Nowadays News is Oxygen of Modern Society. News covers all the areas of human behaviour, Media is a platform fo public issues, but there is a big problem to select information & make perfect News story. Here is attempt to share concept of News.
NCD Asia Pacific Alliance a unique network of government, academic, and civil society organizations and individuals spanning 25 countries, providing the solutions for the prevention and treatment of NCDs.
Playing the Past, Seeing the Future: Game Design in the HumanitiesSeriousGamesAssoc
This session will explore the role of the humanities — history, literature, philosophy, civics, jurisprudence — in the practice of designing serious games. While serious games have long and storied history (no pun intended) with engaging the humanities, recent humanities-based games such as Assassin’s Creed Origins, 1979 Revolution, Walden, a game, and others have opened up new possibilities for not only reasserting game-based learning in humanities contexts, but also re-evaluating the design paradigms through which these games are made. This session will explore the process of designing games in the humanities, the challenges and affordances of doing so, and the possibilities for developing and producing humanities games through grant funding, including the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Only Connect: Reaching New Audiences via Public Relations & External Communic...Kara Gavin
Presented to faculty, staff and students on Sept. 15, 2016, as part of the University of Michigan Medical School's Communicating Science series. Addresses how academics can and should engage in the public sphere directly and with the help of institutional communicators. (https://medicine.umich.edu/medschool/research/events/public-relations-external-audience-communication )
A recording of my talk is available at https://medicine.umich.edu/medschool/research/office-research/research-news-events/communicating-science-seminar-series
Emergency relief services in the social media ageEvanMeduna
Social media has become an important tool for emergency relief services in disaster situations. When traditional methods of communication are unavailable due to infrastructure damage, people turn to social media to request help and spread awareness. A nursing home in Texas used Twitter during Hurricane Harvey to call for assistance when first responders could not be reached, and their tweet was shared thousands of times to bring faster aid. Similarly, a woman rescued her family from rising floodwaters during the storm by having someone contact the fire department on Facebook. While social media allows quick sharing of information, emergency services must take care to validate information to avoid spreading misinformation.
This document summarizes Zizi Papacharissi's research on affective news streams and news storytelling on Twitter. Some key findings include:
- News values that prioritize recent, sudden events also guide Twitter use, along with values of instantaneity and ambient news environments.
- Analysis of 1.5 million tweets about the 2011 Egyptian uprising found both traditional news values and new values like crowdsourced elites and solidarity were prevalent.
- News storytelling on Twitter during events takes the form of affective news, blending facts, drama, opinion and emotion in an instant, repetitive rhythm.
- Affective news streams expose tensions between live tweeting and traditional news reporting and
This document summarizes a forum that brought together public diplomacy practitioners, policy makers, and public opinion researchers. The forum aimed to foster discussion around the relationship between public diplomacy and world public opinion, with a focus on bridging the gaps between these communities. It included leaders from polling organizations, foreign policy think tanks, and academia. The resulting papers explore opportunities for greater collaboration between those who study public opinion and those who practice public diplomacy.
CDR Evidence Centre Technology & Social Media StrategyStephanie Glegg
This presentation provided an overview of the Child Development & Rehabilitation Evidence Centre's Technology & Social Media Strategy to our Program Managers at Sunny Hill Health Centre for Children. The presentation was augmented with hyperlinked examples of several of the key software, social media platforms and tools and how we intend to use them to augment communication and collaboration with our key stakeholders.
Media and Information Literacy through the lifecourseSheila Webber
Presentation given at the 2nd European Media and Information Literacy Forum, in Riga, Latvia, on 27 June 2016, by Sheila Webber (Information School, University of Sheffield)
NCD Asia Pacific Alliance a unique network of government, academic, and civil society organizations and individuals spanning 25 countries, providing the solutions for the prevention and treatment of NCDs.
