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HERE ARE 8 IDEAS FOR HELPING JOURNALISM STUDENTS DEVELOP Harassment laws (or dimensions of industry codes) have become increasingly used against journalists — but journalists are also increasingly having to report harassment under the same laws.Media law classes on privacy, harassment, and malicious communications can address the law both as something to consider when reporting, and something that the reporter and their employer can draw THE 7 HABITS OF SUCCESSFUL JOURNALISTS: HOW DO YOU DEVELOPSEE MORE ON ONLINEJOURNALISMBLOG.COM HOW TO: UNCOVER EXCEL DATA ONLY REVEALED BY A DROP-DOWNSEE MORE ON ONLINEJOURNALISMBLOG.COM A SAMPLE DIRTY DATASET FOR TRYING OUT GOOGLE REFINE A sample dirty dataset for trying out Google Refine. I’ve created this spreadsheet of ‘dirty data ‘ to demonstrate some typical problems that data cleaning tools and techniques can be used for: Different entries that mean the same thing, either because they are lacking pieces of information, or have been mistyped, or inconsistently formatted. SEO IN HEADLINES: HOW THE COLON BECAME KING Someone, somewhere, ought to be doing some research on the increasing use of the colon in news article headlines online. That simple character has already become the go-to option when it comes to fixing your headline for search engine optimisation (SEO). One of the 'rules' of SEO is to make sure you get key words in your headline. A SHOULD JOURNALISTS LEARN HOW TO CODE? THEY ALREADY DO So Olga Khazan had a bad experience with learning how to code (more on that later) and Steve Buttry can think of 6 reasons why journalists should learn how to do just that.The zombie debate ‘Should journalists learn to code?’ stiffens and groans once more, so I thought I’d prod it a little.. Journalists already learn to code. In the UK they learn shorthand – possibly the most esoteric HOW TO: FIX SPREADSHEET DATES THAT ARE IN BOTH US AND UK It's quite common when working with Google Sheets to have data set to US format (Month-Day-Year) without realising it. This is because Google will format your dates based on what 'locale' or language you have set - and the default is US English. Instructions on how to change that are here - IRISH MAIL ON SUNDAY The Irish Mail on Sunday has finally responded to complaints about a story it published this week based on the words of a blogging female air traffic controller: “The male chauvinist pigs of air traffic control” “Melanie Schregardus,” the article says, “claims she was forced to endure a torrent of sexist abuse when she and a handful of colleagues first broke into profession CITIZEN JOURNALISM AND INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING: FROM The myriad numbers of citizen journalism sites that pop up everyday seem to suggest that the media can fulfill the purposes of democracy by merely offering their audiences a forum to express themselves. However, to tap into its full potential, participatory journalism should try to do something in addition to what mainstream reportingalready does
HERE ARE THE ANGLES JOURNALISTS USE MOST OFTEN TO TELL THE Data angle 1: Scale — “This is how big a problem is”. The pandemic has been full of stories about scale: this New York Times piece outlines the scale of the death toll. Perhaps the most common type of story found in data is the scale story: these are stories that identify a big problem, or the size of an issue which has becometopical.
