NETWORKED JOURNALISM,
AL-JAZEERA ENGLISH
AND NEW MEDIA PEDAGOGY
Matt J. Duffy, PhD Presentation for AUSACE Conference, Kuwait, October 2010
What is Networked Journalism?
“Networked journalism takes into account the collaborative nature of
journalism now: professionals and amateurs working together to get the
real story, linking to each other across brands and old boundaries to
share facts, questions, answers, ideas, perspectives. It recognizes the
complex relationships that will make news. And
it focuses on the process more than the product.”
Jeff Jarvis, 2006New Media ExpertAuthor of “What Would Google Do?”
Examples of Networked Journalism
Blogs (add pictures of logos from “Little Green Footballs” and
“Talking Point Memo”)
Micro-blogs (add logo of Twitter)
Social Media sites (add logo of Facebook)
User-generated video (add logo of YouTube and CNN’s iReport)
Ushahidi Maps (add a snapshot of the Haiti Ushahidi map)
Crowd-sourcing (add logo of ProPublica’s ShovelWatch”)
Three Reasons to Embrace Networked Journalism
Beckett (2010) argues that networked journalism creates value
for journalism in three ways.
1. Foments editorial diversity, creating more substantial and varied
news reports.
2. Produces connectivity and interactivity by distributing news in
different ways.
3. Enhances relevance of news reports by relating
audiences and subjects to create new editorial and
ethical relationship to the news.
Charlie Beckett, Director, POLIS
Duffy’s Fourth Reason: Increasing Trust
Recent polls show that consumers trust the news less and less
Networked journalism embraces connecting the audience to the
source of information
What NYU professor Jay Rosen calls “ethic of
the link.”
Therefore,
4. Networked journalism helps increase trust.
Jay Rosen, Professor of JournalismNew York University
How does AL-Jazeera English use Networked Journalism?
The Niemen Journalism Lab noted in a report that Al-Jazeera
English appeared to embrace “networked journalism”
Researcher conducted a qualitative review to analyze its
practice
Conducted in late May by closely examining FB pages,
Twitter feeds, and Web site.
Qualitative Review (1/4)
Facebook – Main page has 70,000 “fans”
Lots of posts, but little engagement
Audiences really just engaging with each other
Only useful in “networked journalism” sense if staff is monitoring the
conversation
Facebook program pages – Riz Khan (interviewer) and Listening
Post (media criticism show)
Far more engagement
Audience invited to submit questions for guests, etc.
Audience suggests ideas for reportsRiz Khan, Reporter and Interviewer
Qualitative Review (2/4)
Al-Jazeera has 28,000 followers
Follows only 28 users
Not really engaged, just using Twitter as way to
disseminate the news
Compare to Atlanta Journal-Constitution
13,000 followers
Follows 2,500 users
Often asks users for help covering a story
Probably gathers news tips from its follows
Qualitative Review (3/4)
Al-Jazeera’s website doesn’t allow comments on its news articles Unlike NYTimes.com, WashingtonPost.com
Only solicits opinions from readers on one part of Web site
Separate “blog” section written by correspondents does allow for
comments
Qualitative Review (4/4)
Ushahidi Map of “War on Gaza”
More than 400 reports from Dec 2008-Jan 2009
While it looks impressive, most (if not all) of the reports of violence didn’t
come from inside Gaza
Rather, observers entered in reports of violence that they read or heard
about through the media
Conclusion
Some networked journalism Asking for feedback from audience on FB and blogs War on Gaza site
Areas for improvement Allow comments on its news stories Embed links on news stories to sources of information Embrace user-generated video Acknowledge that it’s reading comments for audience Engage with Twitter, follow users Ushahidi maps should focus on user-generated reports The Al-Jazeera Labs department (developer of “War on Gaza” map) could
be more focused on creating applications that encourage collaboration to cover the news.
How to Teach Networked Journalism
Explain the tenets of NJ
As an assignment, tell the students to work in groups and analyze a
news outlet.
Tell them to check Web site, Twitter, FB and
other outlets to find signs of networked
journalism
Ask them:
How is the outlet doing networked journalism well?
Where is it missing the mark?
In what new way can this outlet practice networked journalism?
The End
Matt J. Duffy, PhDAssistant ProfessorZayed UniversityAbu Dhabi
Email: [email protected]
Presentation is available at www.mattjduffy.com