Dec. 13 call issued for Spring SE Meeting

Call for papersSite-building and event-planning are underway for the 2011 Southeast Colloquium for the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication March 17-19 in Columbia, S.C.

The call for panel proposals and papers has been posted at event’s home page at the University of South Carolina (http://www.jour.sc.edu/sec2011/); the call for papers is also downloadable as a PDF file here.

The Newspaper Division “paper chair” for the event is Doug Fisher. Contact info for Doug and the other participating divisions is at the event site above.

Still the Newspaper Division?

Here are the links to this summer’s discussion of the Newspaper Division’s name, both in comments on Bill Cassidy’s call for discussion and the e-mail listserv conversation on the same topic — discussion from July and continuing discussion post-conference in August.

To add anything to the blog comments, Register, login, then click the blog’s title and follow this link back to the original discussion.

Its Speak Your Mind box is at the end of the earlier comments, or click a blue “Reply” tag to respond to a specific comment.

Additional notes from Bill appear in the Summer 2010 LeadTime. Links to the 2008 e-mail discussion of the same subject are at the end of the comment list.

For the stay-at-homes and back-at-homes

updated Aug. 9 and 11
This is a page-in-progress of links related to the AEJMC 2010 convention in Denver…

Here’s the Twitter hashtag link for the convention, where there was a whole lot of Tweeting going on…:

https://twitter.com/#search?q=%23AEJMC10

And, more specifically related to newspapers, here’s J-Lab’s video of the “Networked Journalism” luncheon:

“Five news organizations around the country are participating in a yearlong pilot project, funded by J-Lab, to see if they can collaborate with at least five hyperlocal sites in each of their communities. They are the Seattle Times, Charlotte Observer, MiamiHerald, Asheville Citizen-Times and TucsonCitizen.com. “

If the embedded video player doesn’t work for you — it may have to load for 15 seconds or more — one or more of these links will get you to the information…

http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/8755484

Background

J-Lab on Networked Journalism


Conference News Site
Aug. 9 update
The address looks similar to the one for this blog, but http://aejmcnews.net is a news site for proceedings at the conference, staffed by students at four Colorado universities.

Newspaper division readers may be most interested in this item about a Friday panel, written by Amanda Keller, a Colorado State senior…

Strong local news coverage & community connections keep small papers healthy.

(The text-formatting problems mentioned in the original version of this post have been fixed.)


Aug. 11 update
Vin Crosbie, whose blog post about AEJMC and research I linked to last week, has an Aug. 8 follow-up ‘Regarding Academic Research and Fatuous Reporting About Trouble Media Industries’.
Meanwhile, the discussion of his original Aug. 2 post now includes additional comments from folks with significant experience in the newspaper and online newspaper industries.


Any more to share with Newspaper Division members? Add a comment here or send me e-mail and I’ll add it to the blog.

Virtual Denver: Twin presentation of twin surveys

For a hint of virtual convention-going, Ying Roselyn Du of Hong Kong Baptist University and Ryan Thornburg of UNC at Chapel Hill already have their Newspaper Division Denver presentation online, using Scribd.com for the paper and Slideshare.net for the presentation on “The gap between online journalism education and practice: The twin surveys.”

Abstract: The gap between journalism education and journalism practice has long been the focus of debates in the field. Amid the emergence of online journalism in the 1990s, the profession’s criticism of journalism education has continued unabated. It is ever important to revisit the old “gap” issue in this new context. This study attempts to examine the discordance between education and practice by comparing online journalism professionals and educators’ perceptions of key skills, concepts, and duties for online journalism. Findings of the twin surveys suggest that differences do exist in the online context.

For the benefit of those of us who are not in Denver, or just for the archives, feel free to add links to other presentations as comments on this post. Also, #aejmc10 is the Twitter “hashtag” participants are using to flag their items from the convention.

Needed: Industrial-Weight Academic Research?

Member of a newspaper family, online media consultant and Syracuse faculty member Vin Crosbie isn’t at AEJMC’s Denver conference this week for a variety of reasons…

Those who are filling in time at the convention browsing the Web will find food for thought in his item, The Media Academic Research Treadmill at Digital Deliverance, recalling newspaper industry exec Earl Wilkinson‘s visits to AEJMC six or seven years ago.

Vin’s item has drawn a few interesting comments on the relative merits of “industry research” and “academic research.”

Further food for thought: I remember posting some of Wilkinson’s materials back then on the original AEJMC Newspaper Division site, where they’re still available under the heading “Research Material”:
http://aejmc.net/newspaper/resources.html

The INMA list of AEJMC research Wilkinson DID find promising is no longer on the INMA.org site at the address we linked to back then, but I did find a copy by using the Archive.org Wayback Machine:

http://web.archive.org/web/20030920053327/http://www.inma.org/academicpapers.cfm

From the Newspaper Division’s own Web archives, here are the 2003 documents Wilkinson shared with us:

That same year, the Newspaper Division surveyed its members on the question of research interests. Here are quantitative results and Full-text answers

Maybe it’s time for a fresh try at that member survey… It might help with the “What should we call the division?” discussion that has been going on for the past month.

Personal disclosure: My own newspaper-related research is mostly historical, which I have to admit doesn’t do “the industry” much good, except by pointing out that innovation coupled with ethical lapses has sometimes looked good for business, but failed in the long run.