HERE ARE 8 IDEAS FOR HELPING JOURNALISM STUDENTS DEVELOP Harassment laws (or dimensions of industry codes) have become increasingly used against journalists — but journalists are also increasingly having to report harassment under the same laws.Media law classes on privacy, harassment, and malicious communications can address the law both as something to consider when reporting, and something that the reporter and their employer can draw THE 7 HABITS OF SUCCESSFUL JOURNALISTS: HOW DO YOU DEVELOPSEE MORE ON ONLINEJOURNALISMBLOG.COM HOW TO: UNCOVER EXCEL DATA ONLY REVEALED BY A DROP-DOWNSEE MORE ON ONLINEJOURNALISMBLOG.COM A SAMPLE DIRTY DATASET FOR TRYING OUT GOOGLE REFINE A sample dirty dataset for trying out Google Refine. I’ve created this spreadsheet of ‘dirty data ‘ to demonstrate some typical problems that data cleaning tools and techniques can be used for: Different entries that mean the same thing, either because they are lacking pieces of information, or have been mistyped, or inconsistently formatted. SEO IN HEADLINES: HOW THE COLON BECAME KING Someone, somewhere, ought to be doing some research on the increasing use of the colon in news article headlines online. That simple character has already become the go-to option when it comes to fixing your headline for search engine optimisation (SEO). One of the 'rules' of SEO is to make sure you get key words in your headline. A SHOULD JOURNALISTS LEARN HOW TO CODE? THEY ALREADY DO So Olga Khazan had a bad experience with learning how to code (more on that later) and Steve Buttry can think of 6 reasons why journalists should learn how to do just that.The zombie debate ‘Should journalists learn to code?’ stiffens and groans once more, so I thought I’d prod it a little.. Journalists already learn to code. In the UK they learn shorthand – possibly the most esoteric HOW TO: FIX SPREADSHEET DATES THAT ARE IN BOTH US AND UK It's quite common when working with Google Sheets to have data set to US format (Month-Day-Year) without realising it. This is because Google will format your dates based on what 'locale' or language you have set - and the default is US English. Instructions on how to change that are here - IRISH MAIL ON SUNDAY The Irish Mail on Sunday has finally responded to complaints about a story it published this week based on the words of a blogging female air traffic controller: “The male chauvinist pigs of air traffic control” “Melanie Schregardus,” the article says, “claims she was forced to endure a torrent of sexist abuse when she and a handful of colleagues first broke into profession CITIZEN JOURNALISM AND INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING: FROM The myriad numbers of citizen journalism sites that pop up everyday seem to suggest that the media can fulfill the purposes of democracy by merely offering their audiences a forum to express themselves. However, to tap into its full potential, participatory journalism should try to do something in addition to what mainstream reportingalready does
HERE ARE 8 IDEAS FOR HELPING JOURNALISM STUDENTS DEVELOP Harassment laws (or dimensions of industry codes) have become increasingly used against journalists — but journalists are also increasingly having to report harassment under the same laws.Media law classes on privacy, harassment, and malicious communications can address the law both as something to consider when reporting, and something that the reporter and their employer can draw HERE’S HOW ONE JOURNALIST USED ALL SORTS OF COMPANY Eariler this week I came across a fantastic example of using company accounts in journalism: Guardian media editor Jim Waterson's article on how the family that founded the sex-worker social media platform OnlyFans "extracted tens of millions of pounds from its parent company in the last year". The article uses so many different techniques that THE 5 STAGES OF A LONGFORM STORY This year I’ve been working with my MA Data Journalism and MA Multiplatform and Mobile Journalism students on techniques for telling longer form stories. In this post I explain how a consideration of story structure can help you clarify the sources that you will need to talk to in order to gather the elements needed for an effectivelongform story.
41 KEY MOMENTS IN THE HISTORY OF ONLINE JOURNALISM {NOW 45 With the launch of the iPad and Kindle, news organisations turned their attention to longer form writing, while there was a rising awareness of the way that digital technology could be used to track our activities. 2011: The New York Times introduces a ‘leaky’ or ‘metered’ paywall.In contrast to a ‘hard’ paywall, it allowed readers to access some articles for HOW TO: FIX SPREADSHEET DATES THAT ARE IN BOTH US AND UK It's quite common when working with Google Sheets to have data set to US format (Month-Day-Year) without realising it. This is because Google will format your dates based on what 'locale' or language you have set - and the default is US English. Instructions on how to change that are here - SNAPCHAT FOR JOURNALISTS: A GREAT BIG GUIDE A few weeks ago I started writing a post about Snapchat for journalists. It ended up so long that I decided to turn it into a small ebook. But I thought I'd split that original draft - just under half the length of the finished ebook - across a number of posts hereon OJB.
