This project worked with groups of students who typically apply to tertiary journalism courses. Some students joined focus groups, some completed questionnaires, all had the opportunity to discuss their impressions of journalism and what might attract them to such a course. This research is set against published literature which highlights a gender imbalance in journalism courses but does not address it. The project reveals participants’ perceptions, largely based on the television news they see, determine their consideration of journalism as a career. It provides an insight into how young males view the news and the men who present it
This paper reports on the largest survey of female journalists in the Australian news media. The goa...
Since the first woman was appointed as editor of a major newspaper in New Zealand in the mid 1980s, ...
Abstract: There is a shortage of female sports journalists and a lack of media coverage of women's s...
Australian and New Zealand journalism programmes report a disproportionate number of female students...
Although the proportion of female reporters has increased in almost all regions across the world in ...
In recent years, there has been much discussion about the quality of research published by Australia...
The global trend toward university-based journalism education has led to a growing scrutiny of stude...
The numerical inequality between male and female journalists is increasingly eliminated. However, th...
This research explores gender and gender stereotypes in a local newspaper, focusing on issues such a...
Journalism has practically become a feminine profession across the world. To understand the root of ...
This article reports New Zealand’s performance in the latest, 2010 round of the Global Media Monitor...
New Zealand has had three women prime ministers, and the first country in the world to give women a ...
The media is an important cultural gatekeeper, but not a disinterested one. Inevitably journalists, ...
Public journalism, with its citizen-centred approach, has been positioned as a way of changing journ...
In a time of swift technological changes in the news media, much of journalism education is focused ...
This paper reports on the largest survey of female journalists in the Australian news media. The goa...
Since the first woman was appointed as editor of a major newspaper in New Zealand in the mid 1980s, ...
Abstract: There is a shortage of female sports journalists and a lack of media coverage of women's s...
Australian and New Zealand journalism programmes report a disproportionate number of female students...
Although the proportion of female reporters has increased in almost all regions across the world in ...
In recent years, there has been much discussion about the quality of research published by Australia...
The global trend toward university-based journalism education has led to a growing scrutiny of stude...
The numerical inequality between male and female journalists is increasingly eliminated. However, th...
This research explores gender and gender stereotypes in a local newspaper, focusing on issues such a...
Journalism has practically become a feminine profession across the world. To understand the root of ...
This article reports New Zealand’s performance in the latest, 2010 round of the Global Media Monitor...
New Zealand has had three women prime ministers, and the first country in the world to give women a ...
The media is an important cultural gatekeeper, but not a disinterested one. Inevitably journalists, ...
Public journalism, with its citizen-centred approach, has been positioned as a way of changing journ...
In a time of swift technological changes in the news media, much of journalism education is focused ...
This paper reports on the largest survey of female journalists in the Australian news media. The goa...
Since the first woman was appointed as editor of a major newspaper in New Zealand in the mid 1980s, ...
Abstract: There is a shortage of female sports journalists and a lack of media coverage of women's s...