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Journalism - Citizen Journalism - Reporting - Writing - Journalism
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Journalism Careers - careers and training advice for writers and ...
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Philip Merrill College of Journalism | University of Maryland
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Journalism 3G: The Future of Technology in the Field
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VisualJournalism
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California State University, Chico, Department of Journalism
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Friday, October 16, 2009
Monday, July 6, 2009
What is Citizen Journalism? | Citizen Journalism in Africa
What is Citizen Journalism? | Citizen Journalism in Africa
Citizen Journalism is community news and information shared online and/or in print. The content is generated by users and readers. It can be text / blogs, ...
www.citizenjournalismafrica.org/what-is-citizen-journalism -
www.citizenjournalismafrica.org/what-is-citizen-journalism -
Citizen journalism
Citizen journalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Citizen journalism should not be confused with community journalism or civic journalism, which are practiced by professional journalists, or collaborative ...
en.wikipedia.org/.../Citizen_journalism -I, Reporter: What Is Citizen Journalism?
NOTE: At I, Reporter, we get asked this question quite often. So I thought I'd take a stab at providing a definition. This represents my view only -- feel ...
www.ireporter.org/.../what_is_citizen.html -What is Citizen Journalism?
Brief and Straightforward Guide: What is Citizen Journalism?
www.wisegeek.com/what-is-citizen-journalism.htm -MediaShift . Your Guide to Citizen Journalism | PBS
The idea behind citizen journalism is that people without professional journalism training can use the tools of modern technology and the global ...
pbs.org/.../digging_deeperyour_guide_to_ci.html -What is Citizen Journalism? New Media Technology has Led to New ...
Citizen journalism is becoming an increasingly large influence on the mainstream media.
newcitizenjournalism.suite101.com/.../what_is_citizen_journalism -
Electronic Journalism
Electronic Journalism
- Electronic journalism - known as "EJ" or "ENG" for electronic news gathering - is most associated with broadcast news where producers, reporters ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_journalism - The use of electronic media such as the Internet to convey new stories, editorials, or real-time information about current events.
www.armour.k12.sd.us/Mary's%20Classes/literary_terms_glossary.htm - Newsgathering via the WWW, where journalists puts together a news piece for publication on the WWW.
www.keshvani.com/thesis/glossary.html
New Journalism
New Journalism
- New Journalism was a style of 1960s and 1970s news writing and journalism which used literary techniques deemed unconventional at the time. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Journalism - The New Journalism is a 1973 anthology of journalism edited by Tom Wolfe and EW Johnson. The book is both a manifesto for a new type of journalism ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_Journalism - A type of writing in which the journalist presents factual information in a form usually used in fiction. ...
www.gale.cengage.com/free_resources/glossary/glossary_no.htm
Citizen Journalism
citizen journalism
- Citizen journalism (also known as "public", "participatory", "democratic" or "street journalism"Tamara Witschge "" 2009, Opendemocracy.net. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizen_journalism - When members of the public engage in journalism. Examples include providing pictures or film of events to news organisations or reporting events in blogs.
www.mediasmart.org.uk/parents-media-glossary.php - Also known as “participatory journalism,” it is the act of citizens playing an active role in the process of collecting, reporting, analyzing ...
journalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/wewantmedia/node/207 - AKA "grassroots journalism." The collecting and publication of timely, unique, nonfiction information by individuals without formal ...
boitano.net/news/parameters/A%20glossary%20of%20online%20news%20terms.htm
yellow journalism
yellow journalism
- sensationalist journalism
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn - Yellow journalism is a type of journalism that downplays legitimate news in favor of eye-catching headlines that sell more newspapers. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_journalism - Material published in a broadcast or periodical, such as a tabloid newspaper or magazine, which is sensationalistic and of questionable accuracy and taste
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/yellow_journalism - Refers to the inflammatory tactics used by newspaperman William Randolph Hearst and others in drumming up support for war against Spain in the ...
www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1451.html - A style of journalism involving sensationalized reporting popularized in the late nineteenth century in the newspapers of barons of mass ...
www.laits.utexas.edu/gov310/IPOM/glossary.html - Refers to sensational stories and "scare" headlines.
www.angelfire.com/trek/puknews/refsnp.html - Two rival newspapers in New York City, William Randolph Hearst’s Journal, and Joseph Pulitzer’s World, sensationalized editorializing on the ...
www.course-notes.org/US_History/Unit_Notes/Unit_Seven_1900_1920/Imperialism
Definitaion of journalism
Definitaion of journalism
- newspapers and magazines collectively
- the profession of reporting or photographing or editing news stories for one of the media
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn - Journalism is the production of news reports and editorials through media such as newspapers, magazines, radio, television and the Internet. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalism - The activity or profession of being a journalist; The aggregating, writing, editing, and presenting of news or news articles for widespread distribution, typically in periodical print publications and broadcast news media, for the purpose of informing the audience; The style of writing ...
