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8/7/2019 Exam Review Part Two
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Exam Review: Part TwoExam Review: Part TwoExam Review: Part Two
ASTU 100C JRNJournalism 100
Professors Alfred Hermida and Candis Callison
Teaching assistant Fabiola Carletti
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Don¶t forget tobring:
� At least one pencil andone pen
� Your UBC student card
Part One:
Multiple choice (scantron)
Part Two:
Essay Question
Basic InformationBasic InformationBasic Information
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Participatory Journalism:
The act of a citizen, or group of citizens, playing an
active role in the process of collecting, reporting,analyzing and disseminating news and information. Theintent of this participation is to provide independent,reliable, accurate, wide-ranging and relevantinformation that a democracy requires.
- Bowman & Willis (2003), We Media
Lecture Twelve:Lecture Twelve:Lecture Twelve:Participatory JournalismParticipatory JournalismParticipatory Journalism
READINGS:� Bowman & Willis� Hermida
� Potts
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Lecture TwelveLecture TwelveLecture Twelve
³Participatory journalism: The venerable professionof journalism ¿nds itself at a rare moment in historywhere, for the ¿rst time, its hegemony as gatekeeper of the news is threatened by not just new technology andcompetitors but, potentially, by the audience it serves.´- Bowman & Willis (2003), We Media
Online audience now has:� Easy-to-use web publishing tools� Always-on connections� Increasingly powerful mobile devices
� Means to become active participantsin the creation/dissemination of news/info- Bowman & Willis (2003), We Media
Very Important!
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Lecture TwelveLecture TwelveLecture Twelve
STAGES OF NEWSPR ODUCTION
� Access & Observation� Selection/Filtering� Processing/Editing� Distribution� Interpretation
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Lecture Thirteen:Lecture Thirteen:Lecture Thirteen:Collaborating: from consumersCollaborating: from consumersCollaborating: from consumers
to producersto producersto producersREADINGS:
�Jenkins
�Domingo & HeinonenMarshall McLuhan (with Barrington Nevitt)¿rst suggested lines would be blurredbetween consumer and producer in 1970s[Anticipating ³prosumer´ and ³prosumption´]
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Lecture Thirteen:Lecture Thirteen:Lecture Thirteen:
Commodity or Gift?
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When the journalists are in charge, how do theyfacilitate public participate in the stages of newsproduction?
� Access/Observation: User-generated content
� Selection/Filtering:
No entry� Processing/Editing: Citizen blogs, Citizen stories� Distribution: Content hierarchy, Social networking� Interpretation: Collective interviews, Comments,Forums, Journalist blogs, Polls
Lecture Fourteen:Lecture Fourteen:Lecture Fourteen:From consumers to producersFrom consumers to producersFrom consumers to producersVery Important!
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Lecture Fifteen:Lecture Fifteen:Lecture Fifteen:Social MediaSocial MediaSocial Media
READINGS:
�Weinberger�Newman
DEFINING SOCIALMEDIA
� extra layer of information� traf¿c drivers / greatercirculation� new technological tool� generates higherengagement
� new venue for publishing
JENKINS¶
SPREADABLEMEDIAMedia which travels
across mediaplatforms at least inpart because thepeople take it in theirown hands and shareit with their socialnetworks
Very Important!
Go to original slides to see
loads of interesting graphics
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Lecture Sixteen:Lecture Sixteen:Lecture Sixteen:Journalism and Social MediaJournalism and Social MediaJournalism and Social Media
³R ather than talking about media
producers and consumers occupying
separate roles, we might now seethem as participants who interact witheach other according to a new set of rules that none of us fullyunderstands.´- Jenkins (2006) Convergence Culture
Loads of interestingLoads of interestingstats this lecture!stats this lecture!
Example:
75% of online newsconsumers get news byemail or posts on social
networking sites (SNS)
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Lecture SixteenLecture SixteenLecture Sixteen
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Lecture Seventeen:Lecture Seventeen:Lecture Seventeen:Privacy and New MediaPrivacy and New MediaPrivacy and New Media
READINGS:
� Plaisance� Boyd
What is privacy?
