Writing Style Differences in Newspaper, Radio, and Television News

Stumbled across an article by Irving Fang of the University of Minnesota, on the different writing styles in the mass media. A good read and very enlightening for anyone in any of the aforementioned fields.

Fang, I. (1991). Writing Style Differences in Newspaper, Radio, and Television News. University of Minnesota.

A monograph presented by the Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Writing and the Composition, Literacy, and Rhetorical Studies Minor: Monograph Series, No. 2

Check out the paper here.

Cultivation Theory Overview Page is up!

The cultivation theory overview page is up, this give a brief overview of what the theory posits and the associated ideas, up soon I’ll be adding theory criticisms as well.

You can read all about cultivation theory here.

…and We’re Back!

As many of you have noticed, I’ve taken a hiatus from posting here on MCT. Well, my thesis is done, I have an MA in hand, and I’m going to start cracking again on bringing more theory and practicality to the masses.

Is there a specific topic you’d like to hear about? Let me know in the comments and I’ll do my best to work it into the content schedule.

Writing Good Qualitative Research Questions

Got a great handout a while back that I stumbled over today, hopefully it’s as helpful to you as it was to me. Here are the steps for writing good (mass communication of course) qualitative research questions:

Specify the research problem: the practical issue that leads to a need for your study.

Complete these sentences:

  • “The topic for this study will be…”
  • “This study needs to be conducted because…”

How to write a good qualitative purpose statement: a statement that provides the major objective or intent or roadmap to the study. Fulfill the following criteria:

  • Single sentence
  • Include the purpose of the study
  • Include the central phenomenon
  • Use qualitative words e.g. explore, understand, discover
  • Note the participants (if any)
  • State the research site

A good place to start: The purpose of this ______________ (narrative, phenomenological, grounded theory, ethnographic, case, etc.) study is (was? will be?) will be to ____________ (understand, describe, develop, discover) the _____________ (central phenomenon of the study) for ______________ (the participants) at (the site). At this stage in the research, the ___________ (central phenomenon) will be generally defined as ____________ (a general definition of the central concept).

Research questions serve to narrow the purpose. There are two types:
Central

  • The most general questions you could ask

Sub-questions

  • Subdivides central question into more specific topical questions
  • Limited number

Use good qualitative wording for these questions.

  • Begin with words such as “how” or “what”
  • Tell the reader what you are attempting to “discover,” “generate,” “explore,” “identify,” or “describe”
  • Ask “what happened?” to help craft your description
  • Ask “what was the meaning to people of what happened?” to understand your results
  • Ask “what happened over time?” to explore the process

Avoid words such as: relate, influence, impact, effect, cause

Scripts to help design qualitative central and sub-questions:
Central question script (usually use only one):

  • “What does it mean to _________________ (central phenomenon)?”
  • “How would ______________ (participants) describe (central phenomenon)?”

Sub-question script:

  • “What _________ (aspect) does __________ (participant) engage in as a _____________ (central phenomenon)?”

Sources

  1. Cresswell. J. W. (2007). Qualitative inquiry & research design: Choosing among five approaches. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications.
  2. Creswell, J. W., & Plano Clark, V. Principles of qualitative research: Designing a qualitative study. You can download the entire document here.