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/journalism - journalist - diarist: someone who keeps a diary or journal
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn - journalistic - of or relating to or having the characteristics of journalism; "journalistic writing"
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn - Journalists - A journalist (also called a newspaperman) is a person who practices journalism, the gathering and dissemination of information about current ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalists - The Journalist is the monthly magazine of the United Kingdom's National Union of Journalists (NUJ).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalist_(British_magazine) - Journalist - Mass Communication Specialist (abbreviated as MC) is a United States Navy occupational rating.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalist_(US_Navy) - Journalist (Born Rafiek George, 24) is an underground hip hop rapper from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalist_(rapper) - Journalist (Журналистъ) is a Russian magazine founded in 1914 by literary critic Vladimir Friche aimed at newsworkers. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalist_(Russian_magazine) - journalist - The keeper of a person journal, who writes in it regularly; One whose occupation or is journalism, originally only writing in the printed press ...
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/journalist - Process of collection, writing, editing, and publishing news
www.ossrc.org/ode-focus-on-social-studies/dateline-history/pdf/Vocabulary%20List.doc - ( in journalism: Present-day journalism. ) In non-Communist developing nations the press enjoys varying degrees of freedom, ranging from the ...
www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/159990/developing-nation - Writing intended for publication in a newspaper or magazine, or for broadcast on a radio or television program featuring news, sports, entertainment, or other timely material. ...
www.gale.cengage.com/free_resources/glossary/glossary_im.htm
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Journalism- definition
journalism
1. the occupation of reporting, writing, editing, photographing, or broadcasting news.
2. the occupation of running a news organization as a business.
3. the press, printed publications, and their employees.
4. an academie program preparing students in reporting, writing, and editing for periodicals and newspapers. — journalist, n. — journalistic, adj.
1. the occupation of reporting, writing, editing, photographing, or broadcasting news.
2. the occupation of running a news organization as a business.
3. the press, printed publications, and their employees.
4. an academie program preparing students in reporting, writing, and editing for periodicals and newspapers. — journalist, n. — journalistic, adj.
Journalism
journalism
1. the occupation of reporting, writing, editing, photographing, or broadcasting news.
2. the occupation of running a news organization as a business.
3. the press, printed publications, and their employees.
4. an academie program preparing students in reporting, writing, and editing for periodicals and newspapers. — journalist, n. — journalistic, adj.
1. the occupation of reporting, writing, editing, photographing, or broadcasting news.
2. the occupation of running a news organization as a business.
3. the press, printed publications, and their employees.
4. an academie program preparing students in reporting, writing, and editing for periodicals and newspapers. — journalist, n. — journalistic, adj.
Journalism-definition
journalism (Noun)- the profession of collecting, writing, and publishing news through newspapers and magazines or by radio and television
Collins Essential English Dictionary 2nd Edition 2006 © HarperCollins Publishers 2004, 2006
Collins Essential English Dictionary 2nd Edition 2006 © HarperCollins Publishers 2004, 2006
Journalism- definition
journalism (Noun)- the profession of collecting, writing, and publishing news through newspapers and magazines or by radio and television
Collins Essential English Dictionary 2nd Edition 2006 © HarperCollins Publishers 2004, 2006
Collins Essential English Dictionary 2nd Edition 2006 © HarperCollins Publishers 2004, 2006
jour·nal·ism-difination
jour·nal·ism (jûrn-lzm)
n.
1. The collecting, writing, editing, and presenting of news or news articles in newspapers and magazines and in radio and television broadcasts.
2. Material written for publication in a newspaper or magazine or for broadcast.
3. The style of writing characteristic of material in newspapers and magazines, consisting of direct presentation of facts or occurrences with little attempt at analysis or interpretation.
4. Newspapers and magazines.
5. An academic course training students in journalism.
6. Written material of current interest or wide popular appeal.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
n.
1. The collecting, writing, editing, and presenting of news or news articles in newspapers and magazines and in radio and television broadcasts.
