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This book looks at how numbers and statistics have been used to underpin quality in news reporting. In doing so, the aim is to challenge some common assumptions about how journalists engage and use statistics in their quest for quality news.
The Communication Capstone: The Communication Inquiry and Theory Experience (CITE) is explicitly designed for graduating seniors in a Communication Capstone course.
This step-by-step introduction to conducting media and communication research offers practical insights along with Arthur Asa Berger's signature lighthearted style to make discussion of qualitative and quantitative methods easy to comprehend.
Using an engaging how-to approach that draws from scholarship, real-life, and popular culture, this textbook offers students practical reasons why they should care about research methods and a guide to actually conducting research themselves.
The Data Journalism Handbook: Towards a Critical Data Practice provides a rich and panoramic introduction to data journalism, combining both critical reflection and practical insight. It offers a diverse collection of perspectives on how data journalism is done around the world and the broader consequences of datafication in the news.
Theoretically grounded and using quantitative data spanning more than 50 years together with qualitative research, this book examines investigative journalism's role in liberal democracies in the past and in the digital age.