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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Articles 1 - 23 of 23
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Print Vs. Online Journalism: Are Believability And Accuracy Affected By Where Readers Find Information?, Burton Speakman
Print Vs. Online Journalism: Are Believability And Accuracy Affected By Where Readers Find Information?, Burton Speakman
College of Journalism and Mass Communications: Theses
Believability and accuracy of print and online news is studied via the comments of newspaper readers of a small Texas community. The readers of the Normangee Star were chosen to be the survey recipients to learn if readers in a small community had the same attitude about their local newspaper that national surveys have indicated exist about newspapers in general. The expectation was that those who read more news online would consider their local paper to be less believable and accurate than those who read little to no news online. Surveys were mailed to 200 subscribers of the Star, …
Swinging Bridge - November 30, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Swinging Bridge - November 30, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - November 10, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Swinging Bridge - November 10, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Re‐Energize Your Career From The Inside Out, Debbie Danowski
Re‐Energize Your Career From The Inside Out, Debbie Danowski
Communication, Media & The Arts Faculty Publications
After surgery, the author went on an all- out campaign to re-energize her career and discover the passion for writing that had once ruled her life. Here are some of the things she tried which she hopes can help you if you’re stuck. Remember, these tips are not about publishing more. They are about writing more and discovering the passion that brought you into this business in the first place.
Swinging Bridge - October 26, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Swinging Bridge - October 26, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - October 12, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Swinging Bridge - October 12, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - September 28, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Swinging Bridge - September 28, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - September 14, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Swinging Bridge - September 14, 2011, Sari Heidenreich
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
The Return Of The Honeymoon: Television News Coverage Of New Presidents, 1981-2009, Stephen J. Farnsworth, S Robert Lichter
The Return Of The Honeymoon: Television News Coverage Of New Presidents, 1981-2009, Stephen J. Farnsworth, S Robert Lichter
Political Science and International Affairs
Content analysis of network evening news coverage during the first year of the Barack Obama presidency revealed coverage that was far more positive in tone than comparable news reports from the first years of the Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush presidencies. Both domestic and international policy evaluations of the Obama presidency were more positive in tone than those of the last three presidents to take office during partisan transfers of power. The findings reveal a revival of the media honeymoon that scholars thought had disappeared during the modern era of a more combative press. An investigation of …
Media Landscape In Twitter: A World Of New Conventions And Political Diversity, Jisun An, Meeyoung Cha, Krishna Gummadi, Jon Crowcroft
Media Landscape In Twitter: A World Of New Conventions And Political Diversity, Jisun An, Meeyoung Cha, Krishna Gummadi, Jon Crowcroft
Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems
We present a preliminary but groundbreaking study of the media landscape of Twitter. We use public data on whom follows who to uncover common behaviour in media consumption, the relationship between various classes of media, and the diversity of media content which social links may bring. Our analysis shows that there is a non-negligible amount of indirect media exposure, either through friends who follow particular media sources, or via retweeted messages. We show that the indirect media exposure expands the political diversity of news to which users are exposed to a surprising extent, increasing the range by between 60-98%. These …
Floyd Gibbons: A Journalistic Force Of Nature In Early 20th Century America, Andrew J. Nelson
Floyd Gibbons: A Journalistic Force Of Nature In Early 20th Century America, Andrew J. Nelson
College of Journalism and Mass Communications: Theses
“Floyd Gibbons: A Journalistic Force of Nature in Early 20th Century America” examines some of the key journalistic work of dashing newsman Floyd Gibbons and his status as one of the top reporters to ever file a news story. This thesis will look at the world in which Gibbons inhabited 85 to100 years ago, what made him the man and journalist he was and his work as a reporter for the Chicago Tribune compared to what his competitors at national newspapers wrote.
