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传播学案例集锦

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51#
发表于 2013-4-23 12:34:20 | 只看该作者
【案例】

于建嵘
北斗是定位系统。应给救灾部队配上卫星电话。

@浩正刘臻
转发:【鸡毛信】央视连线进入五龙乡的解放军某旅,该旅政委说由于通信不畅,采取了“鸡毛信”的方法:由1个军官2个士兵为单位从震区向外徒步送信!咱们牛逼哄哄的北斗那玩意到底有用没用啊?如果面对美帝强大电磁干扰和空袭情况下该咋办啊?欢迎愤愤们来喷!@于建嵘
@纪许光
http://t.cn/zT652HO








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#反钓鱼防欺诈#是时候和虚假中奖说再见了。查看详情!





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楚留香_保利城:那么多年过去,装备还是那么落后。 (20秒前)

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国民革命军第十八集团军:北斗终端,有短报文功能,可发100多个汉字,老于不知道吧?@于建嵘
(30秒前)

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心理专家666://@于建嵘: 北斗是定位系统。应给救灾部队配上卫星电话。 (40秒前)

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阿Don的一些事一些情:艰苦奋斗精神//@于建嵘:北斗是定位系统。应给救灾部队配上卫星电话。 (40秒前)

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崔小平律师://@于建嵘:北斗是定位系统。应给救灾部队配上卫星电话。 (40秒前)

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蓝天夜游神://@于建嵘: 北斗是定位系统。应给救灾部队配上卫星电话。 (50秒前)

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飞行员X:于老师,北斗是可以发短信的,虽然不能实时通话,但是短信也可以传递信息! (50秒前)

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Metlife十二日尧:北斗不是说带短信功能吗?! (2分鐘前)

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北极圈2011:难道抗日战争时缴获的无线电台都不能用了吗? (2分鐘前)

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冬阳夏溪:现在科技这么发达,怎么还用原始社会的通信方式呢,国家应该考虑考虑吧。 (2分鐘前)

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52#
发表于 2013-5-25 16:38:04 | 只看该作者
【案例】

陈永东
A(Acknowledging,感谢),B(Brief,信念),C(Confidence,信心)……Y(Yes,赞同),Z(Zest,极大的生活乐趣)!对了,各位公司或个人名字缩写的联想可以参考这个!

@新浪江苏
#午后正能量#【26个字母的正能量】积极的想法是成功的一半,26个字母也能给你带来正能量!你记下了么?

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53#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-6-13 23:44:03 | 只看该作者
【案例】

@芮必峰
【传播学的视野】传播学的视野——读E·M·罗杰斯《传播学史》札记  20多年前接触传播学至今,心里始终有个疑问:传播学究竟是一门怎样的学问?一方面,老师和教科书告诉我们,传播学是一(详见长微博) ... http://t.cn/zHRswv8 (分享自 @长微博工具




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54#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-7-4 13:05:57 | 只看该作者
【案例】
广电小当家
【干货分享】美国三大电视网的战略差异//@君兮无言://@小博amigo: //@彭侃THU: 学习。

@清华史安斌
美国晚间电视新闻受众的平均年龄为53岁,三大电视网和有线新闻台共同寻找21世纪电视新闻新模式,吸引不同层面的受众:CNN引入明星主播,强化访谈和评论;NBC主打新闻杂志; PBS继续强化其”精英“的定位。”目标受众导向“的模式成为电视新闻变革的方向,以受众决定新闻形式和品类http://t.cn/zQhLUkn

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55#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-7-13 11:34:06 | 只看该作者
【案例】
一张图告诉你,现代人的社交注定灭亡
发布:2013-06-28 15:32:48作者:经济之声

【一张图告诉你,现代人的社交注定灭亡】许多年后,你还会记得,家人团聚的温馨晚餐吗? 还会记得,和老友约会相见的乐趣吗? 还会记得,陪孩子玩时他最天真可爱的笑颜吗?美国一家网站用23照片证明,移动互联网将会毁掉这一切,到那时,记忆碎片不再,万事皆为虚无。你,在图中吗?


http://society.kankanews.com/radio/2013-06-28/1971035.shtml



56#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-7-13 19:05:25 | 只看该作者
【案例】
石河子大学熊建军
//@刘海龙: 在学术机构不能独立的情况下,大致只能为政府服务,这是制度设计使然。不独传播研究如此,多数社会科学都是这样,也不能把板子全打在传播研究上。相比之下,中国的新闻研究做得更糟。这种制度下,只能依赖非常脆弱的研究者个体的道德操守。

