COMMENTS

  1. Guide to critical thinking, research, data and theory: Overview for

    In daily journalism, we are often content to quote relevant sources or officials, and let them do the "explaining." ... This type of critical thinking can also benefit the practice of data journalism, where the best work is showing increasing sophistication, but where non-specialists remain at high risk for errors in reasoning and inference.

  2. 412. Critical thinking is an essential skill for journalists

    Critical thinking is an essential skill for journalists. It's All Journalism host Michael O'Connell talks to Jonathan Haber, author of a new book on critical thinking from MIT Press, about how journalists can use critical thinking to improve their reporting. Journalists take their obligations seriously to try and discern the facts from the lies ...

  3. Bridging critical thinking and transformative learning: The role of

    In recent decades, approaches to critical thinking have generally taken a practical turn, pivoting away from more abstract accounts - such as emphasizing the logical relations that hold between statements (Ennis, 1964) - and moving toward an emphasis on belief and action.According to the definition that Robert Ennis (2018) has been advocating for the last few decades, critical thinking is ...

  4. The Pyramid of Journalism Competence: what journalists need ...

    "Critical thinking" has become too vague a concept to describe this capacity. ... Journalism is a profession that often resides within a business, an enterprise that creates wealth that can be ...

  5. The Use of Critical Thinking to Identify Fake News: A Systematic

    Fake news emerged from the tradition of yellow journalism of the 1890s, which can be described as a reliance on the familiar aspects of sensationalism—crime news ... news with low quality journalism than false information designed to mislead. Two articles, and discussed the role of critical thinking when interacting on social media. Social ...

  6. PDF It's Critical: The Role of Critical Thinking in Media and Information

    assessing or measuring critical thinking skills in evaluations and tests. One problem when defining critical thinking is deciding how wide or narrow this definition should be. A classic in the field of scholarship on critical thinking, Robert H. Ennis (1962), defines critical thinking as "the correct assessing of statements."

  7. PDF CRITICAL THINKING

    Chapter 2: Critical Thinking 29 focus on the rote memorization of specific facts and the ability to regurgitate those facts when called upon. 2 While this is a bad thing for all education, it is particularly disturbing for those of us who teach in journalism, where thinking on the fly is

  8. PDF Enhancing students' critical thinking in journalism education: An

    As Tian and Low (2011) concede, critical thinking is "notoriously difficult to define and explain" (p.63). The definition endorsed by the United States National Council for Excellence in Critical Thinking Instruction is extremely broad: Critical thinking is the intellectually disciplined process of actively and skillfully conceptualiz-

  9. Restoring Trust in Journalism: An Education Prescription

    The stakes are high because of journalism's importance in informing the public—the cornerstone of a healthy democracy. Journalism education, therefore, has an enormous responsibility to prepare strong critical thinkers on the frontlines of the battle to help restore the public's trust in actual—not "alternative"—facts.

  10. Toward a New Conceptualization of Journalistic Competency: An Analysis

    The technology-driven changes in the media ecosystem have forced news organizations across the globe to restructure operations and workflow, redefine job tasks and responsibilities, and reshape journalistic culture and values (Donsbach, 2014; Rintala & Suolanen, 2005; Schena et al., 2018).Journalistic competency, as a key feature to define the profession, also has been reconfigured into the ...

  11. Skills and Journalism

    Journalism students need vocational skills in order to satisfy employer needs, and academic skills in order to satisfy wider societal needs. Another key research concern in this area has been the issue of de-skilling: the idea that journalistic work gradually becomes less and less skilled as employers mainly demand quicker outputs across ...

  12. Journalism has changed. Education must reflect the reality

    Teaching for a professional role. Historically, journalism teaching emerged just over a century ago as journalists began to claim the status of professionals. ... it must include critical thinking ...

  13. Professional Identity and Roles of Journalists

    The study of journalists' professional roles is a principal avenue to understand journalism's identity and place in society. From the perspective of discursive institutionalism, one could argue that journalistic roles have no true "essence"; they exist as part of a wider framework of meaning—of a discourse.

  14. Critical Thinking: What Do You Mean by That?

    Clarifying issues, conclusions, or beliefs. Clarifying and analyzing the meanings of words and phrases. Developing criteria for evaluation; clarifying values and standards. Evaluating the ...

