Archive for June, 2009

Top links for journalism students

Bachelors Degree Online has compiled a list of the 100 best blogs for journalism students to read.

They write: “Today’s journalism students are entering an industry that’s facing a crossroads. These days, newspapers and media in general are adapting and growing at a rapid pace, and it’s essential that students keep up, or they’ll be left in the dust. By reading these blogs, you can keep an ear to the ground on the latest developments that matter the most to journalism students.

The list is broken down into various categories, including investigate and photo journalism, as well as more general sites.

One omission from the list, however, is Journalism.co.uk, a site I have found eminently useful for news, tips and analysis.

“This list is doing the rounds ‘100 Best Blogs for Journalism Students – Learn-gasm‘… and we’re not on it. Nope, not even a smidgeon of link-love for poor old Journalism.co.uk there,” they lament.

In response the site has added some of its own suggestions, including a certain Centre for Journalism.

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MPs expenses & new and old media

The coverage of the MPs expenses scandal is an example of old and new media co-existing, according to Jon Bernstein, the former multimedia editor of Channel 4 News.

What started out as a traditional old media scoop – with the Daily Telegraph sifting through the data and revealing information in stages – has now been put into ‘the hands of the crowd’ through crowd sourcing experiments conducted by both the Telegraph and the Guardian.

And quite a few people have taken part so far:

“On Sunday the paper boasted that almost 20,000 people had taken part, helping it to scour nearly 160,000 documents. So far so great.

Not to be outdone, the Telegraph also began its own crowd sourcing excercise:

“By the middle of the week, the Telegraph was offering its far-less redacted expenses documents in PDF form and all its data in a Google spreadsheet, while simultaneously asking readers directly: “What have you spotted?”

Bernstein concludes:

“Both papers – and the wider media come to that – have enriched our understanding of a complex and sprawling story. What started as a proprietorial scoop is now in the hands of the crowd.

“Old media and new coexisting.”

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