2. Material written for publication in a newspaper or magazine or for broadcast.
3. The style of writing characteristic of material in newspapers and magazines, consisting of direct presentation of facts or occurrences with little attempt at analysis or interpretation.
4. Newspapers and magazines.
5. An academic course training students in journalism.
6. Written material of current interest or wide popular appeal.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Is Journalism For You?
What is journalism?
Journalism is the timely reporting of events at the local, provincial, national and international levels. Reporting involves the gathering of information through interviewing and research, the results of which are turned into a fair and balanced story for publication or for television or radio broadcast.
Journalism is not just
-fact-finding
-media analysis
-opinion writing, or
-commentary
although all of those aspects can play a part at times.
What do beginning journalists do?
Journalists who are starting their careers normally do not do commentary or opinion pieces. Rather, they cover hard news stories such as community news, courts, crime and speeches by notable people. In broadcast, beginning journalists also may do pre-interviews and research for senior journalists.
An entry-level reporter often does "general assignment" stories rather than stories for a specific beat. General assignment stories are given out to reporters by the city desk or assignment editor.
Is journalism for you?
Asking yourself the questions below will help you determine whether journalism is a good career choice for you.
Do you regularly read at least one newspaper or consult an online equivalent, such as GlobeandMail.com?
Do you regularly watch or listen to television or radio newscasts?
Is it important to you to keep up with current events?
Are you interested in other people’s lives?
Are you able to talk to a wide variety of people?
Do you work well to deadlines?
Are you persistent and willing to dig for information?
Have you mastered basic writing skills? (see below for expectations)
If you answered NO to even one of the above questions, you may want to think again about whether journalism is a good match for your interests and abilities.
What does the Journalism Program at Western cover?
The Master of Arts in Journalism is a well-rounded, professional program that prepares graduates for entry-level positions in newsrooms. The program stresses a balance of academic and practical courses and offers a solid grounding in the basic tools and practices of print, broadcast and online journalism. The curriculum of the Master of Arts in Journalism program is not focused on producing graduates to work in public relations or communications positions.
Expectation of writing ability in the journalism program
It is expected that students in the MA in Journalism program have mastered basic writing skills, including grammar, syntax, and the ability to conceptualize and articulate ideas in writing. A writing competency assignment will be given at the beginning of the summer term and students with writing difficulties will be identified. Students who do not meet the expectation of writing ability will be required to seek remedial help external to the program at their own expense, if necessary. A follow-up writing competency assignment will be given towards the end of the summer term.
Journalism is the timely reporting of events at the local, provincial, national and international levels. Reporting involves the gathering of information through interviewing and research, the results of which are turned into a fair and balanced story for publication or for television or radio broadcast.
Journalism is not just
-fact-finding
-media analysis
-opinion writing, or
-commentary
although all of those aspects can play a part at times.
What do beginning journalists do?
Journalists who are starting their careers normally do not do commentary or opinion pieces. Rather, they cover hard news stories such as community news, courts, crime and speeches by notable people. In broadcast, beginning journalists also may do pre-interviews and research for senior journalists.
An entry-level reporter often does "general assignment" stories rather than stories for a specific beat. General assignment stories are given out to reporters by the city desk or assignment editor.
Is journalism for you?
Asking yourself the questions below will help you determine whether journalism is a good career choice for you.
Do you regularly read at least one newspaper or consult an online equivalent, such as GlobeandMail.com?
Do you regularly watch or listen to television or radio newscasts?
Is it important to you to keep up with current events?
Are you interested in other people’s lives?
Are you able to talk to a wide variety of people?
Do you work well to deadlines?
Are you persistent and willing to dig for information?
Have you mastered basic writing skills? (see below for expectations)
If you answered NO to even one of the above questions, you may want to think again about whether journalism is a good match for your interests and abilities.
What does the Journalism Program at Western cover?
The Master of Arts in Journalism is a well-rounded, professional program that prepares graduates for entry-level positions in newsrooms. The program stresses a balance of academic and practical courses and offers a solid grounding in the basic tools and practices of print, broadcast and online journalism. The curriculum of the Master of Arts in Journalism program is not focused on producing graduates to work in public relations or communications positions.
Expectation of writing ability in the journalism program
It is expected that students in the MA in Journalism program have mastered basic writing skills, including grammar, syntax, and the ability to conceptualize and articulate ideas in writing. A writing competency assignment will be given at the beginning of the summer term and students with writing difficulties will be identified. Students who do not meet the expectation of writing ability will be required to seek remedial help external to the program at their own expense, if necessary. A follow-up writing competency assignment will be given towards the end of the summer term.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
What is "Journalism"?