  15. Here's how we teach creativity in journalism (and why it's the 5th

    Andy Dickinson's journalism.cards "aims to encourage critical and creative thinking when developing ideas". Key to these cards, argues Dickinson , is the building of confidence: "A working sense of how these ideas play out gives you the confidence to challenge them, play with them and mould ideas to fit — confidence and experience ...

  16. Journalists' Professional Roles and Role Performance

    Professional roles are a key topic in journalism research along with the fundamental elements in defining journalism as a profession. ... journalists who perceive a watchdog role as important may have internalized the way of thinking expected by the media outlet where they work. ... This critical aspect suggests that (a) possibly, role ...

  17. Teaching Future Journalists the News: The Role of Journalism Educators

    For the purposes of this study, the authors adopted as a starting point the Stony Brook definition of news literacy, namely the possession of the necessary "critical thinking skills to judge the reliability and credibility of information, whether it comes via print, television or the internet" (Center for News Literacy Citation 2020). In ...

  18. Using the news to develop students' critical thinking

    Critical thinking defined. ... understanding the watchdog role of the press, and recognizing quality arguments and evidence. ... Combining understanding of how journalism works along with topical content allows students to determine the credibility of information they encounter. This integration enables students to interpret, analyze, evaluate ...

  19. Journalistic Roles

    Abstract. The notion of journalistic roles refers to the way journalists perceive, articulate, and enact generalized expectations as to how journalism is serving society, both in normative and descriptive terms. Journalistic roles are constructed in professional discourse, which is about journalism's identity and place in society.

  20. Journalism students see an industry in crisis. It's time to talk about it

    Journalism educators need ... students learn their craft while engaging with critical questions about their roles and responsibilities. ... explaining that this kind of thinking turned them away ...

  21. The Contribution of Journalistic Knowledge to Students' Skills in

    attributes such as critical thinking and analytical acumen, emerges as a pivotal determinant in facilitating the effective composition of news articles among students (McCaffrey, 2023; Mellado, 2015).

  22. THINKING ABOUT CITIZEN JOURNALISM

    Dominic L. Lasorsa. This study seeks to understand how community newspaper editors negotiate the professional complexities posed by citizen journalism—a phenomenon that, even in the abstract, would appear to undermine their gatekeeping control over content. Through interviews with 29 newspaper editors in Texas, we find that some editors ...

  23. Why Is Journalism Important? (19 Reasons)

    Journalism Promotes Critical Thinking. Journalism doesn't just inform—it provokes thought. Here's what journalism does to encourage critical thinking in society: ... Journalism's fundamental role in safeguarding human rights is predicated on its ability to document, report, and create meaningful dialogue on issues that impact the most ...

  24. Changed priorities ahead: Journalists' shifting role perceptions when

    Together with health workers, journalists are often on the frontline of disease outbreaks. During such health crises, 'journalists find themselves at the center of an emotionally loaded, complex playing field; and are pulled in many directions' (The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University, 2009).Health authorities and medical experts, for example, often appeal to the media ...

  25. Navigating the Balance: Journalism, Bias, and Integrity in the ...

    In an era of heightened polarization and scrutiny, the role of journalism in shaping public discourse has never been more critical. Recent events, such as the suspension of a senior editor at NPR ...

  26. NPR responds after editor says it has 'lost America's trust' : NPR

    NPR is defending its journalism and integrity after a senior editor wrote an essay accusing it of losing the public's trust. NPR's top news executive defended its journalism and its commitment to ...

  27. An ICU Nurse Explains the Vital Role of Family Caregivers in Loved Ones

    On supporting science journalism. If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the ...

  28. New Public Relations Minor Available Fall 2024

    Social media skills are essential for effective Public Relations, but it's so much more than knowing how to write a good post. Public Relations specialists also need strong skills in writing, multimedia, critical thinking and ethics to be able to shape the image of a company, a cause, a celebrity, an elected official or a public institution such as a university or a government office.

  29. Qatar Responds To Steny Hoyer's Criticism Of Its Mediator Role In Gaza

    The statement also noted that Qatar's role as a mediator between the two parties came at the request of the U.S. in 2012, and that the country has since helped produce meaningful result, including a deal earlier in this crisis that secured the release of 100 hostages. ... hard-hitting investigations into critical issues facing our country ...