Category Archives: Students

 
Journalism and non-journalism students at Michigan State University explore how to better report environmental issues to the public at the Knight Center for Environmental Journalism.
 

Environmental journalism courses can help students meet the School of Journalism’s elective requirements. They can also be used as part of an environmental theme to complete the school’s concentration requirement by combining them with environment-related courses outside the journalism program. See your academic adviser or contact the Knight Center.
 
Non-journalism students interested in environmental issues are encouraged to contact instructors to discuss waiver of pre-requisites. Often a journalism environmental course may meet communication course requirements of other departments.
 

 
Undergraduates are also encouraged to join the student Environmental Journalism Association and write for Great Lakes Echo to gain resume-building experience and clips.
 
Undergraduate students are eligible for several awards and scholarships in environmental journalism.
 
They are encouraged to augment their study with environment classes and programs elsewhere at MSU such as the Residential Initiative on the Study of the Environment.
 
 

EJ students visit Ontario environmental sites

Environmental journalism students at the Canadian customs plaza construction site in Windsor for the Gordie Howe Memorial International Bridge. Image: John Parent, Windsor Detroit Bridge Authority

Environmental journalism students at the Canadian customs plaza construction site in Windsor for the Gordie Howe Memorial International Bridge. Image: John Parent, Windsor Detroit Bridge Authority


Knight Center director Eric Freedman’s environmental reporting class spent two days in Sarnia and Windsor to give students Canadian perspectives on major issues – perspectives that don’t always mirror U.S. concerns – and to generate ideas for stories they’re writing for Great Lakes Echo and in future courses and their careers.
In preparation for the trip, Andrew Hupfeau, the Consulate General’s environmental policy expert in Detroit, came to campus the previous week to background the students on the history of U.S.-Canadian environmental cooperation in the Great Lakes Basin and the Canadian government’s position on key environmental issues. Continue reading

Knight Center researchers publish study about climate change coverage in the Great Lakes

Bruno Takahashi

Bruno Takahashi


Knight Center research director Bruno Takahashi recently co-authored a study in the journal Environmental Communication examining media coverage of climate change in news publications around the Great Lakes region. The study was co-authored with Kanni Huang, a recent Ph.D graduate from MSU; Fred Fico, emeritus professor in the School of Journalism at MSU,; and Dave Poulson, associate director of the Knight Center.
The study, titled Climate change reporting in Great Lakes region newspapers: a comparative study of the use of expert sources, examined the use of expert sources by online news outlets and found that few expert sources were used in the coverage of climate change, compared to non-expert sources such as politicians. In regards to these expert sources, the researchers found that very few skeptics were used in the stories. However, skeptic sources were more prominent in the stories; — in other words, they were featured earlier in stories than sources who believed in climate change. The study results also showed that reporters who cover climate change more frequently tended to use scientific sources more frequently and more prominently than reporters who authored fewer stories on the issue Finally, the study found that Canadian newspapers gave non-science sources significantly greater prominence than did US newspapers.
The study, funded by the National Science Foundation Division of Undergraduate Education, provides evidence about the limited use of skeptic sources in climate change coverage, but also highlights the fact that those sources are more prominent in the same news stories

Knight Center graduate student and faculty present their research at the 2016 AEJMC conference

Ran Duan

Ran Duan


Knight Center doctoral student  Ran Duan  presented a study at the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication examining climate change images in U.S. newspapers.
The study,  titled “A construal-level perspective of climate change images in U.S. print newspapers,”  was co-authored with Knight Center research director  Bruno Takahashi  and Knight Center affiliated faculty member Adam Zwickle.
Continue reading