ONLINE SECURITY FOR JOURNALISTS: NEVER ASSUME YOU’RE 10 thoughts on “ Online security for journalists: never assume you’re secure ” kld February 6, 2013 at 6:54 pm. AES.io is another online encryption service that can be used for semi-secure/private communication. It is definitely more secure than email, but of course it cannot be completely secure, for many reasons that this article correctly points out. WHAT TO DO IF YOUR FOI IS REFUSED UNDER ‘COMMERCIAL If you're using FOI to ask questions about public services involving private companies it's quite common to be refused on the basis of 'commercial sensitivity' or 'breach of confidence'. In fact, I'd suggest anticipating this in your initial request - or at the very least pushing for details when you receive any initial refusal. Bothexemptions are
IRISH MAIL ON SUNDAY The Irish Mail on Sunday has finally responded to complaints about a story it published this week based on the words of a blogging female air traffic controller: “The male chauvinist pigs of air traffic control” “Melanie Schregardus,” the article says, “claims she was forced to endure a torrent of sexist abuse when she and a handful of colleagues first broke into profession PORTUGUES | ONLINE JOURNALISM BLOG Posts about portugues written by beatrizfarrugiafoina. Comment, analysis and links covering online journalism and online news, citizen journalism, blogging, vlogging, photoblogging, podcasts, vodcasts, interactive storytelling, publishing, Computer Assisted Reporting, User Generated Content, searching and all things internet. ONLINE JOURNALISM BLOG Eariler this week I came across a fantastic example of using company accounts in journalism: Guardian media editor Jim Waterson‘s article on how the family that founded the sex-worker social media platform OnlyFans “extracted tens of millions of pounds from its parent company in the last year”.. The article uses so many different techniques that I put together a Twitter thread reverse HERE ARE THE ANGLES JOURNALISTS USE MOST OFTEN TO TELL THE Data angle 1: Scale — “This is how big a problem is”. The pandemic has been full of stories about scale: this New York Times piece outlines the scale of the death toll. Perhaps the most common type of story found in data is the scale story: these are stories that identify a big problem, or the size of an issue which has becometopical.
HOW TO: UNCOVER EXCEL DATA ONLY REVEALED BY A DROP-DOWNSEE MORE ON ONLINEJOURNALISMBLOG.COM A SAMPLE DIRTY DATASET FOR TRYING OUT GOOGLE REFINE A sample dirty dataset for trying out Google Refine. I’ve created this spreadsheet of ‘dirty data ‘ to demonstrate some typical problems that data cleaning tools and techniques can be used for: Different entries that mean the same thing, either because they are lacking pieces of information, or have been mistyped, or inconsistently formatted. HOW TO: CALCULATE OR FIND RANKINGS IN SPREADSHEETS USING The ebook version of this tutorial includes a dataset and exercise to employ these techniques.. Right at the start of my book on Excel for journalists I talk about sorting data to find out which values come top or bottom. However, there is a family of functions which will give you a lot more control in finding out not just who is top or bottom, but the rank of any value in any series of values. HOW TO: FIX SPREADSHEET DATES THAT ARE IN BOTH US AND UK It's quite common when working with Google Sheets to have data set to US format (Month-Day-Year) without realising it. This is because Google will format your dates based on what 'locale' or language you have set - and the default is US English. Instructions on how to change that are here - ONLINE SECURITY FOR JOURNALISTS: NEVER ASSUME YOU’RE 10 thoughts on “ Online security for journalists: never assume you’re secure ” kld February 6, 2013 at 6:54 pm. AES.io is another online encryption service that can be used for semi-secure/private communication. It is definitely more secure than email, but of course it cannot be completely secure, for many reasons that this article correctly points out. SHOULD JOURNALISTS LEARN HOW TO CODE? THEY ALREADY DO So Olga Khazan had a bad experience with learning how to code (more on that later) and Steve Buttry can think of 6 reasons why journalists should learn how to do just that.The zombie debate ‘Should journalists learn to code?’ stiffens and groans once more, so I thought I’d prod it a little.. Journalists already learn to code. In the UK they learn shorthand – possibly the most esoteric CITIZEN JOURNALISM AND INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING: FROM The myriad numbers of citizen journalism sites that pop up everyday seem to suggest that the media can fulfill the purposes of democracy by merely offering their audiences a forum to express themselves. However, to tap into its full potential, participatory journalism should try to do something in addition to what mainstream reportingalready does
COPYING TEXT FROM A DAILY MAIL ARTICLE? YOU’LL GET A URL 34 thoughts on “ Copying text from a Daily Mail article? You’ll get a URL at the end {updated} ” Laura Oliver July 24, 2009 at 4:05 pm. I suppose it encourages proper attribution. Let’s hope they proffer the same courtesy if reference content from others. ONLINE JOURNALISM BLOG Eariler this week I came across a fantastic example of using company accounts in journalism: Guardian media editor Jim Waterson‘s article on how the family that founded the sex-worker social media platform OnlyFans “extracted tens of millions of pounds from its parent company in the last year”.. The article uses so many different techniques that I put together a Twitter thread reverse HERE ARE THE ANGLES JOURNALISTS USE MOST OFTEN TO TELL THE Data angle 1: Scale — “This is how big a problem is”. The pandemic has been full of stories about scale: this New York Times piece outlines the scale of the death toll. Perhaps the most common type of story found in data is the scale story: these are stories that identify a big problem, or the size of an issue which has becometopical.
