JOURNALISM LIBRARY BLOG HAS MOVED
The Journalism Library Blog has MOVED! This site is no longer being updated as of July 2009. Come find us at our new location:
https://blogs.cul.columbia.edu/journalism
See you there!
The Journalism Library Blog has MOVED! This site is no longer being updated as of July 2009. Come find us at our new location:
https://blogs.cul.columbia.edu/journalism
See you there!
World Wide Web is a composite collection of content created and hosted on the internet by millions of organizations and individuals. In order to effectively evaluate information that you find on the internet, consider the following criteria:
Authorship -
Currency -
Objectivity -
Coverage -
Accuracy/Verifiability -
If you need help in evaluating a particular internet resource, please stop by the Journalism Library or contact any of the libraries on campus for assistance!
The PhD/Spencer Fellows Orientation 2008 library presentation is now available for viewing online - click on the presentation link below to relive the fun and get all of the research and information links!
The Institute for the Future of the Book (if:book) yesterday introduced a new electronic scholarly publishing project focused on media studies. Dubbed MediaCommons, the project is described as “a wide-ranging scholarly network … in which folks working in media studies can write, publish, review, and discuss, in forms ranging from the blog to the monograph, from the purely textual to the multi-mediated, with all manner of degrees in between.”
Among the possible “nodes” in this network will be electronic monographs, casebooks, journals, reference works, and forums. The announcement with more details — including the structural and intellectual reasons behind if:book’s choice of media studies for this scholarly publishing project — is at: http://www.futureofthebook.org/blog/archives/2006/07/introducing_mediacommons_or_ti.html
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