Playing the Past, Seeing the Future: Game Design in the HumanitiesSeriousGamesAssoc
This session will explore the role of the humanities — history, literature, philosophy, civics, jurisprudence — in the practice of designing serious games. While serious games have long and storied history (no pun intended) with engaging the humanities, recent humanities-based games such as Assassin’s Creed Origins, 1979 Revolution, Walden, a game, and others have opened up new possibilities for not only reasserting game-based learning in humanities contexts, but also re-evaluating the design paradigms through which these games are made. This session will explore the process of designing games in the humanities, the challenges and affordances of doing so, and the possibilities for developing and producing humanities games through grant funding, including the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Only Connect: Reaching New Audiences via Public Relations & External Communic...Kara Gavin
Presented to faculty, staff and students on Sept. 15, 2016, as part of the University of Michigan Medical School's Communicating Science series. Addresses how academics can and should engage in the public sphere directly and with the help of institutional communicators. (https://medicine.umich.edu/medschool/research/events/public-relations-external-audience-communication )
A recording of my talk is available at https://medicine.umich.edu/medschool/research/office-research/research-news-events/communicating-science-seminar-series
Emergency relief services in the social media ageEvanMeduna
Social media has become an important tool for emergency relief services in disaster situations. When traditional methods of communication are unavailable due to infrastructure damage, people turn to social media to request help and spread awareness. A nursing home in Texas used Twitter during Hurricane Harvey to call for assistance when first responders could not be reached, and their tweet was shared thousands of times to bring faster aid. Similarly, a woman rescued her family from rising floodwaters during the storm by having someone contact the fire department on Facebook. While social media allows quick sharing of information, emergency services must take care to validate information to avoid spreading misinformation.
This document summarizes Zizi Papacharissi's research on affective news streams and news storytelling on Twitter. Some key findings include:
- News values that prioritize recent, sudden events also guide Twitter use, along with values of instantaneity and ambient news environments.
- Analysis of 1.5 million tweets about the 2011 Egyptian uprising found both traditional news values and new values like crowdsourced elites and solidarity were prevalent.
- News storytelling on Twitter during events takes the form of affective news, blending facts, drama, opinion and emotion in an instant, repetitive rhythm.
- Affective news streams expose tensions between live tweeting and traditional news reporting and
This document summarizes a forum that brought together public diplomacy practitioners, policy makers, and public opinion researchers. The forum aimed to foster discussion around the relationship between public diplomacy and world public opinion, with a focus on bridging the gaps between these communities. It included leaders from polling organizations, foreign policy think tanks, and academia. The resulting papers explore opportunities for greater collaboration between those who study public opinion and those who practice public diplomacy.
CDR Evidence Centre Technology & Social Media StrategyStephanie Glegg
This presentation provided an overview of the Child Development & Rehabilitation Evidence Centre's Technology & Social Media Strategy to our Program Managers at Sunny Hill Health Centre for Children. The presentation was augmented with hyperlinked examples of several of the key software, social media platforms and tools and how we intend to use them to augment communication and collaboration with our key stakeholders.
Media and Information Literacy through the lifecourseSheila Webber
Presentation given at the 2nd European Media and Information Literacy Forum, in Riga, Latvia, on 27 June 2016, by Sheila Webber (Information School, University of Sheffield)
If you’re an online new junkie (or a social media junkie), you’ve probably seen Storify used to present media story or events as they’ve unfolded online. But have you thought about using Storify yourself to document your department’s work? At Emory University, Wendy Darling has for the past couple of years been using Storify to document how her department and the university as a whole handles pitching big stories online, and what the results have been. When a major medical research finding is released, how does Emory present it online? Where are the news releases? Video? Tweets? Facebook posts? Media coverage? Bloggers analyzing? What’s Twitter saying? Using Storify, Wendy has created packages that, once completed, can present a clear picture of how stories played out. These packages can be shared with leadership, with professors, and with others in communications and marketing. Rather than a dry report or a list of media hits, Storify can offer an interactive, “Wow”-generating report that gives people an idea of the value of communications and marketing.
