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Showing posts from February, 2025

News Values: Blog task

  News Values: Blog task Read  Media Factsheet 76: News Values  and complete the following questions/tasks.  Our  Media Factsheet archive is available here  - you'll need your Greenford Google login to access. 1) What example news story does the Factsheet use to illustrate Galtung and Ruge's News Values? Why is it an appropriate example of a news story likely to gain prominent coverage? The earthquake in San Francisco that kills two hundred people. This story is likely to gain prominent coverage because it fits several of Galtung and Ruge’s new values. For example  Continuity- earthquake aftermath abs recovery efforts will be continue in the news. 2) What is gatekeeping? Gatekeeping is the process by which journalists and editors decide what news is published and how it is presented. 3) What are the six ways bias can be created in news? Bias through selection and  omission Bias through placement Bias by headline Bias by photos, captions, and ...

The Future of Journalism

  1) Why does Clay Shirky argue that 'accountability journalism' is so important and what example does he give of this? Because it holds powerful individuals and institutions responsible for their actions. He highlights investigative journalism as a crucial component of democracy. 2) What does Shirky say about the relationship between newspapers and advertisers? Which websites does he mention as having replaced major revenue-generators for newspapers (e.g. jobs, personal ads etc.)? that newspapers traditionally relied on advertisers for revenue. However, with the rise of the internet, businesses have turned to more efficient and targeted online platforms 3) Shirky talks about the 'unbundling of content'. This means people are reading newspapers in a different way. How does he suggest audiences are consuming news stories in the digital age? Shirky suggests that instead of reading full newspapers, people now consume news through social media, blogs, and news aggregator si...

NEWSPAPER NEWS STORY RESEARCH

  WEEK 1 Copy the headline, date and link. Ukraine claims Russian drone hits CHERNOBYL power plant: Shelter protecting the world from radiation is damaged - as IAEA monitor for signs of deadly leak          -  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14396969/Russian-drone-hits-CHERNOBYL-power-plant-Shelter-protecting-world-radiation-damaged-IAEA-monitor-signs-deadly-leak.html         07:28, 14 February 2025  |  UPDATED:   01:57, 15 February 2025 Briefly summarise the story in a sentence or two: is  this is an example of  hard news  or  soft news? Does it reflect the politics or ideological stance of that newspaper/website?           - This story talks about  a Russian drone strike reportedly hit the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, damaging the protective shelter over Reactor 4, which contains radioactive material from the 19...

Blog tasks: The decline in print media

  Part 1: Ofcom report into news consumption Read  this Ofcom report on the consumption of news in the UK  and answer the following questions (bullet points/short answers are fine): 1) Look at the headlines from the report on page 6. Pick three that you think are interesting and bullet point them here. Why did you pick those three in particular?   Different age groups consume news very differently; younger age groups are much more likely to use the internet and social media for news, whereas their older counterparts favour print, radio and TV. Reach of print/online newspapers has seen a decrease from 2020 (47%) to 2022 (38%). The decrease is driven  by decreases in print (online newspaper reach remains steady) which have likely been exacerbated by the pandemic. Five of the top six TV channels (including BBC One which remains the top news source across platforms) saw decreased reach from 2021 among online adults.   I have picked these three because...

Media Paper 2 mock exam - Learner response

  Paper 2 mock exam: Learner response 1) Type up your  feedback  in full (you do not need to write mark/grade if you do not wish to). WWW-solid answers of the key points about each target audiences. EBI- some context about the decline of the print industry. 2) Did you succeed in meeting or exceeding your  target grade  for A Level Media in this paper? If not, how many additional marks do you need to achieve your target grade in Paper 2? These are the grade boundaries we've used, based on real AQA exam grade boundaries (out of 84):   A* = 70; A = 62; B = 51; C = 40; D = 30; E = 20.  no i need another 18 marks to achieve my target grade in paper2. Now  read through the real AQA mark scheme for Paper 2 .  3) Write a  question-by-question analysis  of your performance. For each question, write how many marks you got from the number available and identify any points that you missed by carefully studying the AQA indica...