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Seely, Natalee – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2020
Covering traumatic story assignments is often central to a journalist's job. Violent crimes, natural disasters, and tragic personal struggles--these are newsworthy events. Studies have associated trauma coverage with higher rates of posttraumatic stress disorder, burnout, and other traumatic stress symptoms in reporters. This study uses a survey…
Descriptors: Trauma, Journalism, News Reporting, Coping
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Davidson, Margaret G. – Journalism Educator, 1977
Reports on recommendations based on a study of Wisconsin journalism programs conducted in 1976. (KS)
Descriptors: College Programs, Enrollment, Enrollment Rate, Enrollment Trends
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lorenz, Alfred Lawrence – Journalism Quarterly, 1976
Descriptors: Editing, Journalism, Newspapers, United States History
Sessler, Michael – Quill and Scroll, 1976
Descriptors: Educational Radio, Journalism, Laboratory Techniques, Learning Activities
Walker, Douglas K. – 1974
Seventy-seven percent of Wisconsin's AM stations, 57 percent of FM stations, and 38 percent of television stations broadcast agricultural market news. Most stations devote less than 30 minutes daily to the market reports, which are usually broadcast twice daily, five days a week. Radio market reports are in the early morning and noon hour periods,…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Broadcast Industry, Journalism, News Media
Dyer, Carolyn Stewart – 1979
A study was undertaken to describe the financial affairs of 49 Wisconsin newspapers enumerated in the 1860 United States Census of Products of Industry schedules. Specific information was sought concerning the cost of establishing a newspaper, the cost of materials and supplies, the number of employees and their pay, the value of the newspaper and…
Descriptors: Business, Comparative Analysis, Economic Factors, Journalism
Danky, James P., Ed.; And Others – 1982
Conference proceedings on the Native American Press in Wisconsin and the Nation present speeches and presentations pertaining to current American Indian publications and examples of analysis and synthesis created by Indian scholars. Topics of speeches presented include: an interpretive framework for Native American discourse; the early years of…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian History, American Indians, Freedom of Speech
Paley, Dianne M. – 1986
In their roles as writers, editors, and photographers for community newspapers, women helped to record the economic, social, and political fluctuations that comprise the past. In villages and towns, however, the boundaries of and limits on acceptable female activity were as strong as they were in the cities. Women in community newspapers may have…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Journalism, Newspapers
Danky, James P., Ed.; And Others – 1980
The papers contained in this compilation were drawn from the proceedings of a 1978 conference on periodical publishing in Wisconsin. Papers in the first section of the collection deal with the basics of publishing and cover such topics as selecting articles, starting a new publication, mailing procedures, aesthetics and layout, and printing…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Athletics, Hobbies, Journalism
Rolo, Mark Anthony – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2006
Three years ago, while researching archival photographs and records for a documentary on American Indian war veterans, Dr. Patty Loew stumbled upon a long forgotten film about her Ojibwe grandfather's World War I unit buried in the basement stacks of the Wisconsin Historical Society. Though it was a remarkable find, the truth is, for Loew, it was…
Descriptors: Videotape Recordings, Sciences, Nonprint Media, Indians
McCall, Patricia Ellen – 1974
The focus of this paper is on three questions: Who are the professional women on newspaper staffs? How do they feel about their jobs? What are their job expectations? Questionnaires were sent to each of Wisconsin's 35 daily newspaper editors (all men), a brief form for the editor and a longer form for each woman on his news-editorial staff.…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employee Attitudes, Employment Practices, Females
Scharlott, Bradford W. – 1980
The increase in the number of newspapers in Wisconsin's largest cities from 1840 to 1860 was analyzed to determine whether the coming of the telegraph (1848-1850) spurred newspaper growth significantly. Multiple regression analysis was used to control for the effects of population growth and price-level fluctuations. Even after accounting for the…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Community Development, History, Information Networks
Hoyt, James L. – 1978
After questionable behavior was exhibited by photojournalists at the Bruno Richard Hauptmann trial in 1935, many states adopted a recommendation of the American Bar Association (Canon 35) and totally banned film and electronic coverage of courtroom proceedings. The ban of media became almost complete in this country after the Supreme Court…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Communications, Broadcast Television, Court Litigation, Due Process
McBride, Genevieve G. – 1986
Analysis of the Wisconsin woman suffrage campaign of 1910-1920 suggests that public relations belonged not only to political or business practices, but was equally a process by which the masses achieved their own best interests in nineteenth and early twentieth century social reform movements. Woman suffragists were led by women, and the public…
Descriptors: Activism, Females, Feminism, Fund Raising