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Bennett, Rosemary – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2021
In this HEPI debate paper on the media and higher education, Rosemary Bennett provides a commentary on the interaction of the two sectors and proposes ideas on how universities might best engage with journalists to promote themselves and their research. [Foreword by Adam Tickell.]
Descriptors: Journalism, News Media, Universities, Public Relations
John, Jeffrey Alan – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2013
This essay suggests that because anyone and everyone can now be a "journalist," the standards of the field of journalism have been greatly diminished. To regain respect for the profession and retain stature in the academy, journalism education should offer an assurance of the legitimacy of journalism program graduates by recognizing only…
Descriptors: Journalism, Journalism Education, Certification, Standards
Schulenburg, Chris T. – Hispania, 2012
As the newspaper continues to lose ground to a multitude of internet discourses, the role of intellectuals as a voice of opposition to hegemonic sources receives ever more intense scrutiny. In particular, the novel "Plata quemada" (1997) by the Argentine novelist Ricardo Piglia presents this intellectual dilemma and its newfound…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Novels, Reading, Journalism
Phelps, Richard P. – Online Submission, 2016
There are many thousands of education researchers in the world, thousands of higher education institutions, and hundreds of relevant research journals. But the EWA has chosen to rely almost exclusively on an infinitesimal proportion of it for expertise. Ironically, the tiny group on which they depend comprises some of the world's most poorly read…
Descriptors: Professional Associations, Writing (Composition), Educational Research, Expertise
McDevitt, Michael; Sindorf, Shannon – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 2012
The authors argue that journalism's uncertain identity in academia has made it vulnerable to unreflective instrumentalism in the digital era. They show how instrumentalism intertwined with the digital sublime constitutes a rhetorically resonate rationale for closing a journalism school. Evidence comes from documents and testimony associated with…
Descriptors: Journalism Education, Advisory Committees, Journalism, Information Technology
Camp, Michael – Journal of General Education, 2012
Liberal arts universities are under mounting pressure to maintain their position of relevance in an increasingly technological and economically competitive world, while professional journalism is steadily losing ground to social media. This essay argues that a new partnership between journalism schools and the academic community would be…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Liberal Arts, Journalism Education, Partnerships in Education
Alterman, Eric – Academe, 2011
Think back to the famous 1920s debate between Walter Lippmann and John Dewey. The argument--begun by Lippmann with a series of three brilliant books published between 1919 and 1925 and ended by Dewey in 1927 with his book-length response to "Public Opinion," Lippmann's masterpiece--turned on many issues simultaneously but rested foundationally on…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Journalism, Citations (References), Newspapers
Allgaier, Joachim – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2011
I start by introducing some ideas from the field of science and technology studies that concern the difficulty of differentiating experts and laypeople. Based on this description I react to Albaek's comment and further explain the approach taken in my study. The results of the study indicate that the function of different types of sources can vary…
Descriptors: Expertise, Science Education, Journalism, Science Instruction
Huber-Humes, Sonya – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Journalism programs across the country have rolled out new curricula and courses emphasizing complex social issues, in-depth reporting, and "new media" such as online news sites with streaming audio and video. Journalism education has rightly taken its cue from media outlets that find themselves not relevant enough for a new generation of readers,…
Descriptors: Journalism, News Media, Journalism Education
Yang, Michelle Murray – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2011
Examining Malcolm Browne's photograph of the burning monk as well as appropriations of it by the Ministers' Vietnam Committee, I argue that self-immolation is a powerful rhetorical act that utilizes self-inflicted violence as a means of performing a visual embodiment of violence done by an "other." I assert that the power and resonance…
Descriptors: Photography, Visual Aids, Rhetoric, Self Destructive Behavior
Price, Todd Alan – International Journal of Social Education, 2009
In the following article I reflect on a few of the lessons provided by the late historian Howard Zinn, both his close reading of history, but even more so his critical insight "that history is made, not only received". Zinn used history much like a muckraking joumalist would: he wrote history not only "through" the eyes of common people, but "for"…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Personal Narratives, Textbook Content, Journalism
Cooper, Kenneth J.; Pyrillis, Rita; Rosario, Ruben; Stuart, Reginald; Zinngrabe, Elaine – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2007
This article presents five vignettes, written by veteran journalists, that focus on the current and future state of journalism. Despite almost daily reports of media consolidation and newspaper layoffs, the journalists sound a cautionary but optimistic tone about the industry. They weigh in on everything from the threats to diversity to the future…
Descriptors: Journalism Education, American Indians, Journalism, Job Layoff
Gup, Ted – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In this article, the author reports his dismay when he learned that his students are ignorant of critical issues outside of the classroom despite the availability of online information. However, he believes that its both unfair and inaccurate to hold those young people accountable for the moral and legal morass they find themselves in as a nation.…
Descriptors: Current Events, History, Knowledge Level, College Students

Nerone, John – Journalism Educator, 1990
Discusses different ways of conceiving the content and purpose of journalism history courses. Maintains that history is about arguments, not facts; and that there is no such thing as journalism history. Notes that both premises are applicable to research and are easily and usefully employed in the classroom. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Historiography, Journalism, Journalism Education
Dash, Leon – Qualitative Inquiry, 2007
The author opposes any Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) overseeing the work of journalism professors and journalism students in any academic institution. He argues that the tendency for IRBs to require anonymity for persons interviewed immediately reduces the credibility of any journalistic story. The composition of an IRB is questioned on…
Descriptors: Journalism Education, Constitutional Law, Social Sciences, Journalism