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This work provides journalists with the empirical tools they need to operate in the current reporting climate. It offers ways in which news coverage is expanded and enhanced through the use of qualitative methods developed in the social sciences.
Offers a systematic review of the literature on communication education and instruction. This volume approaches the topic from the perspective that meta-analysis serves as a useful tool for summarizing experiments, and for determining how and why specific teaching and learning experiences have positive student outcomes.
In this examination of the complexity of health-related communication, detailed case studies demonstrate in-depth applications of communication theory in relation to the real situations. With its breadth of coverage and practical approach, it is appropriate for courses addressing the application of communication theory in a health-related context.
Talks both specifically and generally about the theoretical and methodological approaches one can use to study the First Amendment and general Communication Law issues. This book helps graduate students and scholars at various skill levels to think about new approaches to questions about Communication Law.
Offers a set of meta-analyses, covering the breadth of media effects research. Organized by theories, outcomes, and mass media campaigns, the chapters included offer important insights on what social science research reveals about effects. This volume is useful for students, researchers, and graduate students in media effects and media psychology.
This collection explores the use of narratives in the social construction of wellness and illness. The emphasis is on what the process of narrating accomplishes--how it serves in the health communication process where people define themselves and present their social and relational identities.
Intended for students and researchers in broadcast history, this book provides an understanding of the qualitative methodological tools necessary for the study of electronic media history, and illustrates how to find primary sources for electronic media research. Divided into five parts, it provides a broad topical look at history in broadcasting.
This volume studies the explanation of illness in various cultural and social contexts. It is aimed at scholars and practitioners in health communication and health care fields, including nursing, public health, and medicine.
This volume provides case studies of some of the people, groups and classes who are living a disenfranchised existence in the USA. Whether by birth or unfortunate circumstances, they are denied full privileges.
Offers various perspectives relating to the development, effectiveness, and implementation of interactive computing technology for health promotion - programs and interventions aimed at improving various health-related outcomes such as involvement in care, quality of life, adherence, disease management, healthy lifestyle, and more.
Computers have changed the landscape of both gathering and disseminating information throughout the world. This work is designed to show both students and professional journalists which tools are being used on a daily basis by leading news organizations and journalists.
Focusing on the agenda-setting function of the news media from an information processing stand-point, this volume examines how individuals expose themselves to news media content and how this content translates into issue salience.
This study systematically examines empirical strategies for the teaching of media, focusing on 14-16 year-old students. It describes an international project based on research which began in England, and aims to initiate a more fruitful dialogue about educational approaches.
This text emphasizes academic administration, for communication and media administrators. It contains philosophical, theoretical and practical information. It is divided into sections on: background material and specific and programmatic challenges facing administrators.
This volume studies the explanation of illness in various cultural and social contexts. It is aimed at scholars and practitioners in health communication and health care fields, including nursing, public health, and medicine.
An examination of organizations and the communication processes within them. Presenting research conducted by the authors, it explores problems related to task and relational orientations as they relate to organizational structure and function within predominantly African-American organizations.
A study of important issues about sex in advertising. What is it? Does it work? How does it affect individuals and society? Scholars and popular writers answer these questions, covering: gender representation; social effects; subliminal embeds; appeals to the homosexual community; and new media.
Making Media Content: The Influence of Constituency Groups on Mass Media addresses the development of media content and the various factors and constituencies that influence content, such as advertisers, corporate interests, owners, and advocacy groups.
This volume presents an analysis of the children's television community--the organizations, major players, and approaches to programming--and offers an overview of the history, current state, and future of children's TV. The Children¿s Television Community is highly informative for educators, industry professionals, and practitioners in media, developmental psychology, and education.
Considers the use of sex to promote brands, magazines, video games, TV programming, music and movies. Exploring sexual information used in mass media to sell products and programs, this book will be of interest for scholars and students in advertising, marketing, media promotion, persuasion, mass communication & society, and gender studies.
Explores the role of communication in framing and contributing to issues of social justice. This work investigates the theoretical and practical ways in which communication scholarship can enable inclusive and equitable communities within American society. It is useful for undergraduate and graduate courses in communication, journalism, and more.
This volume examines the convergence of biotechnology and communication systems and explores how this convergence directly influences our understanding of the nature of communication. Editor Sandra Braman brings together scholars to examine this convergence in three areas: genetic information and "facticity"; social issues and implications; and the economic and legal issues raised by the production and ownership of information. The work highlights the sophisticated processes taking place as biotechnology and information technology systems continue to evolve. The chapters in this book approach the complex history of this topic and the issues it raises from a number of directions. It begins by examining the shared features and spaces of biotechnology and digital information technologies as meta-technologies--qualitatively distinct from both the tools first used in the premodern era and the industrial technologies that characterized modernity. Next, the book explores what is and is not useful in treating the types of information processed by the two meta-technologies through a shared conceptual lens and looks at issues raised by the ownership of genetic and digital information. The final chapters are concerned with relationships between information and power. Defining a future research agenda for communication scholarship, this work is beneficial to scholars and students in science communication, cultural studies, information technologies, and sociology.
First Published in 1990. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Managing Interpersonal Conflict is a systematic review of conflict research in legal, institutional and relational contexts. Each chapter represents a summary of the existing quantitative social science research using meta-analysis, with contexts ranging from jury selection to peer mediation to homophobia reduction. The contributors provide connections between cutting-edge scholarship about abstract theoretical arguments, the needs of instructional and training pedagogy, and practical applications of information. The meta-analysis approach produces a unique informational resource, offering answers to key research questions addressing conflict.This volume serves as an invaluable resource for studying conflict, mediation, negotiation and facilitation in coursework; implementing and planning training programs; designing interventions; creating workshops; and conducting studies of conflict.
Self Versus Others explores the third-person effect and its role in media as a means of persuasion. This scholarly work synthesizes more than two decades of research on the third-person effect, the process in which individuals do not perceive themselves to be impacted by particular messages¿such as persuaded to engage in risky behaviors or encouraged to be violent¿but they believe others will be.
This collection provides current research in language & social interaction (LSI), including historical & cutting-edge examples. The volume is dedicated to and highlights themes in the work of the late Robert Hopper, an outstanding scholar in communication who pioneered research in Language and Social Interaction (LSI).
A remote island in the South Atlantic, St. Helena, was introduced to live TV for the first time in 1995. Before this, the resident's only televisual experience had been through video. The community is a small homogeneous one which has made it possible fo
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