HOW TO: UNCOVER EXCEL DATA ONLY REVEALED BY A DROP-DOWNSEE MORE ON ONLINEJOURNALISMBLOG.COM A SAMPLE DIRTY DATASET FOR TRYING OUT GOOGLE REFINE A sample dirty dataset for trying out Google Refine. I’ve created this spreadsheet of ‘dirty data ‘ to demonstrate some typical problems that data cleaning tools and techniques can be used for: Different entries that mean the same thing, either because they are lacking pieces of information, or have been mistyped, or inconsistently formatted. HOW TO: CALCULATE OR FIND RANKINGS IN SPREADSHEETS USING The ebook version of this tutorial includes a dataset and exercise to employ these techniques.. Right at the start of my book on Excel for journalists I talk about sorting data to find out which values come top or bottom. However, there is a family of functions which will give you a lot more control in finding out not just who is top or bottom, but the rank of any value in any series of values. HOW TO: FIX SPREADSHEET DATES THAT ARE IN BOTH US AND UK It's quite common when working with Google Sheets to have data set to US format (Month-Day-Year) without realising it. This is because Google will format your dates based on what 'locale' or language you have set - and the default is US English. Instructions on how to change that are here - ONLINE SECURITY FOR JOURNALISTS: NEVER ASSUME YOU’RE 10 thoughts on “ Online security for journalists: never assume you’re secure ” kld February 6, 2013 at 6:54 pm. AES.io is another online encryption service that can be used for semi-secure/private communication. It is definitely more secure than email, but of course it cannot be completely secure, for many reasons that this article correctly points out. SHOULD JOURNALISTS LEARN HOW TO CODE? THEY ALREADY DO So Olga Khazan had a bad experience with learning how to code (more on that later) and Steve Buttry can think of 6 reasons why journalists should learn how to do just that.The zombie debate ‘Should journalists learn to code?’ stiffens and groans once more, so I thought I’d prod it a little.. Journalists already learn to code. In the UK they learn shorthand – possibly the most esoteric CITIZEN JOURNALISM AND INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING: FROM The myriad numbers of citizen journalism sites that pop up everyday seem to suggest that the media can fulfill the purposes of democracy by merely offering their audiences a forum to express themselves. However, to tap into its full potential, participatory journalism should try to do something in addition to what mainstream reportingalready does
COPYING TEXT FROM A DAILY MAIL ARTICLE? YOU’LL GET A URL 34 thoughts on “ Copying text from a Daily Mail article? You’ll get a URL at the end {updated} ” Laura Oliver July 24, 2009 at 4:05 pm. I suppose it encourages proper attribution. Let’s hope they proffer the same courtesy if reference content from others. JUNE | 2021 | ONLINE JOURNALISM BLOG 1 post published by beatrizfarrugiafoina during June 2021 ABOUT OJB | ONLINE JOURNALISM BLOG From 2010-2015 he was a Visiting Professor in Online Journalism at City University London and from 2009-2014 he ran Help Me Investigate, an award-winning platform for collaborative investigative journalism. Since 2015 he has worked with the BBC England and BBC Shared DataUnits based in
HERE ARE THE ANGLES JOURNALISTS USE MOST OFTEN TO TELL THE Data angle 1: Scale — “This is how big a problem is”. The pandemic has been full of stories about scale: this New York Times piece outlines the scale of the death toll. Perhaps the most common type of story found in data is the scale story: these are stories that identify a big problem, or the size of an issue which has becometopical.
THE 7 HABITS OF SUCCESSFUL JOURNALISTS “Don’t say you want to see the world and then complain if you’re sent to Djibouti.” One of the greatest appeals of journalism — the fact that you might be reporting on one thing today and a completely different thing tomorrow — is also often the source of aspiring journalists’ most common complaint: that a subject is not interesting.. The complaint is a symptom of bad habits: a THE 5 STAGES OF A LONGFORM STORY This year I’ve been working with my MA Data Journalism and MA Multiplatform and Mobile Journalism students on techniques for telling longer form stories. In this post I explain how a consideration of story structure can help you clarify the sources that you will need to talk to in order to gather the elements needed for an effectivelongform story.