The document summarizes the state of traditional media and science communication as well as the goals and operations of The Conversation, a non-profit media organization. Specifically:
1) Traditional media is struggling financially and many experienced journalists are leaving, while scientists are often locked out of public debates.
2) The Conversation aims to fill this gap by turning universities into newsrooms, combining academic rigor with journalistic flair to give expert voices a platform free from commercial influence.
3) The organization has over 4900 registered academics, 15 commissioning editors, and partnerships with global university networks that allow it to reach a large, engaged audience and seed its fact-checked articles to other media outlets.
A presentation to early-career health services researchers about working with institutional communicators, interacting with the media, and using social media to advance their professional careers.
Strategic communication and the influence of the media on public opinionPOLIS LSE
this is a lecture given to the NATO defense college in Rome on March 8th 2016 about how changes in journalism are impacting on issues such as the understanding of conflict and the formation of public opinion. It looks at the role of social media, the changes to mainstream media as it becomes more networked and the ways that might be changing flows of public opinion, especially around security and terror issues.
Constructing Social Media Knowledge Graphs with Social ScientistsJeff Z. Pan
This document discusses constructing knowledge graphs to help social scientists analyze social media data. It summarizes interviews with 12 social scientists who face challenges using existing tools for social media capture and analysis. The tools lack support for qualitative analysis and user-driven thematic coding. The document proposes using a knowledge graph approach to establish common ground between social scientists and tools by representing social media data as interconnected entities and attributes. Two prototype tools are described that allow thematic coding of data and visualization of analyzed data as knowledge graphs.
LDD Southern Summit 2013 - RNLI - Social media, digital innovation and the an...Adido
The document discusses the opportunities and challenges of using social media for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI). It outlines how social media can be used to inform, educate, support, and raise funds for the RNLI's rescue services. However, managing diverse audiences and ensuring immediacy vs. accuracy presents challenges. The document provides recommendations on crowdsourcing content, providing training and support, conducting daily huddles, using analytics to track performance, and ensuring communications are helpful to clients.
This document provides an overview of media research. It defines key concepts like communication, media, and science. It discusses the research process and different branches of science. It also outlines different classifications of media research like the disciplines it draws from, the stages of media production it focuses on, and the methods used. Finally, it provides examples of different media sectors and industries and discusses the purpose of conducting media research from the perspectives of students, communicators, advertisers, and researchers.
This document appears to be a program for a social event sponsored by the School of Media and Journalism at UNC–Chapel Hill. It lists various sponsor levels including title, diamond, platinum, and gold sponsors which are universities, organizations, and companies. It also lists honor sponsors who are sponsoring in memory or honor of individuals. The bulk of the document consists of slides thanking and recognizing the various sponsors.
This document appears to be a sponsorship listing for the AEJMC Chicago PRD 2017 Social event. It lists various sponsor levels including Title, Diamond, Platinum, Gold and Silver sponsors. It also lists honor sponsors who sponsored in honor or memory of individuals. The document thanks all the sponsors and includes individual thank you messages to sponsors.
Council on-foundations 2014-media-deserts_10182014. v2Michelle Ferrier
The role of community foundations in fueling localized, media innovations that serve residents of their communities using The Media Deserts Project to visualize and engage communities in creating strategies for fresh, local news and information.
This document discusses challenges facing university presses in sustaining and reimagining the monograph format. It outlines some of the key challenges like lack of support, library budget cuts, and humanities scholars hesitancy to experiment with open access models. The document also highlights some new models and initiatives university presses are taking to address these challenges, such as open access publishing platforms and projects, discovery programs, and collaborations between presses. Overall, the document examines how university presses are innovating in their efforts to continue supporting high-quality scholarly monographs.
1) Kara Gavin works in communications at Michigan Medicine to publicize research findings to news media and the public using various channels including social media.