As a reporter, Gibbons was remarkably aggressive and could be counted upon to get the story, no …
An Iphone In A Haystack: The Uses And Gratifications Behind Farmers Using Twitter, Sarah Van Dalsem
An Iphone In A Haystack: The Uses And Gratifications Behind Farmers Using Twitter, Sarah Van Dalsem
College of Journalism and Mass Communications: Theses
The fast-growing social media site, Twitter, is growing in popularity among Americans from all walks of life, including farmers who are using it to share information with other farmers and consumers. This thesis expands on Uses and Gratifications Theory by looking at how farmers are using the social media site to promote agriculture and reach out to others. Based on a qualitative analysis completed on 22 interviews with farmers, four major purposes for using Twitter came to light: (1) Farmers are using Twitter to seek information; (2) they are using it as a tool to lead others within the agricultural …
The Cnn Effect: Mass Media And Humanitarian Aid, Jared R. Bredeson
The Cnn Effect: Mass Media And Humanitarian Aid, Jared R. Bredeson
Senior Honors Theses
Mass media have great power and great responsibility. The CNN Effect states that when news media broadcast emotionally driven stories of human crisis, this provokes a major response by domestic audiences and political elites. This power to influence public policy can help save people from danger and even death. Acts of massive genocide were committed in Rwanda and Darfur. Because the media failed to act quickly and report accurately on these situations, many people lost their lives due to slow international reaction. News media need to learn from these tragic mistakes and never let genocide go on unnoticed by those …
Swinging Bridge - April 27, 2011, Jaime White
Swinging Bridge - April 27, 2011, Jaime White
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - April 13, 2011, Jaime White
Swinging Bridge - April 13, 2011, Jaime White
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - March 30, 2011, Jaime White
Swinging Bridge - March 30, 2011, Jaime White
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - March 2, 2011, Jaime White
Swinging Bridge - March 2, 2011, Jaime White
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - February 16, 2011, Jaime White
Swinging Bridge - February 16, 2011, Jaime White
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - February 2, 2011, Jaime White
Swinging Bridge - February 2, 2011, Jaime White
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - January 19, 2011, Jaime White
Swinging Bridge - January 19, 2011, Jaime White
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Reporting From Down Under: Foreign Correspondents In Australia, Beate Josephi
Reporting From Down Under: Foreign Correspondents In Australia, Beate Josephi
Research outputs 2011
This paper draws on a study of 12 foreign correspondents reporting on Australia for print, radio, TV and news agencies. The study found evidence that while new technology may have changed transmission speeds, it has not changed the nature of events they report on. News ranking is still determined by factors such as political influence and trade volumes, news values and news interest. Australia - medium-sized, geographically on the periphery and politically stable - is not a major player on the world political stage. As a country, it is always more likely to come to the world's attention because of …
Anonymous Sources: A Utilitarian Exploration Of Their Justification And Guidelines For Limited Use, Matt J. Duffy, Carrie Packwood Freeman
Anonymous Sources: A Utilitarian Exploration Of Their Justification And Guidelines For Limited Use, Matt J. Duffy, Carrie Packwood Freeman
Communication Faculty Publications
This article critically examines the practice of unnamed sourcing in journalism. A literature review highlights arguments in favor of and against their use. Then, the authors examine some common examples of anonymous sourcing using the lens of utilitarianism, the ethical model commonly used to justify the practice. We find that few uses of unnamed sourcing can be justified when weighed against diminished credibility and threats to fair, transparent reporting. The authors then suggest specific guidelines for journalists that, if followed, would curb many of the pedestrian uses of unnamed sourcing but still allow for the practice in specific circumstances.
"Fourth World" Values In A Spanish-Language Newspaper Serving An Immigrant Community, Richard J. Peltz-Steele
"Fourth World" Values In A Spanish-Language Newspaper Serving An Immigrant Community, Richard J. Peltz-Steele
Faculty Publications
This study operationalized the Four Worlds model for mass media values in a new context — that of a foreign-language newspaper serving a recent-immigrant community within a First World society, namely a Hispanic community in central Arkansas, in the United States. The study established baseline representations of previously described “First World” and “Fourth World” values in a mainstream central Arkansas newspaper, and in Cherokee and Koori newspapers. The study speculated that the central Arkansas Hispanic community exists with a measure of physical and cultural separation from mainstream society — arising from informal barriers such as socioecomomic status, residential neighborhoods, language, …