HOW TO: CALCULATE OR FIND RANKINGS IN SPREADSHEETS USING The ebook version of this tutorial includes a dataset and exercise to employ these techniques.. Right at the start of my book on Excel for journalists I talk about sorting data to find out which values come top or bottom. However, there is a family of functions which will give you a lot more control in finding out not just who is top or bottom, but the rank of any value in any series of values. SEO IN HEADLINES: HOW THE COLON BECAME KING Someone, somewhere, ought to be doing some research on the increasing use of the colon in news article headlines online. That simple character has already become the go-to option when it comes to fixing your headline for search engine optimisation (SEO). One of the 'rules' of SEO is to make sure you get key words in your headline. A WHY DO PEOPLE READ ONLINE NEWS? (RESEARCH SUMMARY Ioana Epure summarises “Harnessing the potential of online news: Suggestions from a study on the relationship between online news advantages and its post-adoption consequences”, a study by An Nguyen (University of Stirling) In the last decade journalism has entered a stage in which news organisations are less reluctant to invest in online operations, but An 7 LAWS JOURNALISTS NOW NEED TO KNOW 6. Harassment and stalking. The same chapter includes a section on the use of The Protection From Harrassment Act 1997 to prevent journalists on reporting on particular individuals: “Defences to a charge of harassment include if you were undertaking actions for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime, or that your conduct was “reasonable” in the particular circumstances. WHAT TO DO IF YOUR FOI IS REFUSED UNDER ‘COMMERCIAL If you're using FOI to ask questions about public services involving private companies it's quite common to be refused on the basis of 'commercial sensitivity' or 'breach of confidence'. In fact, I'd suggest anticipating this in your initial request - or at the very least pushing for details when you receive any initial refusal. Bothexemptions are
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FAQ: DATA JOURNALISM AND GATEKEEPINGLeave a reply
Image by CLEVER FRANKE (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) _The latest frequently asked questionspost
__comes in response to a PhD student looking at data journalism and gatekeeping. Here are the questions and my answers:_ HOW DO YOU THINK THE ROLE OF JOURNALISTS HAS CHANGED DURING THE 21ST CENTURY, ESPECIALLY WITH THE DATA EXPLOSION AND THE RISE OF MISINFORMATION AND DISINFORMATION? Journalists and news organisations have both been forced to adapt by the increased COMPETITION, and the changing nature of the world that we report on (i.e. the fact that it is more data-driven). Many publishers tell me they want to give their journalists data skills because they feel that they need to ‘up their game’ in order to compete with new entrants to the sector, and to create DISTINCTIVE content in an environment where celebrities, politicians, sportspeople etc. all publish direct to audiences rather than via media. Continue reading → This entry was posted in faq, online journalism
and
tagged data journalism, faq
, gatekeeping
, misinformation
, trust
, verification
on April 11, 2020
by Paul Bradshaw
.
HOW TO PREVENT CONFIRMATION BIAS AFFECTING YOUR JOURNALISMLeave a reply
A couple weeks ago I published a guide to cognitive biases forjournalists
.
I saved perhaps the biggest one of all — CONFIRMATION BIAS — for a post all of its own. It might be one of the best-known biases, but for that very reason it can be easy to underestimate. Here, then, is what you need to know — and what to do to reduce it. WHAT IS CONFIRMATION BIAS — AND HOW DOES IT AFFECT JOURNALISM? Confirmation bias is the tendency to SEEK OUT — OR MORE EASILY _BELIEVE_ OR _RECALL_ — INFORMATION THAT CONFIRMS OUR EXISTINGBELIEFS.
It leads us to make judgements that are not based on an equal assessment of all the evidence, but only that evidence we have CHERRY PICKED, REMEMBERED OR ATTRIBUTED MORE CREDIBILITY TO. Confirmation bias affects journalists in at least three ways: Continuereading →
This entry was posted in online journalismand
tagged cognitive bias, confirmation
bias , data
dredging ,
Jonathan Haidt ,
p-hacking , thinking fast and thinking slowon April 7, 2020
by Paul Bradshaw
.
A JOURNALIST’S GUIDE TO COGNITIVE BIAS (AND HOW TO AVOID IT)4 Replies
Image from Design Hacks For the last few years I’ve been teaching my journalism students a dedicated class on COGNITIVE BIAS — common ways of thinking that lead journalists (and audiences and sources) to make avoidablemistakes.