2) It is important for research institutions to communicate their work to taxpayers, policymakers, and the general public who are interested but may not understand technical scientific concepts.
3) Surveys have shown the public often has different views than scientists on issues like GMOs and vaccines, showing the need for more effective science communication to improve public understanding.
The document discusses how Twitter was used as a mechanism for both reporting and sharing news during the 2011 Egyptian uprising. It analyzes over 1.5 million tweets to understand the news values and rhythms of storytelling on Twitter. Traditional news values of recency, drama, and relevance were found, but Twitter also introduced new values like instantaneity, crowdsourced reporting, and creating an ambient news environment. The blending of news, opinions, facts and emotions on Twitter represented a hybrid form of affective and collaborative news storytelling.
The rhythms of news storytelling on Twitter:Affective news streams, hybridit...Zizi Papacharissi
The document discusses how Twitter was used as a mechanism for both reporting and sharing news during the 2011 Egyptian uprising. It analyzes over 1.5 million tweets to understand the news values and rhythms of storytelling on Twitter. Traditional news values of recency, drama, and relevance were found, but Twitter also enabled new values like crowdsourced reporting, constant updates, and expressions of solidarity and emotion. The blending of facts, opinions, and affect on Twitter represented a hybrid form of news that was both oral and written in nature.
This document provides information and strategies for academics to increase the visibility and impact of their work outside of academia. It discusses using social media strategically to build a professional brand and get noticed. Tips are provided for writing attention-grabbing titles for social media posts in 120 characters or less. Maintaining an online professional profile through tools like ORCID and tracking impact through metrics and altmetrics are also covered. The document emphasizes finding ways for research to inform public policy, engage the public, and have societal and economic benefits and outcomes beyond academia.
This document provides an overview of Dr. Michelle Ferrier's background and research interests. It discusses her work in media innovation through various startups. Her research focuses on three main areas: 1) The Media Deserts Project which maps areas lacking access to news/information using GIS tools; 2) Media entrepreneurship and creating pathways for innovation; 3) Addressing online harassment through her work on TrollBusters using natural language processing. The document highlights increasing layoffs in the newspaper industry and growing rates of online harassment experienced by women journalists as motivations for her research agenda.
This document discusses the role of social media in communicating science. It provides an overview of the author's experience using social media for their Superfund Research Center since 2001. Key points include:
- Social media allows researchers to directly engage stakeholders, the public, and other scientists.
- The author has expanded their social media use over time, now utilizing tools like Twitter, Facebook, podcasts, and blogs to share their research.
- Metrics can measure the impact of social media engagement, such as number of followers, retweets, and page views. Future opportunities include crowdsourcing, citizen science, and building social media capacity through training.
Social media news audiences and the quantified journalistTim Highfield
This document summarizes a research project on social media news audiences and the quantified journalist. The project examines how journalists and audiences co-create news on social media platforms like Twitter. It analyzes what news content is shared on social media, which sources are most prominent, and the roles of journalists and audiences in shaping public discussions. The researchers will collect data from sources like Twitter, Facebook, and news site analytics to understand news sharing trends and how overlapping publics form and interact. The goal is to develop a new model of the Australian online public sphere and understand how news consumption and debate unfold over time.
Earned media involves framing stories around problems, Rotary actions, and impacts. Stories should have news value by being timely, proximate, eliciting human interest, involving prominent figures, or having significant consequences. Data and visually compelling images can also increase news value. When approaching media, clubs should consult, respond to inquiries, and engage further as needed. Resources for clubs include templates, guidelines, trainings, and support from the RI media relations team.
The Influence of Social Media in ReportingJasmine Jones
This document summarizes a research paper about the influence of social media on news reporting. The paper analyzes how consumers have shifted from obtaining news from newspapers to social media platforms on handheld devices. It presents data showing declining newspaper subscriptions but increasing social media followers for major newspapers over time. The conclusion is that social media and technology have significantly impacted how politicians and news affiliates engage with consumers and how people receive and share news.
Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
If you’re an online new junkie (or a social media junkie), you’ve probably seen Storify used to present media story or events as they’ve unfolded online. But have you thought about using Storify yourself to document your department’s work? At Emory University, Wendy Darling has for the past couple of years been using Storify to document how her department and the university as a whole handles pitching big stories online, and what the results have been. When a major medical research finding is released, how does Emory present it online? Where are the news releases? Video? Tweets? Facebook posts? Media coverage? Bloggers analyzing? What’s Twitter saying? Using Storify, Wendy has created packages that, once completed, can present a clear picture of how stories played out. These packages can be shared with leadership, with professors, and with others in communications and marketing. Rather than a dry report or a list of media hits, Storify can offer an interactive, “Wow”-generating report that gives people an idea of the value of communications and marketing.
The document summarizes the state of traditional media and science communication as well as the goals and operations of The Conversation, a non-profit media organization. Specifically:
1) Traditional media is struggling financially and many experienced journalists are leaving, while scientists are often locked out of public debates.
2) The Conversation aims to fill this gap by turning universities into newsrooms, combining academic rigor with journalistic flair to give expert voices a platform free from commercial influence.
3) The organization has over 4900 registered academics, 15 commissioning editors, and partnerships with global university networks that allow it to reach a large, engaged audience and seed its fact-checked articles to other media outlets.
A presentation to early-career health services researchers about working with institutional communicators, interacting with the media, and using social media to advance their professional careers.
Strategic communication and the influence of the media on public opinionPOLIS LSE
this is a lecture given to the NATO defense college in Rome on March 8th 2016 about how changes in journalism are impacting on issues such as the understanding of conflict and the formation of public opinion. It looks at the role of social media, the changes to mainstream media as it becomes more networked and the ways that might be changing flows of public opinion, especially around security and terror issues.
Constructing Social Media Knowledge Graphs with Social ScientistsJeff Z. Pan
This document discusses constructing knowledge graphs to help social scientists analyze social media data. It summarizes interviews with 12 social scientists who face challenges using existing tools for social media capture and analysis. The tools lack support for qualitative analysis and user-driven thematic coding. The document proposes using a knowledge graph approach to establish common ground between social scientists and tools by representing social media data as interconnected entities and attributes. Two prototype tools are described that allow thematic coding of data and visualization of analyzed data as knowledge graphs.
LDD Southern Summit 2013 - RNLI - Social media, digital innovation and the an...Adido
The document discusses the opportunities and challenges of using social media for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI). It outlines how social media can be used to inform, educate, support, and raise funds for the RNLI's rescue services. However, managing diverse audiences and ensuring immediacy vs. accuracy presents challenges. The document provides recommendations on crowdsourcing content, providing training and support, conducting daily huddles, using analytics to track performance, and ensuring communications are helpful to clients.
This document provides an overview of media research. It defines key concepts like communication, media, and science. It discusses the research process and different branches of science. It also outlines different classifications of media research like the disciplines it draws from, the stages of media production it focuses on, and the methods used. Finally, it provides examples of different media sectors and industries and discusses the purpose of conducting media research from the perspectives of students, communicators, advertisers, and researchers.
This document appears to be a program for a social event sponsored by the School of Media and Journalism at UNC–Chapel Hill. It lists various sponsor levels including title, diamond, platinum, and gold sponsors which are universities, organizations, and companies. It also lists honor sponsors who are sponsoring in memory or honor of individuals. The bulk of the document consists of slides thanking and recognizing the various sponsors.
This document appears to be a sponsorship listing for the AEJMC Chicago PRD 2017 Social event. It lists various sponsor levels including Title, Diamond, Platinum, Gold and Silver sponsors. It also lists honor sponsors who sponsored in honor or memory of individuals. The document thanks all the sponsors and includes individual thank you messages to sponsors.
