Archive
4 Jul

Shades of language: Looking into Canadian media coverage of Quebec

<p><strong>By Shannon O’Reilly, </strong><strong>for <a href="http://www.magcloud.com/browse/issue/557432"><em>Convergence</em></a></strong></p><p>Pauline Marois hadn’t even been sworn in as Quebec’s new premier before debate began that a move to ensure French as the predominant language would mean a lesser voice for the En­glish speaking population.</p>

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14 Jun

Access granted: AMI makes media available for all Canadians

<p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-medium inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/medium/images/AMI.PNG" title="" /></p>

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7 May

Copy editors: an endangered species?

<p><em>In an era when the Toronto Sun misspells "Correction" in a correction column, is there any hope for a revival of good copyediting?</em></p><p><strong><span style="font-size: 10px;">By Gin Sexsmith, for the<em> Ryerson Review of Journalism</em></span></strong></p>

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11 Apr

Willfully blind: A closer look at the Margaret Wente plagiarism scandal and what it says about The Globe and Mail’s institutional arrogance

<p><strong>By Brittany Devenyi, Gianluca Inglesi, and Rhiannon Russell</strong></p><p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-medium inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/medium/images/RRJ-small_1.PNG" title="" /></p>

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11 Apr

What to expect in RRJ’s final summer issue

<p><strong>By Rhiannon Russell</strong></p><p><img align="left" alt="" class="imagecache-medium inline-image" hspace="10" src="http://j-source.ca/sites/www.j-source.ca/files/imagecache/medium/images/RRJ-small.PNG" title="" />When I walked into the school as a green, wannabe reporter and set eyes on the <em>Ryerson Review of Journalism</em>, I was already planning to be on that masthead.</p>

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11 Apr

Ryerson Review of Journalism defends its Wentegate analysis

<p><strong>By Brittany Devenyi and Rhiannon Russell</strong></p>

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30 Jan

High school student paper publishes despite extracurricular cuts: Q&A with Proxy editor-in-chief Sabina Wex

<p>Teachers across Ontario are boycotting extra-curricular activities — including the supervision of student newspaper production — as a form of protest in the ongoing contract dispute with the government.</p><p>But students at North Collegiate Toronto Institute will still get their news.</p>

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16 Jan

The Great Wall: Canadian dailies and online subscriptions

<p><img src="http://kjr.kingsjournalism.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Blenmancover1.jpg" /></p><p><strong>By Joy Blenman in the <em><a href="http://kjr.kingsjournalism.com/?p=12159" target="_blank" rel="noopener">King's Journalism Review</a></em></strong></p><p>"I've never bought a physical newspaper," says a journalism student at the University of King's College.</p><p>“Is that something you’re proud of?” replies John Honderich.  He’s the chairman of Torstar Corporation, which owns the Toronto Star, among other publications.</p>

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9 Jan

Holding their administration to account: Concordia student journalists bent on investigations

<p><em>When Concordia University’s student newspaper, </em>The Link<em>, makes shocking revelations through investigative work, the impact spreads past campus borders and into the community at large.</em></p><p> </p><p>“Why the hell didn’t I know about this?”</p>

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17 Oct

Q&A with CUP president Sam Brooks

<p><em>Canadian University Press president Sam Brooks spoke with <strong>Eric Mark Do </strong>about the student press’ unique editorial voice, the Francophone representation in CUP and why its member papers find themselves facing the same challenges as newspapers across North America.</em></p><p> </p><p><strong>J-Source: What do you think the role of CUP is in the development of student journalism, and in the ever-changing journalism industry as a whole?</strong></p>

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