<p> </p><p><a href="http://cjf-fjc.ca/">The Canadian Journalism Foundation</a> has announced that Tamara Baluja, a national reporter with <em>The Globe and Mail </em>with a special interest in education, is the winner of the <a href="http://cjf-fjc.ca/gregclark">Greg Clark Award</a> for early career journalists.</p>
READ MORE<p>Par Colette Brin - Paru sur <a href="http://www.blogues.ulaval.ca">Contact</a></p>
READ MORE<p><em>In the latest issue of the <a href="http://rrj.ca/rrj2/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Ryerson Review of Journalism</a>, <strong>Matthew Braga</strong> profiles Adam Gopnik and explains why The New Yorker essayist aspires to be the “rococo, Jewish, city-bound, Canadian E.B. White.”</em></p><p> </p>
READ MORE<script src="http://storify.com/projetj/radio-canada-f-35-et-journal-de-montreal.js"></script><noscript>[<a href="http://storify.com/projetj/radio-canada-f-35-et-journal-de-montreal" target="_blank" rel="noopener">View the story "Radio-Canada, F-35 et Journal de Montréal" on Storify</a>]<h1>Radio-Canada, F-35 et Journal de Montréal</h1><h2>Un F-35 attaque la tour de Radio-Canada à Montréal. Ceci n'est pas la réalité, mais un photo-montage du caricaturiste du Journal de Montréal, Baudet.
READ MORE<p>They may work on different mediums, but Rick MacInnes-Rae and Mark Kelley have something in common today, with both of their shows having been cancelled during an employee town hall meeting called in light of CBC’s newly-slashed budget.</p>
READ MORE<p><em>The job of a journalism school includes providing its students with a solid journalistic ethical foundation. <strong>Rhiannon Russell</strong> compares the student ethics codes of institutions across the country—from UBC all the way to King's—and with explanation from directors and professors at some of Canada's most well-known journalism schools, lays out why, when it comes down to it, the rules of the game are the same for everyone, student or not.</em></p><p> </p>
READ MORE<p> </p><p><img alt="" class="imagecache-large inline-image" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/large/images/Screen shot 2012-04-09 at 1.49.10 PM.png" title="" /></p><p>Have you noticed that lately the seemingly-otherwise-intelligent folks whose daily musings populate your Facebook newsfeed are reading a lot about Snooki, Miley Cyrus or other celebrities doing outlandish things?</p><p>A number of “social reader” apps are to thank – or, as it may be, curse – for that.</p>
READ MORE<p><em>Mike Wallace's death at the age of 93 has led many to assess his impact on American journalism. But as <strong>Cecil Rosner</strong> explains, his interviewing style also influenced the course of Canadian investigative journalism, particularly the television variety.</em></p><p> </p><p>While Mike Wallace had a legion of both admirers and detractors, there is little doubt his work exercised an influence over modern Canadian investigative journalism.</p>
READ MORE<p> While Mike Wallace had a legion of both admirers and detractors, there is little doubt his work exercised an influence over modern Canadian investigative journalism.</p>
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