Many educators are looking for ways to include things such as wikis, interest groups, blogs, and second life as part of their curriculum. Does including the latest social networking fad or web 2.0...
Via Ana Cristina Pratas
Share ideas that matter on the social web and experience
the benefits of curating the world's best content.
I don't have a Facebook, a Twitter or a LinkedIn account
|
|
Rescooped by Jack Patterson from Digital Delights onto Social media and education |
Many educators are looking for ways to include things such as wikis, interest groups, blogs, and second life as part of their curriculum. Does including the latest social networking fad or web 2.0...
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Your new post is loading...
I selected this piece by Ross Dawson because he is one of my trusted sources and he continues to shed light on the future of journalism.
He sets the tone by stating:
"There are eight aspects of news that its audience will value, be prepared to pay for, and that will provide a viable financial foundation for quality journalism in the emerging media environment."
The article delves into each of these. Here's what particularly caught my attention.
**Timeliness is becoming ever-more important in a world ravenous for immediacy.
**Investigative reporting will retain a central role in society. Increasingly this will involve data analysis, and often harnessing information and insights provided by many citizens.
**Insight, through adding context, analysis, and synthesis to news, is where some of the greatest value lies, particularly in business and political journalism.
**Those who can provide this insight, be they domain experts or journalists with the requisite breadth of experience, will always have a bright future.
**The skills required to present information, ideas and data in a visual and highly aesthetic format will shift far closer to the heart of what it is to be a journalist.
Ross also points out the trend towards personalized and local news delivery and suggests that journalists will need to understand how social curation works. And for me, this is the key to the overlap between the established profession of journalism and the still developing discipline of content curation.
I see clear parallels between the two and believe these are at least partly demonstrated by the points I have chosen to quote and particularly the smaller portions I bolded. I look forward to clear and growing collaborations between journalists and curators. We have much to learn from each other.
Curated by Jan Gordon covering "Content Curation, Social Media and Beyond"
Read full article here: [http://bit.ly/zn9rpM] Via janlgordon
nuphero's comment,
March 2, 2012 6:32 AM
Hi there
When I go to full article link, the site says it must provide account and password to login. Does this content commercial or this site is private? Thanks you.
janlgordon's comment,
March 2, 2012 11:36 AM
Nuphero
Hi There, I just checked this link and it's something new, it wasn't like this before. I'll try to find you another link. You might also google I tried to get it on Google and it comes up the same way. So sorry, about this. Will have to check into this and see what's going on......
nuphero's comment,
March 3, 2012 1:26 PM
Hi janlgordon
Thanks for your respond. After some tricks with Google, thanks to some keywords of your curated version, I now can read the original post. So don't worry Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
No
|



Your new post is loading...