By Robert Niles
Journalism is a form of writing that tells people about things that really happened, but that they might not have known about already.
People who write journalism are called "journalists." They might work at newspapers, magazines, websites or for TV or radio stations.
The most important characteristic shared by good journalists is curiosity. Good journalists love to read and want to find out as much as they can about the world around them.
Journalism comes in several different forms:
I. News
A. Breaking news: Telling about an event as it happens.
B. Feature stories: A detailed look at something interesting that's not breaking news.
C. Enterprise or Investigative stories: Stories that uncover information that few people knew.
II. Opinion
A. Editorials: Unsigned articles that express a publication's opinion.
B. Columns: Signed articles that express the writer's reporting and his conclusions.
C. Reviews: Such as concert, restaurant or movie reviews.
Online, journalism can come in the forms listed above, as well as:
Blogs: Online diaries kept by individuals or small groups.
Discussion boards: Online question and answer pages where anyone can participate.
Wikis: Articles that any reader can add to or change.
The best journalism is easy to read, and just sounds like a nice, smart person telling you something interesting.
Reporting
How do you get the facts for your news story? By reporting!
There are three main ways to gather information for a news story or opinion piece:
Interviews: Talking with people who know something about the story you are reporting.
Observation: Watching and listening where news is taking place.
Documents: Reading stories, reports, public records and other printed material.
The people or documents you use when reporting a story are called your "sources." In your story, you always tell your readers what sources you've used. So you must remember to get the exact spelling of all your sources' names. You want everything in your story to be accurate, including the names of the sources you quote.
Often, a person's name is not enough information to identify them in a news story. Lots of people have the same name, after all. So you will also want to write down your sources' ages, their hometowns, their jobs and any other information about them that is relevant to the story.
Whenever you are interviewing someone, observing something happening or reading about something, you will want to write down the answers to the "Five Ws" about that source:
Who are they?
What were they doing?
Where were they doing it?
When they do it?
Why did they do it?
Many good reporters got their start by keeping a diary. Buy a notebook, and start jotting down anything interesting you hear, see or read each day. You might be surprised to discover how many good stories you encounter each week!
Writing
Here are the keys to writing good journalism:
Get the facts. All the facts you can.
Tell your readers where you got every bit of information you put in your story.
Be honest about what you do not know.
Don't try to write fancy. Keep it clear.
Start your story with the most important thing that happened in your story. This is called your "lead." It should summarize the whole story in one sentence.
From there, add details that explain or illustrate what's going on. You might need to start with some background or to "set the scene" with details of your observation. Again, write the story like you were telling it to a friend. Start with what's most important, then add background or details as needed.
When you write journalism, your paragraphs will be shorter than you are used to in classroom writing. Each time you introduce a new source, you will start a new paragraph. Each time you bring up a new point, you will start a new paragraph. Again, be sure that you tell the source for each bit of information you add to the story.
Whenever you quote someone's exact words, you will put them within quotation marks and provide "attribution" at the end of the quote. Here's an example:
"I think Miss Cherng's class is really great," ten-year-old McKinley student Hermione Granger said.
Commas go inside the closing quote mark when you are providing attribution.
Sometimes, you can "paraphrase" what a source says. That means that you do not use the source's exact words, but reword it to make it shorter, or easier to understand. You do not use quote marks around a paraphrase, but you still need to write who said it. Here's an example:
Even though the class was hard, students really liked it, McKinley fourth-grader Hermione Granger said.
Journalism is a form of writing that tells people about things that really happened, but that they might not have known about already.
People who write journalism are called "journalists." They might work at newspapers, magazines, websites or for TV or radio stations.
The most important characteristic shared by good journalists is curiosity. Good journalists love to read and want to find out as much as they can about the world around them.
Journalism comes in several different forms:
I. News
A. Breaking news: Telling about an event as it happens.
B. Feature stories: A detailed look at something interesting that's not breaking news.
C. Enterprise or Investigative stories: Stories that uncover information that few people knew.
II. Opinion
A. Editorials: Unsigned articles that express a publication's opinion.
B. Columns: Signed articles that express the writer's reporting and his conclusions.
C. Reviews: Such as concert, restaurant or movie reviews.
Online, journalism can come in the forms listed above, as well as:
Blogs: Online diaries kept by individuals or small groups.
