Antarctica By Gary Braasch• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 Ornithologist Fraser at a diminished Adelie colony on Torgersen Island The disintegrating Müller Ice Shelf, Lallemand Fjord A male Adelie penguin disgorges … Read more
Journalism’s Road to Becoming a Profession By Philip Meyer• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 There are key roles for educators to play in this transformation. Read more
A Government Agency Impedes Access to Information By Joseph A. Davis• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 What right do the public and journalists have to see data about children’s health and the environment? Read more
The Bridge Between the Classroom and Journalism By William F. Woo• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 The purpose of journalism education can’t be addressed without determining why journalists do what they do. Read more
Melding the Competing Demands of Basic Skills and Emerging Issues in Journalism By Paul Grabowicz• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 At Berkeley, a professor is using Weblogs as a new approach to teaching both. Read more
What Should Be Taught in Journalism Schools? By Melvin Mencher• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 An aspiring reporter ‘doesn’t need to learn how—he needs to learn what.’ Read more
The Press Portrayed the Story as Fish vs. Farmers By Michael Milstein• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 But the Klamath River story is a whole lot more complicated than that. Read more
The Worthiness of Bollinger’s Challenge By Geneva Overholser• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 ‘For craft training to be accorded due respect does not mean all else must be shunned.’ Read more
After September 11, Headlines About Air Quality Were Everywhere By Dan Fagin• Journalist’s Trade• December 15, 2002 A reporter explains his misgivings about this complicated story. Read more