Author Archives: Dave Poulson

Knight Center researchers publish study on media and environmental citizenship

Knight Center Research Director Bruno Takahashi and doctoral students Ran Duan and Tony Van Witsen, recently published the study “Revisiting environmental citizenship: The role of information capital and media use” in the journal Environment & Behavior.
The study examines the contextual and individual factors that influence environmental citizenship across nations. The results show that  at the individual level,  media use,  environmental concern,  and postmaterialism positively predict environmental citizenship.
At the country level, the study found  a stronger media effect in countries with less developed media systems, a finding opposite to the original assumption made by the researchers. The researchers surmise that this could be because less developed media systems are more centralized.
That could lead to more powerful agenda setting, including environmental agendas. It is also possible that more developed media systems promote consumerism more widely, as opposed to environmental messages.
The study was co-authored by Edson Tandoc Jr., assistant professor at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

 

Losing the stake in stakeholder

PoulsonTeachAhhh…sweet vindication.
A perk editors enjoy is enforcing pet language peeves.  Sure, there are grammar guidelines, punctuation rules and proper word use that are generally accepted practices.
But then there are those innocent words and phrases that unreasonably drive editors around the bend. For me, one of those words – and there are perhaps too many – is stakeholder.
This is a significant problem in my role as the editor of the Knight Center’s Great Lakes Echo environmental news service. Government agencies, nonprofit groups, lawyers and others affiliated with environmental issues are enthralled with what has become to mean anyone with a stake in those issues.
Me? Nothing gives me greater pleasure than excising stakeholder from copy. “The only stakeholder is a vampire killer’s assistant,” I tell reporters.
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Alum now editing at the Weather Channel

James Crugnale

James Crugnale


Knight Center alum James Crugnale recently landed a job as an editor at the Weather Channel in New York City.
He helps edit the science section of Weather.com which has expanded beyond its coverage of the forecast.
“I’ll be helping out on stories about space, nature, cool new discoveries, mysteries of the planet, the environment and health,” Crugnale said.  “Besides lists and
slideshows, I’ll be working on long-form stories and thoroughly reported science pieces.”
The Weather Channel made a serious investment in original video, journalism, and
photo content in 2013 and its digital news offering has been greatly bolstered, he
said.
Crugnale graduated with a masters degree from Michigan State University’s School
of Journalism with a specialization in environmental journalism in 2009. Previously he worked as a blogger/reporter for Mediaite and The Wrap.

National Geographic editor is 2015 fall commencement speaker

Screen Shot 2015-12-07 at 12.48.46 PMNational Geographic editor and Michigan State University alum Susan Goldberg is the university’s fall commencement speaker.
MSU School of Journalism students will meet with her from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Dec. 18, at the university’s College of Communication Arts and Sciences building. To attend, RSVP by Dec. 11 at tinyurl.com/susangoldberg.
Goldberg, who graduated from the MSU School of Journalism in 1984, is also editorial director for all National Geographic Partners.