Footnote: For more on current research, check out that same Clyde Bentley’s posts at the Reynolds Journalism Institute, University of Missouri, a regular research roundup.

What’s a ‘newspaper’ when random Twitter feeds build the contents?

(This item was originally misleadingly headlined, “What’s a ‘newspaper,’ division?”
The Newspaper Division name-change discussion is elsewhere. )

So does “a newspaper” now mean any page of glowing bits that has frequently changed information organized into sections, with headlines and short summaries linked to more detail?

That appears to be the definition over at Paper.li, whose motto is “read a Twitter stream as a daily newspaper.”

So today I “founded” two newspapers. All I had to do was login using my Twitter I.D. (“bobstep”) and type the feed names into a box.

paper.li edition of AEJMC Twitter feed paper.li

Well, maybe I just “found,” not “founded,” the first one. I went through the Paper.li form to create it, but it may have been there already.

In both cases, the page is built of headlines and summaries from the Twitter feeds subscribed to by the owner of a feed — “AEJMC” for the first one, and “BobStep” for the second.

This may be important: Note that the contents of our “newspapers” aren’t items that the group or person named on top wrote — or even read; they are just the latest Twitterings from sources we thought might have something interesting to say once in a while. Perhaps we haven’t been watching closely enough to see that they really don’t. Nothing like running their stuff under your name to make you sit up and take notice.

Selections from the owners’ own posts are in a sidebar off to the right of those screen images, where the feed owner is called “curator” of the page.

Anyhow, if those are “newspapers” then the name "Newspaper Division" is broader than some of us thought!

Meanwhile, I can’t help wondering what The New York Times thinks about having a page at paper.li headed “The New York Times Daily” with “as shared by nytimes + 199 followed people on Twitter” in smaller type beneath.

More on this over on my personal blog.

Newspapers ‘strange survival’ in Economist

“Newspapers have escaped cataclysm by becoming leaner and more focused” according to The Economist‘s Newspapers: The strange survival of ink, a story rich in European examples.

But even in the U.S., it says, “some companies are now worth ten times as much as in the spring of 2009, although they remain far from pre-recession heights.”

(See the article for some interesting details on McClatchy and Gannett, including a report  that more Gannett papers using USA Today material.)

“The survival of newspapers is by no means guaranteed,” the article concludes, after discussing business strategies that involve iPads and smartphones, more local news and sports, etc. Emphasis added below:

“They still face big structural obstacles: it remains unclear, for example, whether the young will pay for news in any form. But the recession brought out an impressive and unexpected ability to adapt. If newspapers can keep that up in better times, they may be able to contemplate more than mere survival.”

Summer LeadTime: Mountains Calling

The summer 2010 LeadTime newsletter

The Summer issue of the LeadTime newsletter is ready for downloading at its tab atop this page or from the Newsletter archive on the division homepage.

Among its topics:

  • Things to do in Denver in and out of the AEJMC Convention this August…
  • a profile of the division’s Educator of the Year…
  • convention panels…
  • pre-convention sessions on teaching, research…
  • the research paper presentation schedule…
  • the chairman’s column…
  • and editor Mike Grundmann’s first-person account of his challenging semester as a student media adviser at James Madison University.

Hampton U Prof Named Outstanding Teacher

An AEJMC Newspaper Division selection committee has named Rick Kenney of Hampton University the division’s 2010 winner of the Outstanding Teacher Award.

A former journalist with the Baltimore Evening Sun, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, St. Petersburg Times, South Florida Sun-Sentinel and other papers, Kenney was named Scripps Howard Endowed Professor of Journalism at the Hampton, Va., university last year. He teaches media ethics and media law and directs the school’s Academy of Writing Excellence. He has won numerous awards for both his journalism and his teaching, and also has been an Ethics Fellow with the Poynter Institute since 2003.

Kenney, former executive news editor at the Evening Sun, holds a doctorate in mass communication from the University of Georgia and has taught at the University of Central Florida, Troy State University and Florida Southern College. He also directed a Dow Jones Newspaper Fund intern residency program for copy editing interns from 2002 to 2008, and wrote COPY! The first 50 years of the Dow Jones newspaper Fund.

Brian Carroll of Berry College, co-chair of the Newspaper Division’s teaching standards committee, thanked Kenney’s nominators, Rick Brunson, John Gogick,  Melissa Patterson and  Tim Lynch. Presentation of the award will be made at the business meeting of the Newspaper Division during the AEJMC National Convention Aug 4-7 at the Sheraton Denver Downtown Hotel in Denver.

Newspaper Fund becomes News Fund, keeps funding internships

Dow Jones is canceling the ‘newspaper’ in the name of its venerable journalism education programs, now called the Dow Jones News Fund. Picky editors will notice that the name change hasn’t percolated down through all references in the organization’s Web pages. The good news is that the DJNF internship and grant programs are still there.

DJNF/The Journalist’s Road to Success.

THE NEWS FUND was created in 1958 by then-Dow Jones & Co. chairman Bernard Kilgore to encourage young people to consider careers in journalism. The Dow Jones Foundation continues to provide the primary support for the Newspaper Fund, along with contributions from other newspapers and newspaper companies nationwide.

Those “Journalist’s Road to Success” pages are still a good bookmark for journalism students, newspaper-focused or not.

Thanks to Doug Fisher for pointing out the change, and to Chris Roberts for adding a link to Doug’s blog in our name-change discussion page.

Next Page »