13 Media School faculty, students participate in AEJMC conference
The Media School Report
August 12, 2024
Media School faculty and graduate students participated in the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication’s 107th Annual Conference, which took place in Philadelphia from Aug. 8-11.
The following attendees participated in the conference by presenting their research, participating in and moderating panel sessions, and more.
Faculty
Discussant, Public Relations Division
Discussant, Law and Policy Division
“Long Hours, Lots of Freedom: Nonprofit Investigative Journalists’ Diverging Views of Professional Practices and Values”
Panelist, “A Perfect Fit: Fashion Media and American Mass Communication Scholarship”
Panelist, “Sex and The Press: Directions for Research, Policy, and Practice”
“‘I’m Sick of Woke Indoctrination Masquerading as Education’: Race-based ‘Indoctrination’ in Education as Republican Campaign Strategy”
“Analyzing 42 Years of U.S. Newspaper Coverage of Sepsis and Septic Shock”
Elected member, AEJMC Standing Research Committee
Discussant, AEJMC-Knudson Latin America Prize Award Recipients
“A Cross-national Replication of Perceived News Media Importance: Further Validating and Expanding a Measure for Understanding Valuations of Normative Journalism Roles”
“Affinities for competing knowledge systems: Perceived News Media Importance and Social Media Importance across cultural contexts”
“A Clear and Present Danger to Democracy: Threats Against U.S. Journalists And Their Consequences”
Students
“An Analysis of Social Media Discourse Regarding Bullying Dynamics on Big Brother Naija All-Stars Season”
“Evaluating Fake News Regulation in Southeast Asia: Comparative Analysis of Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand”
“A Cross-national Replication of Perceived News Media Importance: Further Validating and Expanding a Measure for Understanding Valuations of Normative Journalism Roles”
“Affinities for competing knowledge systems: Perceived News Media Importance and Social Media Importance across cultural contexts”
“Examining News Media Use and Trust in Political Institutions in Kenya: The Moderating Role of Perceived Corruption and Political Freedom”
“Long Hours, Lots of Freedom: Nonprofit Investigative Journalists’ Diverging Views of Professional Practices and Values”
“Roles, Responsibilities, And Resources for a Media Literacy Policy: Perceptions of Senegalese Media Professionals”
“Gendered Violence, Precarious Labor and Solidarity – Notes from a Journalistic Field”