Journalism Students Don’t Read Newspapers Says QUT Journalism Professor

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Tech Wired has interviewed Professor Alan Knight, you can listen here. It’s all about who you ask when it comes to newspapers dying, especially in Australia. When 200 journalism students were surveyed at Queensland University of Technology asking what their main source of news was, it certainly seemed the case of a dying era for [...]

Journalism Students Don’t Read Newspapers Says QUT Journalism Professor

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2 Responses to “Journalism Students Don’t Read Newspapers Says QUT Journalism Professor”
  1. websinthe says:

    I agree. As much as the medium of paper and ink newspapers is becoming less popular, it is still the best source for news.

    This is especially true for publications like the SMH and the Financial Review. The accountability of print journalists is huge. They don’t always get it right, but the only reason the internet gets it right is because there’s enough small operators out there that someone is bound to be right at some point.

    Until online resources emerge with the same accountability and credibility as newspapers, I’m still only going to trust them so far, and that’s coming from someone who has been labeled a citizen journalist far too many times.

    By the way, nice site revamp.

  2. Many students these days (and I teach in communications) don’t read anything – even their “readings” – so what hope for them to read newspapers? That’s hard work, Alan. It’s a sad state of affairs. They just sit there in class and it seems as though they expect a miracle (i.e., that knowledge will come to them by sitting there). And don’t get me started on essay-writing. Some can’t even get alphabetical referencing correct.

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