Larry Dailey issues a provocative call to disrupt convergence projects between colleges and newspapers in America. The University of Nevada-Reno professor questions whether some of the partnerships do more than provide newspapers with free student labor. Read Dailey's article in the December edition of the The Convergence Newsletter, and post your thoughts below. What should college journalism programs require of newspapers, television stations, and other news businesses in a convergence partnership? Continue the conversation on the newsletter's Google+ or Facebook pages.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Thursday, December 20, 2012
December 2012: A call to disrupt convergence
Friday, November 30, 2012
November 2012: How students seek information in the age of convergence
The new technology explosion requires that media audiences learn and
maintain new skills for information literacy so they can find, filter,
evaluate, and use information.
In the new issue of The Convergence Newsletter, Alex Gorelik and Anton Bezuglov of Benedict
College report on their experiment to determine how students seek and
evaluate information. Their pilot study used T.D. Wilson's framework of
information-seeking behavior to record students' choices as they searched for the answer to a question. Gorelik and Bezuglov found
that students' impatience to find a clear answer can trump even their
knowledge that a single information source may be suspect. Read the article, then visit the newsletter's Facebook and Google+ pages.
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Wednesday, November 14, 2012
October 2012: Teaching the business of journalism, while teaching business journalism
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
October 2012: Seven functions of Twitter for journalists
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Thursday, September 20, 2012
September 2012: Nonprofit news sites face a different set of challenges
As the Great Recession accelerated the decline of traditional news
operations in the U.S. and some other countries, the number of nonprofit
news ventures has increased to fill the reporting void. In a new
article, two veterans of nonprofit startups explore the different set of
challenges nonprofits face. Read the article, then join the discussion below or at The Convergence Newsletter's Google+ or Facebook pages.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Agenda Set for 11th Annual Convergence Conference
The agenda for the 11th Annual Convergence and Society Conference features two days of research and panels exploring the conference themes: advancing business journalism and convergence. The conference opens with an evening reception Wednesday, Sept. 26, then continues with two full days of sessions Sept. 27 and 28.
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August 2012: In Convergence, Experience is Still the Best Teacher
Thursday, August 23, 2012
August 2012: Teaching Multimedia Journalism, Street By Street
In the latest edition of The Convergence Newsletter, Chris Harper of Temple University relates how the journalism department uses an urban reporting project to prepare students for the changing demands of the newsroom and to broaden their perspectives by sending students to undercovered, underserved Philadelphia neighborhoods. Read his story in the August edition. Then join the conversation at our Facebook or Google+ pages.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
August 2012: A case study in convergence at the Wall Street Journal
Rob Wells, formerly of The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg Business News, and the Associated Press, explains how convergence played a key role during a Washington-area hostage crisis for reporters and editors trying to feed the Dow Jones Newswire, WSJ.com, and The Wall Street Journal's print editions. Wells uses that invaluable field experience to prepare students for the demands of the newsroom.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
June 2012: A case study of emergency news and participatory journalism
When an emergency happens, journalists are likely to find the community
already has started a digital conversation. As Carrie Brown-Smith of the
University of Memphis found, non-journalists quickly create
Twitter hashtags to report, share, and discuss emergency information.
Her findings provide useful insights into how news media can embrace
participatory journalism and respond to the community's concerns. Read her report in the latest edition of The Convergence Newsletter.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
May 2012: How to reach all of your readers
Even as convergence reaches beyond the traditional newsroom and outside the traditional audience bound by geography, reporters must consider who is being missed in the process. Amanda Sturgill of Elon University explains an exercise she conducts with journalism students to highlight the need for a well-considered, multichannel approach to include overlooked and under-served populations in reporting the news. Join the conversation below or on Facebook or Google+.
Thursday, May 24, 2012
May 2012: A new definition of convergence must include business
Digital convergence has reached beyond news departments into the business office, suggests Augie Grant, The Convergence Newsletter's founding editor. As a result, journalists must learn the basics of business to thrive in the changing environment. Read his analysis in the May edition of the newsletter, then join the conversation below or on Facebook or Google+.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
April 2012: Yes, blogging is journalism
Blogging is journalism, writes West Virginia University's Bob Britten in the April edition of The Convergence Newsletter. And students will benefit from learning how to use the tool in their reporting, explains Britten.
"I'm not interested in teaching a class about technology, but I am
interested in teaching a class about using social media's connective,
network-based nature to become effective mass communicators who can
interact with readers." Read the article, then join the conversation below.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
March 2012: Measuring the value of editing to online readers
Cringing at online news copy?
"The editors who provided the anonymous last pair of eyes on hastily
written stories in years gone by aren't there at the levels they used to
be – if they are there at all," writes Fred Vultee of Wayne State University.
Vultee reports on an American Copy Editors Society-sponsored study
of how readers assessed edited and unedited news stories for
professionalism, organization, writing, and value in The Convergence Newsletter. The work is timely as
online news sites increasingly ask readers to pay for access. Read the article, then join the conversation below.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
February 2012: The effect of our words on others
One description of research is a conversation – with the participants in research, with other researchers, and with professionals who apply the research. In this issue, the featured researchers look in very different ways at the meaning and effect of words on others. Both have important implications for how journalists operate in a world where understanding the conversation is critical. Read the latest edition of The Convergence Newsletter, then join the conversation here or on the newsletter's Facebook or Google+ pages.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
February 2012: Don't touch my news website video
Barbara Selvin of Stony Brook University sparked an extensive, sometimes heated, and occasionally international discussion of the use of video on news websites. The debate hits several important issues: experimentation versus productivity, timeliness versus production value, specialization versus cross-training. Read her article in the current edition of The Convergence Newsletter, then join the conversation on the newsletter's Facebook or Google+ pages.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter
Monday, February 27, 2012
February 2012: How comments influence reader perceptions of online news
In online journalism, news is now more than the staff-written news story but a whole package with multiple elements. At the University of Alabama, doctoral student Yan Yan is investigating how, or if, user comments affect people's immediate perceptions of news. Looking beyond positive and negative comments, she included rational and emotional appeals for a four-by-four study design that yields interesting insights.
Read about her work in the February edition of The Convergence Newsletter, then join the conversation here or on the newsletter's Facebook or Google+ pages.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
December 2011: A worthwhile look back before moving ahead
The December edition of The Convergence Newsletter offers a pair of articles worth reviewing before you surge ahead into the new year, a new project, a new semester, or all three. Read about two of the research projects that make up part of the fabric of the grand experiment of convergence. Then join the conversation with comments below or at our Facebook or Google+ pages.
Recent and archived issues of The Convergence Newsletter