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| Cox
Center Activities Sept. 1, 1998 to Aug. 31, 1999 (Academic Year 1998-99) |
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Russian
Student Journalist Participates in Seminar Ms. Burlakova is editor-in-chief of Gaudeamus, a bi-weekly newspaper for young people in the St. Petersburg area. She was the first international editor to attend the annual Management Seminar for College Newspaper Editors, now in its fourth year. The seminar covered such topics as motivating college staff members, managing peers, conflict management, time management, business and personnel law, libel, copyright and other legal topics.
Prior to attending the workshop, Ms. Burlakova held a three-week internship
position at Atlanta Press, a weekly newspaper which concentrates on politics
and entertainment. Her hosts in Atlanta included journalists from the
Fulton County Daily Report and The Atlanta Journal Constitution. Dr. Melinda Hawley, associate director of the Cox Institute and director of Public Service and Outreach of the Grady College, organized the trip and internship for Ms. Burlakova, whom she met in April of 1999 in St. Petersburg. Dr. Hawley was in Russia to participate in the Cox Center evaluation of the Knight International Press Fellowship Program, which sent six trainers to Russia since 1994.
Pacific
Workshop Planned at
New Orleans Meeting Dr. Richstad, who lives in Seattle, has spent much of his career running training and research projects in the Pacific. He has represented the Cox Center in workshops conducted in the Pacific during the 1990s. Dr. Becker also released the results of the 1998 Annual
Surveys of Journalism & Mass Communication while at the AEJMC
conference in New Orleans. The Annual Surveys are conducted in the Cox
Center but are funded separately from other Center activities.
Center Conducts
Evaluation Project During the course of the year, Center staff interviewed journalists and
other media professionals in 11 countries where ICFJ trainers have worked
since 1994.
Indonesian
Journalist Meets Students and Faculty
Research
Team on Trade Meets in San Francisco Dr. Becker has been involved in the international trade project since 1993. Previous research has identified forces resulting in the localization of the coverage of such important international stories as trade disputes. Local reporters are often less prepared to cover such complicated stories than specialists working for national and international media organizations. The research team outlined the design of the next phase of the project, which will involve interviews with journalists and economic specialists and focus groups with ordinary citizens. The work will be completed by early in 2000.
Latvian Newspaper
Professionals Learn about Readership Research In a three-day workshop sponsored by the Latvian Media Professionals
Training Centre, Riga, and the James M. Cox Jr. Center
for International Mass Communication Training and Research at the University
of Georgia, the participants discussed the techniques of conducting focus
groups and surveys of their readers. They learned about everything from
the art of asking questions to the special techniques of scientific sampling.
Cox
Center Director Meets Students at New Swiss University
The students were enrolled in a course on journalism as practiced in western societies and are part of a new program in communication studies at the two-year-old Italian language university in the southern Swiss city. Prof. Becker had responsibility for coverage of the journalism in the United States and other English speaking countries in the semester-long course. The students have heard or will hear from other experts about journalism as practiced in France, Germany, Italy and Switzerland. Approximately 20 students participated in the two-week session led by Prof. Becker. The lectures focused on the legal basis of journalism in the United States and Australia, Canada and the UK, the coverage by the U.S. media of the Watergate and recent Clinton scandals, journalism education in the United States and other English language countries, and technological change and its likely impact on the practice of journalism. Approximately 600 students are enrolled in the new Swiss university,
which has specialties in only two areas, communication science and economics.
Scientists
and Journalists Join Workshop in Quito Approximately 20 journalists, journalism students and scientists attended
the one-day workshop, held in conjunction with the Third International
Symposium on Sustainable Mountain Development December 9-14 in Quito.
The workshop for journalism was on the first day of the symposium and
was designed to set the stage for interaction for journalists and scientists
during the entire symposium.
Cox Center Visiting Scholars Complete Stay Two mass communication scholars from the Federal Republic of Germany
completed their visits to the Cox Center in November and returned to Europe.
Student Paper Award Established
Japanese Scholar Talks to Doctoral Students Prof. Youichi Ito of Keio University in Japan told graduate students
at the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication that it is possible
to develop research strategies to compare the degree of political development
in countries around the world. Prof. Ito's visit to the Grady College
was sponsored by the Cox Center and graduate students in the Grady College.
Fijian
Island Journalists participating in an indigenous language workshop learned
about the importance of language on preserving culture and about how to
use their media to inform their audience about important events in the
community.
Producer Speaks on International Program
Romanian Faculty Member Visits Cox Center
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