citizen media

Recent resources tagged with citizen media.

Citizen Journalists at ELI 2008

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Citizen Journalists at ELI 2008 (ID: ELI08199)
Author(s):W. Gardner Campbell (University of Mary Washington), Cyprien P. Lomas (The University of British Columbia), Patricia A. McGee (University of Texas at San Antonio), Deborah Keyek-Franssen (University of Colorado at Boulder), and Liv Gjestvang (The Ohio State University)
Origin:Presented at ELI Meetings (02/20/2008)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Citizen journalism refers to a wide range of activities in which everyday people contribute to information or commentary about news events. The practice epitomizes the belief that the experiences of people personally involved with an issue present a different -- and often more complete -- picture of events than can be derived from the perspective of an outsider.

At the ELI Annual Meeting in San Antonio, ELI put this innovation into practice, arming a team of five "citizen journalists" with video cameras to capture important themes that emerged during the event. The team -- Gardner Campbell, Cyprien Lomas, Patricia McGee, Deborah Keyek-Franssen, and Liv Gjestvang -- shot footage from the event as well as participant interviews. This final video summary, created with the help of Instructional Technology graduate students from the University of Texas-San Antonio, was presented on the final day of the meeting.

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Online gaming: Moral panic in Singapore

Created by Catherine Howell (University of Cambridge) on January 25, 2007

During my recent stay in Singapore, I was reminded yet again of the ways in which the use of new technologies tends to highlight differences in national and social values. Like Australia, Singapore is currently beset by a moral panic surrounding young people’s use of online gaming. But the Singaporean response has differed significantly from that of its Pacific neighbour.

In December 2006, the local Singapore newspaper, the Straits Times, reported that a teenager had been arrested and sentenced to early military service for illegally accessing a neighbour’s unsecured wireless network. The boy’s parents, concerned by their son’s moodiness and declining academic performance, had decided that he was spending far too much time on gaming. Enough was enough: they unplugged the household modem. The boy’s response was to take his laptop outside one evening, wandering round the neighbourhood until he found an unsecured wireless network to tap into. There he was discovered by a neighbour, who confronted him and then called the police after the boy allegedly became aggressive. Then on January 17 2007, the newspaper ran a follow-up story: ‘Is there a gaming addict in your home’? The way in which one family’s issue was used to feed existing concerns about online gaming in Singapore, and to create an impression of gaming as a runaway social issue, was telling.