Keeping an eye on blogs, citizen media,citizen journalism, citizen reporters and anything about technology that's news for the news business since 2002. Acting locally in Chicago, thinking globally.
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Can 'Citizen Journalists' Really Produce Readable Content?
In 1945 when the Hutchins Report came out, one of its recommendation was to move toward a professionalization of journalism. Too many reporters were just people from any walk of life who wrote about what they saw. The report urged colleges to set up J schools and to work to get reporters to be professionals.
Today, how many reporters come from any walk of life but the college-educated, skewed toward upper middle class (think of some of the J schools, if only to consider what it costs to become a college-educated journalist--at Medill or Columbia University??) So now, journalists do lack a diversity and no longer represent wide swaths of the public.
Enter "citizen reporters" that toggle the wisdom of the Hutchins report, and you have a unsettled journalism and news community.
Steve Outing writes about this issue and offers suggestions and a good analysis of existing efforts--except he has left out citj efforts that don't originate in the states, like Ohmynews. Can 'Citizen Journalists' Really Produce Readable Content?
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