Journalism is particularly vulnerable to cognitive bias: we regularly make DECISIONS AT SPEED; we have to deal with TOO MUCH INFORMATION — or extract meaning where there isn’t enough of it. Each of those situations makes us vulnerable to poor decision-making — and many of the rules that we adhere to as journalists are designed to addressthat
.
Some cognitive biases — such as GROUPTHINK, PREJUDICE, and CONFIRMATION BIAS (covered in a second post here) — are well-known, but many others are not (there are over 180 ofthem ). That
includes BIAS BLIND SPOT : the tendency to see how biases affect other people, but not yourself. So if you were thinking “this doesn’t apply to me”, read on for a guide to some of the cognitive biases likely to affect journalists — from being manipulated by sources to being bad editors of our own copy — and WHAT TO DO TO TACKLE THEM. Continue reading → This entry was posted in online journalismand
tagged anchoring bias, anchoring
effect ,
cognitive bias ,
Emily Kasriel ,
fading effect bias
, framing
effect , ikea
effect , negativity
bias ,
out-group homogeneity bias,
plan continuation bias,
solutions journalism, sunk
cost fallacy
, uniqueness
bias on March
24, 2020
by Paul Bradshaw
.
TEACHING JOURNALISTS HOW TO FIND STORIES IN COMPANY ACCOUNTS: THE STORY TREASURE HUNTLeave a reply
“These are not the treasures we’re looking for..” image byStavos
(CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 )
Last week I shared some of the tips from a class for students on my MA in Multiplatform and MobileJournalism
and MA
in Data Journalism
on HOW TO
FIND STORIES IN COMPANY ACCOUNTS. It’s a challenging subject to teach — but for the last couple of years I’ve used an approach that seems to work especially well: a STORY TREASURE HUNT. Here’s how it works. Continue reading → This entry was posted in online journalismand
tagged company accounts, pedagogy
, teaching
, treasure hunt
on March 10,
2020
by Paul Bradshaw
.
HERE ARE 9 WAYS TO FIND STORIES IN COMPANY ACCOUNTS (AND ONLY THREE OF THEM INVOLVE NUMBERS)2 Replies
This week I’m teaching students on my MA in Multiplatform andMobile Journalism
and MA
in Data Journalism
HOW TO
FIND STORIES IN COMPANY ACCOUNTS — so I thought it would be a good time to share just some of the ways that you can use these public documents for story leads and ideas. Here, then, are just 9 ways to find stories in company accounts — and most of them don’t involve any numbers at all. Continue reading→
This entry was posted in online journalismand
tagged company accounts, emphasis of
matter ,
facebook , going
concern , tax
on March 4, 2020
by Paul Bradshaw
.
EMPATHY AS AN INVESTIGATIVE TOOL: HOW TO MAP SYSTEMS TO COME UP WITHSTORY IDEAS
Leave a reply
By starting from one person you can start to identify the different parts of the systems that affect your topic — and useful story leadsand ideas
For the last couple of weeks I’ve been helping students on my MA in Multiplatform and Mobile Journalism and MA in Data Journalismcome up
with STORY IDEAS FOR SPECIALIST REPORTING AND INVESTIGATIONS. Part of the process involves an exercise around scoping out a particular subject or system you are interested in — for example, the housing system, or ‘dark kitchens’, the Oscars, or air pollution — and identifying the gaps in your knowledge that can lead to stories. It’s an exercise where EMPATHY plays a central role. Here’s how the process works — and why empathy is so important to it. Continue reading → This entry was posted in online journalismand
tagged empathy ,
investigations ,
kumu , network analysis, planning
, story ideas
on February 19,
2020
by Paul Bradshaw
.
IT’S NOT ALL ABOUT NUMBERS: 6 WAYS THAT DATA CAN GIVE YOU ASTORY LEAD
Leave a reply
It’s a common misconception of data journalism that the resulting stories will be all about numbers. In fact, the DATA IS OFTEN JUST A STEPPING STONE — it might take you to interviews, or help you find case studies; it might give you the spark for a feature idea without asingle number.
Recently I was asked about these alternatives to ‘number stories’ by one of my part time PGCert Data Journalismstudents
— so here are the 6 tips I shared with them: Continue reading → This entry was posted in data journalism, online
journalism
and
tagged Carmen Aguilar Garcia,
explainers , Rob
England on
February 5, 2020
by Paul Bradshaw
.
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