Council on-foundations 2014-media-deserts_10182014. v2Michelle Ferrier
The role of community foundations in fueling localized, media innovations that serve residents of their communities using The Media Deserts Project to visualize and engage communities in creating strategies for fresh, local news and information.
This document discusses challenges facing university presses in sustaining and reimagining the monograph format. It outlines some of the key challenges like lack of support, library budget cuts, and humanities scholars hesitancy to experiment with open access models. The document also highlights some new models and initiatives university presses are taking to address these challenges, such as open access publishing platforms and projects, discovery programs, and collaborations between presses. Overall, the document examines how university presses are innovating in their efforts to continue supporting high-quality scholarly monographs.
1) Kara Gavin works in communications at Michigan Medicine to publicize research findings to news media and the public using various channels including social media.
2) It is important for research institutions to communicate their work to taxpayers, policymakers, and the general public who are interested but may not understand technical scientific concepts.
3) Surveys have shown the public often has different views than scientists on issues like GMOs and vaccines, showing the need for more effective science communication to improve public understanding.
The document discusses how Twitter was used as a mechanism for both reporting and sharing news during the 2011 Egyptian uprising. It analyzes over 1.5 million tweets to understand the news values and rhythms of storytelling on Twitter. Traditional news values of recency, drama, and relevance were found, but Twitter also introduced new values like instantaneity, crowdsourced reporting, and creating an ambient news environment. The blending of news, opinions, facts and emotions on Twitter represented a hybrid form of affective and collaborative news storytelling.
The rhythms of news storytelling on Twitter:Affective news streams, hybridit...Zizi Papacharissi
The document discusses how Twitter was used as a mechanism for both reporting and sharing news during the 2011 Egyptian uprising. It analyzes over 1.5 million tweets to understand the news values and rhythms of storytelling on Twitter. Traditional news values of recency, drama, and relevance were found, but Twitter also enabled new values like crowdsourced reporting, constant updates, and expressions of solidarity and emotion. The blending of facts, opinions, and affect on Twitter represented a hybrid form of news that was both oral and written in nature.
This document provides information and strategies for academics to increase the visibility and impact of their work outside of academia. It discusses using social media strategically to build a professional brand and get noticed. Tips are provided for writing attention-grabbing titles for social media posts in 120 characters or less. Maintaining an online professional profile through tools like ORCID and tracking impact through metrics and altmetrics are also covered. The document emphasizes finding ways for research to inform public policy, engage the public, and have societal and economic benefits and outcomes beyond academia.
This document provides an overview of Dr. Michelle Ferrier's background and research interests. It discusses her work in media innovation through various startups. Her research focuses on three main areas: 1) The Media Deserts Project which maps areas lacking access to news/information using GIS tools; 2) Media entrepreneurship and creating pathways for innovation; 3) Addressing online harassment through her work on TrollBusters using natural language processing. The document highlights increasing layoffs in the newspaper industry and growing rates of online harassment experienced by women journalists as motivations for her research agenda.
This document discusses the role of social media in communicating science. It provides an overview of the author's experience using social media for their Superfund Research Center since 2001. Key points include:
- Social media allows researchers to directly engage stakeholders, the public, and other scientists.
- The author has expanded their social media use over time, now utilizing tools like Twitter, Facebook, podcasts, and blogs to share their research.
- Metrics can measure the impact of social media engagement, such as number of followers, retweets, and page views. Future opportunities include crowdsourcing, citizen science, and building social media capacity through training.
Social media news audiences and the quantified journalistTim Highfield
This document summarizes a research project on social media news audiences and the quantified journalist. The project examines how journalists and audiences co-create news on social media platforms like Twitter. It analyzes what news content is shared on social media, which sources are most prominent, and the roles of journalists and audiences in shaping public discussions. The researchers will collect data from sources like Twitter, Facebook, and news site analytics to understand news sharing trends and how overlapping publics form and interact. The goal is to develop a new model of the Australian online public sphere and understand how news consumption and debate unfold over time.