Discussion boards: Online question and answer pages where anyone can participate.
Wikis: Articles that any reader can add to or change.
The best journalism is easy to read, and just sounds like a nice, smart person telling you something interesting.
Reporting
How do you get the facts for your news story? By reporting!
There are three main ways to gather information for a news story or opinion piece:
Interviews: Talking with people who know something about the story you are reporting.
Observation: Watching and listening where news is taking place.
Documents: Reading stories, reports, public records and other printed material.
The people or documents you use when reporting a story are called your "sources." In your story, you always tell your readers what sources you've used. So you must remember to get the exact spelling of all your sources' names. You want everything in your story to be accurate, including the names of the sources you quote.
Often, a person's name is not enough information to identify them in a news story. Lots of people have the same name, after all. So you will also want to write down your sources' ages, their hometowns, their jobs and any other information about them that is relevant to the story.
Whenever you are interviewing someone, observing something happening or reading about something, you will want to write down the answers to the "Five Ws" about that source:
Who are they?
What were they doing?
Where were they doing it?
When they do it?
Why did they do it?
Many good reporters got their start by keeping a diary. Buy a notebook, and start jotting down anything interesting you hear, see or read each day. You might be surprised to discover how many good stories you encounter each week!
Writing
Here are the keys to writing good journalism:
Get the facts. All the facts you can.
Tell your readers where you got every bit of information you put in your story.
Be honest about what you do not know.
Don't try to write fancy. Keep it clear.
Start your story with the most important thing that happened in your story. This is called your "lead." It should summarize the whole story in one sentence.
From there, add details that explain or illustrate what's going on. You might need to start with some background or to "set the scene" with details of your observation. Again, write the story like you were telling it to a friend. Start with what's most important, then add background or details as needed.
When you write journalism, your paragraphs will be shorter than you are used to in classroom writing. Each time you introduce a new source, you will start a new paragraph. Each time you bring up a new point, you will start a new paragraph. Again, be sure that you tell the source for each bit of information you add to the story.
Whenever you quote someone's exact words, you will put them within quotation marks and provide "attribution" at the end of the quote. Here's an example:
"I think Miss Cherng's class is really great," ten-year-old McKinley student Hermione Granger said.
Commas go inside the closing quote mark when you are providing attribution.
Sometimes, you can "paraphrase" what a source says. That means that you do not use the source's exact words, but reword it to make it shorter, or easier to understand. You do not use quote marks around a paraphrase, but you still need to write who said it. Here's an example:
Even though the class was hard, students really liked it, McKinley fourth-grader Hermione Granger said.
What is Journalism?
Journalism is the profession of writing or communicating, formally employed by publications and broadcasters, for the benefit of a particular community of people. The writer or journalist is expected to use facts to describe events, ideas, or issues that are relevant to the public. Journalists (also known as news analysts, reporters, and correspondents) gather information, and broadcast it so we remain informed about local, state, national, and international events. They can also present their points of view on current issues and report on the actions of the government, public officials, corporate executives, interest groups, media houses, and those who hold social power or authority.
In journalism, a story refers to a single article, news item or feature. A story is usually relevant to a single event, issue, theme, or profile of a person. Stories are usually inspired through news pegs (the central premise of the story). Correspondents report on news occurring in the main, locally, from their own country, or from foreign cities where they are stationed.
Today, most reporters file information or write their stories electronically from remote locations. In many cases, breaking stories are written by random staff members, through information collected and submitted by other reporters who are out on the field gathering information for an event that has just occurred and needs to be broadcast instantly. Radio and television reporters often compose stories and report "live" from the scene. Some journalists also interpret the news or offer opinions and analysis to readers, viewers, or listeners. In this role, they are called commentators or columnists.
In journalism, a story refers to a single article, news item or feature. A story is usually relevant to a single event, issue, theme, or profile of a person. Stories are usually inspired through news pegs (the central premise of the story). Correspondents report on news occurring in the main, locally, from their own country, or from foreign cities where they are stationed.
Today, most reporters file information or write their stories electronically from remote locations. In many cases, breaking stories are written by random staff members, through information collected and submitted by other reporters who are out on the field gathering information for an event that has just occurred and needs to be broadcast instantly. Radio and television reporters often compose stories and report "live" from the scene. Some journalists also interpret the news or offer opinions and analysis to readers, viewers, or listeners. In this role, they are called commentators or columnists.
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