@传媒大狼孩
在美国,传播效果研究的很重要的一部分是用来分析选民的态度以及选票的走向。他们的总统是需要努力拉票的,也是需要公关的,所以需要这些研究。而中国了,在政治上,传播学有多少研究是致力于民主或者说出于民主需要?@传播小王子 @范以锦@郭庆光_人语天声 @传媒老王 @刘海龙 @张志安 @谭天论道

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刘海龙
在学术机构不能独立的情况下,大致只能为政府服务,这是制度设计使然。不独传播研究如此,多数社会科学都是这样,也不能把板子全打在传播研究上。相比之下,中国的新闻研究做得更糟。这种制度下,只能依赖非常脆弱的研究者个体的道德操守。
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57#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-7-30 09:45:13 | 只看该作者
【案例】

@武大沈阳
【微博意见领袖行为分析】在《两岸传媒》发的一篇小文章,我们团队新闻院的硕士研究生 杨郡媚所作。分析了200多位意见领袖近两年半的情况,近期我们扩大了研究范围,准备对更多的账号作进一步分析。




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58#
 楼主| 发表于 2013-8-19 23:03:05 | 只看该作者
【案例】

新闻界杂志社
//@清华史安斌: 对传播学的学科地位和学术共识展开争论,本身就是避免其不断被边缘化的重要举措!这篇回应文章主要从学科规范和学术共识来阐述传播学的重要地位,有理有据,但缺少从教育和人才培养的角度强力回应南加大院长的疑虑,这可能是纯学者与像南加大院长这样的跨界人士之间

@贾文山CM
这是美国国家传播学会对南加州大学传播学院院长对传播领域批评文章的回应。http://t.cn/zQrnob8

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59#
发表于 2013-8-19 23:08:48 | 只看该作者
【案例】Another View on Communication Scholarship
August 13, 2013

ByNancy Kidd and Trevor Parry-Giles

As the scholarly society dedicated to serving the nation’s communication scholars, teachers, and practitioners, the National Communication Association (NCA) took a special interest in Ernest Wilson's essay,
"Communication Scholars Need to Communicate,"
as well as the comments elicited by Wilson’s piece. Wilson’s lament has sparked interesting debate and discussion not only among those in our discipline, but also among administrators, faculty, and students throughout higher education. Wilson’s central claims, while provocative, are decidedly at odds with what we know to be the nature, relevance and rigor of the wide range of communication scholarship. A corrective vision of the discipline is, therefore, necessary.

The Coherent Core of Communication

What Wilson believes about the discipline’s core is, quite frankly, unclear from his piece. On several occasions in the early part of his commentary, he issues a call for a carefully defined distinctive disciplinary core, only to later enumerate what he says is indeed a core of the discipline. In any case, it seems a cogent summary may be useful.

Rooted firmly in the classical imperative of understanding the power of speech to sway public audiences, and in the contemporary imperative of understanding the power of mediated messages to move millions, communication scholars are engaged in rigorous, sustained research that appreciates the role and influence of communication across all aspects of public and private life. Free of a stultifying adherence to methodological or theoretical orthodoxies, communication scholars and teachers embrace the ubiquity of communication and work to explain, understand, and analyze it.

Communication scholars are also mindful of the pedagogical core of the discipline — the inherent civic value of speech to meaningful citizenship — which emerged from the democratic impulse embodied in 19th- and 20th-century progressivism. As we pursue our research and teaching, we remember the words of the ancient Athenian orator and rhetorician, Isocrates: "Because there has been implanted in us the power to persuade each other and to make clear to each other whatever we desire, not only have we escaped the life of wild beasts, but we have come together and founded cities and made laws and invented arts."

Publicly Engaged Communication Scholars

Beyond the confines of the academy, and contrary to Wilson’s assertions about the lack of relevance of much research, communication scholars bring their discipline to life with communities of practice across the nation and around the world. These interactions span a multitude of contexts, from the corporate realm to public policy-making to movements for social justice. Such engagement is not confined, as Wilson suggests, to only the scholars at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School. While Wilson’s colleagues are indeed doing good, engaged work, they are not alone. In the next few paragraphs, just a few of the countless, diverse, and illustrative examples of rigorous, engaged communication scholarship are articulated. Communication is ubiquitous, so our communities of practice are far more varied than those of professional schools (law, medicine), and our colleagues around the country actively embrace this breadth of opportunity.

Professor Rebecca Townsend of Manchester Community College was named a 2012 "White House Champion of Change" for her work on transportation planning. With funding from the Federal Transit Administration, Townsend developed an initiative that brings community members from typically underrepresented groups into culturally sensitive, deliberative discussions about transportation needs in the interest of ensuring that planners hear more from transit-dependent residents. Townsend has been asked to discuss this work with many parties involved in transportation policy including the Transportation Research Board, the National Science Foundation, the Open Government Partnership, and legislators at the federal and state levels. Her strategies are being adopted across the country.

