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in title, tags, annotations or urlWhat changed my mind about the Fourth of July - chicagotribune.com - 25 views
13 Ways to Get More Pinterest Followers | Search Engine Journal - 57 views
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13 Ways to Get More Pinterest Followers | Search Engine Journal http://t.co/QAWhj7nZ
Directory of Open Access Journal - 51 views
13 Must-Have Gadgets and Apps for Educators -- THE Journal - 9 views
Cut and Paste Reportage: The Rise of "Whatever Journalism" | text2cloud - 64 views
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What is plagiarism? A case study of a news story that keeps growing as the headlines change--racism, whites only screening, outrage--even though each story is simply a rewriting of a summary of a letter to the editor. The problem, ultimately, isn't the technology; it's the generation of readers and writers who prefer outrage to curiosity.
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interesting article about writing
Research in Learning Technology - 92 views
4 ways journalism educators are using Storify as a teaching tool | Poynter. - 121 views
Teaching and Learning About Journalism - NYTimes.com - 40 views
BBC Academy - Journalism - Skills - 32 views
Cool Tools: The Best Magazine Articles Ever - 103 views
Not an Upgrade - an Upheaval -by Clay Shirky - 0 views
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The hard truth about the future of journalism is that nobody knows for sure what will happen; the current system is so brittle, and the alternatives are so speculative, that there's no hope for a simple and orderly transition from State A to State B. Chaos is our lot; the best we can do is identify the various forces at work shaping various possible futures. Two of the most important are the changing natures of the public, and of subsidy.
The Trouble With Twitter - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views
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To those who Twitter, the reporter who investigates a story before offering it to the public must also seem tediously ruminant. On Twitter, the notes become the story, devoid of even five minutes of reflection on the writer's way to the computer. I can see that there are times —an airplane landing in the Hudson, a presidential election in Iran—when this type of impromptu journalism becomes a necessity, and an exciting one at that. Luckily, reporters still exist to make sense of information bytes and expand upon them for readers—but for how much longer? I worry that microblogging cheats my students out of their trump card: a mindful attention to the subject in front of them, so that they can capture its sights and sounds, its smells and tactile qualities, to share with readers. How can Twittering stories from laptops and phones possibly replace the attentive journalist who tucks a digital recorder artfully under a notepad, pencil behind one ear, and gives full attention to the subject at hand?
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I went home after the lecture and—hypocritically, I admit—updated my Facebook status and my blog to declare how much I despise Twitter.
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Twitter serves as a source of links to longer news stories.
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Which is one of its main uses in journalism. As Jay Rosen (@jayrosennyu) and others have put it, through services like Twitter and, indeed, Diigo we edit the web for one another. We can see it as acting as human filters, intelligent gatherers and sifters of information for the various networks in which we are nodes.
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Language Learning & Technology - 1 views
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