Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-Pacific

This reflective article describes and analyses the use of Facebook and Twitter over a five-year timeframe by two journalism academics in Australia, whose industry and research expertise are in the Asia-Pacific. The use of social media has made possible for journalism educators an active electronic s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nasya Bahfen, Alexandra Wake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pacific Media Centre 2015-10-01
Series:Pacific Journalism Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/127
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spelling doaj-7bc47f8ad9c840889727dd129408a56c2020-11-25T02:42:41ZengPacific Media CentrePacific Journalism Review1023-94992324-20352015-10-0121210.24135/pjr.v21i2.127Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-PacificNasya BahfenAlexandra WakeThis reflective article describes and analyses the use of Facebook and Twitter over a five-year timeframe by two journalism academics in Australia, whose industry and research expertise are in the Asia-Pacific. The use of social media has made possible for journalism educators an active electronic space in which to conduct discourse on development, publication, networking and career opportunities with students and alumni. This discourse and the educators, students or alumni who engage in it reflect the nature of the global media industry as inherently network-based (in contrast to employment approaches found in other industries such as graduate programmes in commerce, law or engineering). Because it operates using electronic communication, such discourse also reflects the industry which journalism graduates seek to enter as not being geographically confined to one city or state within Australia—instead, reflecting a rapid rate of movement between cities and states, or between countries, or between urban and rural locations. Using active participant observation, the researchers argue that social media can be used to develop and retain links with their students and alumni, by making use of the social connectedness that is coming to characterise communication. The researchers were early adopters of Facebook and Twitter communication with students. The article argues that social media has been beneficial in the conduct of these activities while exploring the use of social networking in relation to the politics of ‘friending’ or ‘following’ and ‘being followed’ by students.https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/127alumniAustraliajournalism academicsjournalism educationdigital mediaresearch
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nasya Bahfen
Alexandra Wake
spellingShingle Nasya Bahfen
Alexandra Wake
Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-Pacific
Pacific Journalism Review
alumni
Australia
journalism academics
journalism education
digital media
research
author_facet Nasya Bahfen
Alexandra Wake
author_sort Nasya Bahfen
title Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-Pacific
title_short Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-Pacific
title_full Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-Pacific
title_fullStr Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-Pacific
title_full_unstemmed Tweeting, friending, reporting: Social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the Asia-Pacific
title_sort tweeting, friending, reporting: social media use among journalism academics, students and graduates in the asia-pacific
publisher Pacific Media Centre
series Pacific Journalism Review
issn 1023-9499
2324-2035
publishDate 2015-10-01
description This reflective article describes and analyses the use of Facebook and Twitter over a five-year timeframe by two journalism academics in Australia, whose industry and research expertise are in the Asia-Pacific. The use of social media has made possible for journalism educators an active electronic space in which to conduct discourse on development, publication, networking and career opportunities with students and alumni. This discourse and the educators, students or alumni who engage in it reflect the nature of the global media industry as inherently network-based (in contrast to employment approaches found in other industries such as graduate programmes in commerce, law or engineering). Because it operates using electronic communication, such discourse also reflects the industry which journalism graduates seek to enter as not being geographically confined to one city or state within Australia—instead, reflecting a rapid rate of movement between cities and states, or between countries, or between urban and rural locations. Using active participant observation, the researchers argue that social media can be used to develop and retain links with their students and alumni, by making use of the social connectedness that is coming to characterise communication. The researchers were early adopters of Facebook and Twitter communication with students. The article argues that social media has been beneficial in the conduct of these activities while exploring the use of social networking in relation to the politics of ‘friending’ or ‘following’ and ‘being followed’ by students.
topic alumni
Australia
journalism academics
journalism education
digital media
research
url https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/pacific-journalism-review/article/view/127
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