Results tagged “School” from eHub

Remember this equation

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I was going to write a blog on the importance of convergence as we enter a new age of journalism. You know, that's supposed to be the business of journalism these days. Breaking news. Post updates to the Web. Incorporate video into your story packages. Accomplish more work, yet do it all in the same number of hours as before you had all the work. Oh yeah, and for the same pay. Sometimes, even for less pay. And with fewer staffers. 

That is the journalism world we live in. The question is: Why in the heck would anyone our age want to join this poorly-structured, archaic and supposedly dead-in-the-water profession?

Good question.

I ponder this often. It seems rather insane sometimes to think about the amount of work that goes into and cost of an undergraduate or graduate education for a profession with a poor business model that doesn't pay very well. And yet I'm less than a week away from graduating with a master's degree in journalism.

Apparently, I am not alone.

I came across this article a couple of weeks ago, then found it again this morning when I Googled "Journalism convergence" and clicked on the News tab.

A couple of fun snippets include:

"For almost $100,000 (including room and board) over two years, USC's graduate journalism program will prepare you for a profession that features low pay, long hours and an uncertain future. You'll learn to produce video, to blog and to write a tight news lead."

And the best part:

"Chris Nelson, 29 and a refugee from a DVD production job in Hollywood, told me Annenberg students aren't so naive that they've overlooked the sickly media job market. But they've embraced an axiom: Crisis=Opportunity."

And then it starts to make sense. Maybe veteran reporters are receiving the axe, and the current business model surely sucks, but WE are the future of journalism. We will be responsible for carrying out the tasks that will keep the business of journalism afloat. We can do it better than anybody else. We've grown up with the Internet, blogging, podcasts, and video, so we understand what is necessary to produce a quality product in the "new era" of journalism. I hope this isn't just me being naïve, of course.

After all, crisis = opportunity.

Are we blind?

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Limitations of Science
The first thing you learn in middle school science is that science can't prove anything. Or at least that should have been the first thing you learned. Yes, friends, that includes evolution, creationism and all of the above. Science can only disprove that which is thought to be true. You learn that in order for scientific experiments and surveys to be valid, you must have a good sample size. The target group of respondents you survey must be a good sample of the larger population.

"Listen to me! I'm liberal!"
Max Blumenthal, journalist for The Daily Beast, an online Web site of media-related stories and blogs, must have been absent the day his middle school science teacher explained this. I'm joking of course, but only kind of.
Blumenthal wrote a blog based on a poll that said Rush Limbaugh was the least popular political figure of all the figures the firm polled, beating out Rev. Jeremiah "God Damn America" Wright. Oh, yes. And one more thing. The firm that conducted the poll was a Democratic research firm, Greenberg-Quinlan-Rosner. Blumenthal makes mention of that small fact only briefly to avoid appearing obviously deceptive.



Selective truth?
Blumenthal goes on to criticize Limbaugh for hoping Obama's plans would fail. Now, I am not an avid supporter of Rush Limbaugh, nor do I agree with every word from his mouth, but it seems to me that any person in his right mind would hope the policies of his opposition would fail to be implemented or uphold. Does Blumenthal presume that any democrat would hope conservative policies or ideas succeed? I think not. It would be ridiculous to expect Limbaugh or any true conservative to wish that nationalized health care or a number of Obama's other aspirations come to be. It would be equally absurd to demand a liberal be supportive of Bush's tax cuts. See what I mean?
Besides that, anyone who's willing to base their beliefs and convictions on a democratically biased poll taken from a biased sample size is asking for trouble. If a poll was to truly be valid, it should be double-blind, so that neither the sample nor the surveyor had vested results in its outcome.

The machine keeps on...
Blumenthal's irrational rant just goes to show that, while democrats claim to be "open-minded," they are, by and large, the most close-minded of all. Angry little men like Blumenthal scrounge and scrape for a shred of evidence that the other side is wrong. Men like him jump to conclusions about what everyone else is at the drop of a hat.
When it comes down to it, both the media and the education system are liberal-run machines. So why should I be surprised that people like Blumenthal are the ones running their mouths behind a megaphone?


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