Earned media involves framing stories around problems, Rotary actions, and impacts. Stories should have news value by being timely, proximate, eliciting human interest, involving prominent figures, or having significant consequences. Data and visually compelling images can also increase news value. When approaching media, clubs should consult, respond to inquiries, and engage further as needed. Resources for clubs include templates, guidelines, trainings, and support from the RI media relations team.
The Influence of Social Media in ReportingJasmine Jones
This document summarizes a research paper about the influence of social media on news reporting. The paper analyzes how consumers have shifted from obtaining news from newspapers to social media platforms on handheld devices. It presents data showing declining newspaper subscriptions but increasing social media followers for major newspapers over time. The conclusion is that social media and technology have significantly impacted how politicians and news affiliates engage with consumers and how people receive and share news.
Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
An astonishing, first-of-its-kind, report by the NYT assessing damage in Ukraine. Even if the war ends tomorrow, in many places there will be nothing to go back to.
Acolyte Episodes review (TV series) The Acolyte. Learn about the influence of the program on the Star Wars world, as well as new characters and story twists.
Essential Tools for Modern PR Business .pptxPragencyuk
Discover the essential tools and strategies for modern PR business success. Learn how to craft compelling news releases, leverage press release sites and news wires, stay updated with PR news, and integrate effective PR practices to enhance your brand's visibility and credibility. Elevate your PR efforts with our comprehensive guide.
El Puerto de Algeciras continúa un año más como el más eficiente del continente europeo y vuelve a situarse en el “top ten” mundial, según el informe The Container Port Performance Index 2023 (CPPI), elaborado por el Banco Mundial y la consultora S&P Global.
El informe CPPI utiliza dos enfoques metodológicos diferentes para calcular la clasificación del índice: uno administrativo o técnico y otro estadístico, basado en análisis factorial (FA). Según los autores, esta dualidad pretende asegurar una clasificación que refleje con precisión el rendimiento real del puerto, a la vez que sea estadísticamente sólida. En esta edición del informe CPPI 2023, se han empleado los mismos enfoques metodológicos y se ha aplicado un método de agregación de clasificaciones para combinar los resultados de ambos enfoques y obtener una clasificación agregada.
5. News Sources
• Reporters
• Contacts
• Newsroom diary
• Files
• Check calls
• Emergency services
radio
• Politicians
• Pressure groups
• Staged events
• News releases
• Syndicated recordings
• Freelancers
• Tip-offs
• Hoaxes
• Wire services and
news agencies
• The network
• Other news media
• Shared material
6. NEWS: PRODUCT OR POINT OF VIEW
• Product
Gathered
Processed
Packaged(Attractive)
Polished & Finished
Sold by Media(Newspapers/Radio/Television/Web)
• Point of View
Of the People & For The People (Public Interest )
Value Added (Social change)
Enrich the Knowledge & Understanding of the world around them
11. Getting the News Story
• Newsroom conference
• Copytasting
• Balance of news
• Visuals and actuality
• The brief
• The angle
• Chasing the contact
• Staged news conferences
• Beating the clock
• Work to sequence
• Don’t panic
12. Basics of Newswriting
• The news angle
• Multi-angled stories
• Hard news formula
• The intro
• Placing key words
• Feature openers
• Developing the story
• Signposting
• Last line
• Last words
• Accuracy
• Proof reading
13. News Presentation Mechanics
• Speed
• Breathing
• Projection
• Emphasis
• Pitch
• Microphone technique
• Using the prompter/Laptop
• Bringing the story to life
14. Dr. Rajesh Singh Kushwaha,
Assistant Professor,
Dept. of Mass communication & Journalism,
Dr. RamManohar Lohia Avadh University,
Ayodhya, U.P.
Email : manurajchandra@gmail.com