Professor Stephen John Hartnett, chair of the department of communication at the University of Colorado at Denver, has a commitment to community-based civic engagement that is reflected in the Prison Justice Project. Through this initiative, students bring communication skills to people in prisons and jails to improve their likelihood of succeeding in both public and private life upon release. Among the activities in this program is a prison workshop focusing on presentational speaking and the publication of
Captured Words/Free Thoughts,
a magazine of writings and images created by inmates. Several people who have participated in this program have productively engaged in post-release activities that incorporate communication skills.

Patrice M. Buzzanell, professor at the Brian Lamb School of Communication at Purdue University and a past president of the International Communication Association, has for many years taught and conducted research in her university’s Engineering Projects in Community Service program. She has led or co-led four service-learning design teams focused on several goals, including encouraging girls’ voices in engineering design and consideration of the field as a career possibility; engaging middle-school students in nanotechnology; promoting community environmental education and sustainability; and creating and maintaining global partnerships for water-energy-education systems in rural Ghana.

A past president of our association, H. Dan O’Hair, who is the interim senior vice provost and dean of the College of Communication and Information at the University of Kentucky, leads a large team of engaged scholars by example. His National Science Foundation-supported work focuses on hurricane warnings and involves close partnerships with the National Center for Atmospheric Research, the National Hurricane Center, local emergency managers, and broadcasters in Miami and Houston. O’Hair has been asked to present his findings to members of Congress and key staffers from most of the government agencies involved in risk management, and his work has been influential in policy decisions.

Applied research of this kind is not new to the discipline. Nearly 30 years ago, University of Kentucky Professor Lewis Donohew pioneered the field of health communication by applying behavioral science research and technology to the development of drug prevention messages that targeted thrill-seekers.

Relevance and Rigor

Wilson argues that much communication scholarship is not sufficiently relevant to society, coherent or rigorous. We contend, based on the examples above and many others, that there is, in fact, a large body of existing communication scholarship that refutes this claim. Research that lacks rigor or relevance is simply not supported by major funders like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and NSF, nor is it engaged by policy makers in Congress and beyond. All of the examples cited above are meaningful instances of communication scholars and teachers pursuing relevant, effective, coherent programs for the betterment of their students, their communities, and society at large.

Another unsubstantiated assertion in Wilson's piece is that there is a failure of communication as a discipline to communicate well with other disciplines, and that this leads to a lack of interdisciplinary recognition. Communication scholarship is indeed widely recognized by interdisciplinary academic organizations as a crucial component of their scholarly efforts. The American Academy of Arts & Sciences, for example, recently released its congressionally commissioned report, "The Heart of the Matter: The Humanities and Social Sciences for a Vibrant, Competitive, and Secure Nation," which prominently recognizes the value and relevance of communication skills as both central to a liberal education and desirable for employers and employees in the expanding global marketplace. The commission also "calls for a national commitment to building critical intercultural skills at every stage of the education system," skills that undeniably are rooted in an enhanced appreciation of intercultural communication.

The National Academies of Science recently announced its second Arthur M. Sackler Colloquium on "The Science of Science Communication," which will feature several communication scholars, including Dietram Scheufele (University of Wisconsin) and Edward Maibach (George Mason University). And the American Council of Learned Societies has announced that among the recipients of its highly competitive Public Fellows Program is Margaret H. Kunde, a newly minted Ph.D. in communication studies from the University of Minnesota.

Sadly, Wilson was not more rigorous in developing his commentary on the state of the communication discipline. He states that he has tried to be a good student of communication, but he clearly still has more to learn. While we appreciate the fine work at USC that Wilson touts, we encourage him to expand his focus beyond the walls of his own institution.

Can our discipline do even better? Of course we can — for thousands of years, scholars of communication have evolved and adapted in response to changing social and technological needs. Despite Wilson’s dismal prognostication about the discipline, communication scholars frequently work with communities of practice across an array of the human experience, boldly bringing with them insights, knowledge, and rigorous engagement that are at the center of modern intellectual life and purposeful action.





BIO
Nancy Kidd is executive director of the National Communication Association, where Trevor Parry-Giles is associate director for academic and professional affairs.









60#
 楼主| 发表于 2014-2-10 22:13:11 | 只看该作者
【案例】
青年参考王波
编码解码,当年为考试而读,如今多少人还记得。。。

@政见CNPolitics
#政见学人#英国文化理论家,社会学家斯图亚特·霍尔于2月10日去世,享年82岁。霍尔是英国文化研究领域的杰出代表,他的编码/解码等理论被学界熟知。霍尔曾任伯明翰大学当代文化研究中心主任和英国社会学协会主席。在去年,传播与批判/文化研究杂志中刊登了对霍尔的访谈。http://t.cn/8FCqSwZ

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