrease workload and save jobs in a slumping economy but also free up more time for research to meet promotion and tenure requirements.

How Social Media Can Enhance Quality Journalism

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Mashable posted an article today about how social media can enhance quality journalism. Vadim Lavrusik says that although gossip stories and fluff pieces are read online at a high rate, the most shared articles are the ones about hard news. When online users share hard news stories with their friends and followers, it creates referrals for that story that would not have been there before if someone was just searching on Google.

The article goes into topics such as social search, social media optimization and social content. Towards the end, Lavrusik has this to say about social media enhancing journalism:

Journalists have always “curated” content by grabbing pieces of information and contextualizing it into a story. The difference is that social media now provides efficiency in getting that information, often through first-hand sources who are micropublishing to their social profiles.

You can read the full article here.

Do you think social media is enhancing  journalism? Why or why not?

 

Americans Spending More Time With Media

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A recent report put out by Edison Research and Arbitron says that Americans are spending 20% more time consuming radio, television and the Internet than we did a decade ago.

They said the increase can be attributed to 26% more Americans having Internet access than 10 years ago, but also because of increased smartphone usage. You can read an article about it here, or read the full report.

Here’s a video about the report:

 

What do you think? Do you spend more time consuming media than you did a decade ago?

Facebook More Beneficial for Journalists Than Twitter

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An article was just published on Inside Facebook comparing the benefits of Twitter and Facebook for journalists. Last week Facebook set up a page that helps journalists learn how to use the Facebook platform to promote their work. Since then, there’s been a discussion online about which platform is the most useful for journalists.

The Inside Facebook article says that promoting articles on Twitter is fast and easy, but that it doesn’t offer the same interaction that Facebook does. The article says that interacting with photos, videos and polls on Facebook eventually builds a stronger audience, even if it takes journalists a longer time to set up the post.

What do you think?

Which platform is best for journalists?