10 tips for teaching journalists how to effectively use social media

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By Mallary Jean Tenore on Poynter, May 23 – 

When I first wrote about Twitter in September 2007, I got emails from journalists who said I was highlighting a tool that would never have journalistic application.

A lot has changed since then.

There’s now a greater willingness to embrace Twitter and other social media tools — or to at least see their potential. As more tools emerge, we need to be open to teaching others how to use them and how to integrate them into our workflow.

I’ve put together some tips for teaching social media based on teaching I’ve done here at Poynter. While the tips are mostly geared toward journalism educators, journalists who are coaching their colleagues may also find them useful.

Read the full post on Poynter

 

How Tech’s Giants Want to Re-invent Journalism

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By  on paidContent, Apr. 26 – 

Some of Silicon Valley’s biggest technology companies reject suggestions they are now news organisations.

But they nevertheless think they have the prescription for what news media must do next…

First, the disclosures: “We’re not a news company,” Google’s head of news products and Google+ programming Richard Gingras told media executives at the Paley Center’s international council of media executives in Madrid on Thursday. “We’re a platform,” Facebook’s journalism manager Vadim Lavrusik duly followed.

Read the full article on paidContent

Resources for journalism educators to stay current on media news & trends

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By Katy Culver on Poynter, April 20 – 

My students were recently on spring break, but that didn’t slow them in their march to improve my teaching through social media.

At one point, a student in my intro course tweeted:

tweet by @blakesamanas

He highlighted an ethics case I’d completely missed — NBC’s investigation of some clearly problematic editing of audio from the Trayvon Martin shooting.

At first I said, “Geez, how did I miss that?”

Then I thought, “Thank God for social media.”

Read the full post on Poynter

 

Governments Increasingly Targeting Twitter Users for Expressing Their Opinion

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By Jillian C. York on MediaShift, April 11 –

 

“In its six years of existence, Twitter has staked out a position as the most free speech-friendly social network. Its utility in the uprisings that swept the Middle East and North Africa is unmatched, its usage by activists and journalists alike to spread news and galvanize the public unprecedented.

As Twitter CEO Dick Costolo recently boasted at the Guardian Changing Media Summit, Twitter is “the free speech wing of the free speech party.”

But at the same time, some governments — in both not-so-democratic and democratic societies — have not taken such a positive view of Twitter and freedom of expression. Instead, they’ve threatened, arrested and prosecuted their citizens for what they express in 140 characters or less.”

Read the full post on MediaShift

Free to Tweet Winners

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From the 1 for All website – 

“The Free to Tweet competition on Dec. 15, 2011, encouraged students 14-22 to celebrate the First Amendment though social media. Most participants tweeted their messages, while others e-mailed, or tweeted with links to essays, videos, photos or graphics.”

Twenty-two students from the US will each receive $5,000 scholarships to continue their high school or college education.

Read the full post and the list of winners on the 1 for All website

Facebook Launches Its ‘Web Newspaper’

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By Mark Hachman on PCMag, March 8 – 

“Facebook threw its hat into the ring of curated newsfeeds on Thursday, offering a new “Interest Lists” feature that will allow Facebook users to subscribe to interesting, topical content.

For example, users who want to keep up with the 2012 presidential candidates can subscribe to a list of updates from the candidates themselves, and the political news outlets that follow them, such as MSNBC, CNN, and Fox.”

Read the full article on PCMag

New York Times: If Twitter Is a Work Necessity

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By  on New York Times, Feb. 29, 2012 – 

When Anne Klein shut down its designer line in 2008, Eileen McMaster was among the fashion professionals there who found themselves without jobs. After years of working long hours, she took some time off, turning her attention to improving her health, becoming a Pilates instructor and wellness consultant along the way.

Now, with signs that the struggling economy is slightly improving, she is looking to get back into the fashion industry. To help strengthen her position in the job market, she returned to the classroom last year to develop expertise in social media that she can layer on top of her deep marketing and corporate communications experience.

“I didn’t have the social media savvy in the way I do in other areas of marketing,” said Ms. McMaster, 44, of North Babylon, N.Y., who signed up for the social media marketing boot camp online courses at Mediabistro.com. “When I left fashion, social media wasn’t even something we were doing in the industry. Fast-forward four years, and if you are a brand and you are not on social media, you are missing a huge audience.”

Read the full article on the New York Times website

Twitter and the shrinking news cycle

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By  on Gigaom, Feb. 13 –

“In the not-so-distant past, news generally tended to travel in a few well-worn paths. It was reported by a newspaper, it appeared on television at noon or 6 p.m. or it was mentioned on a drive-time radio show — and those involved usually had plenty of time to report it and produce it. The arrival of CNN and 24-hour news changed all of that, however, and Twitter and Facebook have changed it again: Now the news is just as likely to appear in a tweet or to be posted as a status update by someone who is directly involved in the event.”

Read the full post on Gigaom

 

 

Journalists and (Sometimes) Controversial Retweets

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Many news organizations have handed out guidelines to their staff about the use of retweets on Twitter. Their rules are there to help stop any controversial tweets before they get associated with the organization, or at least to encourage their employees to think twice before retweeting.

In a post on Poynter, Jeff Sonderman had this to say about the topic:

The Washington Post’s guidelines tell reporters not to tweet anything that could be perceived as reflecting political bias or favoritism. The Associated Press just published new retweet guidelines warning that retweets can appear to express a reporter’s opinion.

The result is a lot of confusion and fear that a “mistweet” could cost journalists their credibility or their jobs. That is a shame, because Twitter is a vibrant network for real-time information, and journalists should participate fully in it. The retweet is the network’s method of spreading information, and journalists should understand how it works.

The post goes on to suggest the use of a new designation, “NT”, to specify that a user is retweeting something as a neutral tweet. You can read the full post on Poynter here.

Do you think current journalism students will have to deal with this issue when they get their first job?

 

‘Storm’ video shows future of news in uninterrupted stream of our lives

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From Steve Myers on Poynter, Oct. 7, 2011

Recent news events from Joplin to Tripoli have provided plenty of examples of how news has become a real-time experience, something you observe and discuss as it’s happening rather than waiting hours or days to watch or read.

You may have lost the weekend of August 20 to Andy Carvin’s furious chronicling of the fall of Tripoli. Perhaps you followed along with Brian Stelter as he tweeted his observations and photos of the devastation left by the tornado in Joplin, Mo. Maybe you watched the minute-by-minute drama leading up to the execution of Troy Davis, or read tweets about the East Coast earthquake before you felt it. Earlier this week, it was the helicopter crash in the East River.

Such examples prompted Jeff Jarvis to wonder whether articles sometimes are just byproducts. If we can wade in the stream, what’s the point of a wrap-up article?

Perhaps it is unnecessary for the leading edge of news consumers – news junkies and people in the news industry. But the vast majority of people – anyone whose eyes aren’t locked on a smart phone or laptop screen – still desire for their news to be packaged in some way so they can make sense of what they missed.

Read the full post on Poynter