This edition of AsiaPacific Media Educator features, along with other articles and reports (pp.60-105), a debate on the direction of journalism education in Australia. It revolves around the question of how academics teaching and researching journalism should deal with contemporary developments in philosophy and literary criticism -- particularly those that may be gathered under the rubric of postmodernism and what is presumed to be its home in the humanities -- cultural and media studies
The Pacific Media Centre—Te Amokura—which publishes Pacific Journalism Review has always been concer...
Good journalism remains central to the needs of the Pacific and her people. Good journalism educatio...
When practitioners and journalism educators gather for a talkfest, we hear the usual complaints that...
This edition of AsiaPacific Media Educator features, along with other articles and reports (pp.60-10...
Debates over the most appropriate way in which journalism education might be delivered continues una...
This essay first appeared in Quadrant, May 1998. It revisits the intellectual conflict between media...
Media and communication research has closely followed the profound transformations undergone by glob...
The relationship between journalism and cultural studies in the tertiary education system in Austral...
The Asia-Pacific MediaEducator is a new venture aimed at providing a forum for media educators acros...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. ...
Where is journalism taught in Australia, who teaches it, how many students do they teach; and what f...
We have survived this far. Judging from the range of research papers and commentaries submitted for ...
This article reviews recent debate about the performance and impact of the Excellence for Research i...
Journalism studies is currently undergoing one of the periodic renovations that is characteristic of...
The last issue of APME (January-June 1998) featured a section on the pedagogical conflict between cu...
The Pacific Media Centre—Te Amokura—which publishes Pacific Journalism Review has always been concer...
Good journalism remains central to the needs of the Pacific and her people. Good journalism educatio...
When practitioners and journalism educators gather for a talkfest, we hear the usual complaints that...
This edition of AsiaPacific Media Educator features, along with other articles and reports (pp.60-10...
Debates over the most appropriate way in which journalism education might be delivered continues una...
This essay first appeared in Quadrant, May 1998. It revisits the intellectual conflict between media...
Media and communication research has closely followed the profound transformations undergone by glob...
The relationship between journalism and cultural studies in the tertiary education system in Austral...
The Asia-Pacific MediaEducator is a new venture aimed at providing a forum for media educators acros...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. ...
Where is journalism taught in Australia, who teaches it, how many students do they teach; and what f...
We have survived this far. Judging from the range of research papers and commentaries submitted for ...
This article reviews recent debate about the performance and impact of the Excellence for Research i...
Journalism studies is currently undergoing one of the periodic renovations that is characteristic of...
The last issue of APME (January-June 1998) featured a section on the pedagogical conflict between cu...
The Pacific Media Centre—Te Amokura—which publishes Pacific Journalism Review has always been concer...
Good journalism remains central to the needs of the Pacific and her people. Good journalism educatio...
When practitioners and journalism educators gather for a talkfest, we hear the usual complaints that...