Tag thesis

ATLAS.ti – The Knowledge Workbench:: ATLAS.ti – The QDA Software.

Qualitative analysis software is all well and good, but can it go to the library and get those last three books I need to finish up my thesis proposal by explaining pattern analysis? I didn’t think so. I’ll download the trial anyway. via stepno.

ATLAS.ti – The Knowledge Workbench:: ATLAS.ti – The QDA Software.

The sky is not falling

From the Columbia Journalism Review comes a short note taking “A Long View on Layoffs.”

For those looking for some comfort in numbers, rest assured that there appear to be plenty of working journalists left around here somewhere. The CJR piece runs down some long-term employment statistics and then turns loose some of Wilson Lowrey’s ideas.

I quote Prof. Lowrey in the lit review to my thesis-in-progress, and I had the pleasure of meeting him last year when he moderated an AEJMC panel that gave me quite a bit of hope for the future.

But on to the blockquote from the CJR story:

“…bloggers are individual workers, while traditional journalists contribute to larger systems. Their competitive relationship, he says, “could benefit audiences and society” by pressuring professional journalists to be more accurate and, in some cases, filling the need for information that either falls outside the bounds of traditional newsgathering or simply slips through cracks caused by downsizing. Unlike the for-profit news outlets on which they depend for original reporting, bloggers are relatively unencumbered by professional media’s overarching “need to attract large audiences and advertisers.” As a result, blogs are free to be specialized, complex, and partisan. They can also stay with stories longer and quote nonelite sources often ignored by their institutional counterparts.”

That’s a great way to say that bloggers operate out in the Long Tail; a great deal of agility comes with that position.

(CJR article via my thesis adviser, appropriately enough.)

Lyn Richards Research World

Her homepage with good sources on qualitative research, NVivo tutorials, list of publications.

Lyn Richards Research World

Handling Qualitative Data: A Practical Guide – Google Book Search

Lyn Richards book. Available at SJSU library.

Handling Qualitative Data: A Practical Guide – Google Book Search

NVivo 7

Qualitative analysis software. Not sure I need it, but worth a look.

NVivo 7

A blog challenge for copy desks – Common Sense Journalism

Doug Fisher wants to see more copy desk blogs. With retorts and refutations, a good example of the back-and-forth that happens when you try to get newsroom folks to blog. via Howard.

A blog challenge for copy desks – Common Sense Journalism

Business News Web Logs: Content Analysis and Survey

A little bit of research on biz blogs at newspapers. Conclusions? There aren’t enough of ‘em, especially at smaller papers.

Business News Web Logs: Content Analysis and Survey

The Plight of Newspaper Bloggers » The Bivings Report

Some basics to watch out for – policy against linking to other publications, the “just another column” syndrome. via Martin.

The Plight of Newspaper Bloggers » The Bivings Report

Myths and Realities of Convergence – Nieman Reports

Randy Covington in the Winter 2006 ‘Goodbye Gutenberg’ issue: “The truth is convergence costs money because usually it requires additional staff and more technology….Convergence needs to be undertaken as a growth strategy, not a cost-cutting measure.”

Myths and Realities of Convergence – Nieman Reports

Tim Porter book excerpt – PressThink

“Good editors are discovering that the traditional, top-down ‘I-paid-my-dues-and now-it’s-your-turn’ style fails to foster the nimble thinking, collaboration and risk-taking newspapers today need”

Tim Porter book excerpt – PressThink