The ability to do things in our liveswithout public scrutiny.
-Patrick Lee Plaisance (2008)
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Lecture SeventeenLecture SeventeenLecture Seventeen
� Erving Goffman¶s concept of frontstage,backstage
Social networking sites� Self-representation through an online pro¿le� Articulation of an individual¶s public via a
Friend¶s list� Public communication and interaction� Social presence through status updates(Boyd 2010)
Networked publics
�Invisible audiences�Collapsed context�Blurring of public and private(boyd, 2010)
Seriously,
who¶s Joan?
Very Important!
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Lecture Eighteen:Lecture Eighteen:Lecture Eighteen:Privacy, social media and journalismPrivacy, social media and journalismPrivacy, social media and journalism
HOW ARE THE PR OFESSIONALS THINKING THR OUGH THESE QUESTIONS?
Canadian Association of Journalists on privacy
The public has a right to know about its institutions and the people whoare elected or hired to serve its interests. Their role is public and inmatters concerning these roles they are accountable to the public.
�Individuals have a right to privacy except when that right is superceded by thepublic good.�We will not harass or manipulate people who are thrust into the spotlightbecause they are victims of crime or are associated with a tragedy.�R elatives of people in the news sometimes become newsworthy, but we will
guard against voyeuristic stories.
See Original Slides for:
�BBC editorial guidelines�Quotations from working journalists re: ³expectation of privacy´
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Lecture Nineteen:Lecture Nineteen:Lecture Nineteen:Journalism EthicsJournalism EthicsJournalism EthicsREADINGS
�Stephen Ward�Kovach & Rosensteil
Get to know me.
Stephen Ward¶s major stages of
JOURNALISM ETHICSJOURNALISM ETHICS
Very very Important!
STAGE ONE: The invention of journalism ethics in the periodic newspress of the 17th century.
STAGE TWO: The public ethic (relatedto the development of the 18th
century public sphere)
STAGE THREE: The liberal theory of the
press (19th century phenomenaSTAGE FOUR: Objectivity and the mass
commercial press
STAGE FIVE: The return of interpretive
journalism
STAGE SIX: Global journalism ethics
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Lecture Twenty:Lecture Twenty:Lecture Twenty:What is an ethical journalist?What is an ethical journalist?What is an ethical journalist?
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Lecture TwentyLecture TwentyLecture Twenty
We looked at three case studies:
�Catherine Urquhart, Global BC January 20, 2011
�Tweets about the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords, January 8, 2011
�Suspension of Keith Olbermann, MSNBC November 11, 2010
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Lecture TwentyLecture TwentyLecture Twenty---one:one:one:GlobalGlobalGlobal --- socialsocialsocial --- media & democracymedia & democracymedia & democracy
KEY QUESTIONS:� What is the function of journalism in moments of change,revolution, and upheaval?� How does new media reorient our conceptions of (networked)publics, and is it the same everywhere?� What kind of a tool are digital, social networks like Twitter andFacebook?
READINGS:
�Goldstein
�MacKinnon
�Gaffney
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Lecture TwentyLecture TwentyLecture Twenty---oneoneone
We explored:
�Ward¶sglobal journalism
ethics�Boyd¶snetworkedpublics
� Hermida¶s
ambientjournalism
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Lecture TwentyLecture TwentyLecture Twenty---oneoneone
Note: Please seeLecture 22(Taylor Owen¶s
lecture) on Vistafor more info re: social media &
revolution.
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Lecture TwentyLecture TwentyLecture Twenty---three:three:three:The Future of JournalismThe Future of JournalismThe Future of Journalism
READINGS:
�Rusbridger
� Keller
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Lecture TwentyLecture TwentyLecture Twenty---three:three:three:The Future of JournalismThe Future of JournalismThe Future of Journalism
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