1994, ISBN: 9780773051935
New York, N.Y.: Vintage Books, 1989. Tenth Printing [stated]. Trade paperback. Very good. xvii, [1], 268, [2] pages. Some page discoloration noted. Includes Preface, Acknowledgments, N… Mehr…
New York, N.Y.: Vintage Books, 1989. Tenth Printing [stated]. Trade paperback. Very good. xvii, [1], 268, [2] pages. Some page discoloration noted. Includes Preface, Acknowledgments, Notes, Introduction, and Index. Chapters include The Teacher; The Teacher's Methods; Great Teachers and their Pupils; and Teaching in Everyday Life. Gilbert Arthur Highet (June 22, 1906 - January 20, 1978) was a Scottish-American classicist, academic, writer, intellectual, critic and literary historian. He believed it was the duty of the intellectual to support freedom and defend pluralism. In 1938 he was appointed to the chair of Latin & Greek at Columbia University. He stayed at Columbia until 1971 (except for British Army service during WWII). He became an American citizen in 1951, following his appointment as Anthon Professor of Latin Language and Literature in 1950. Highet devoted most of his energy to teaching, but he also aspired to raise the level of mass culture and achieved a broader influence by publishing essays and books, hosting his own radio program, acting as a judge for the Book-of-the-Month Club, and serving on the editorial board of Horizon magazine. He himself was a highly praised teacher. Robert J. Ball, wrote: "When Gilbert Highet entered the classroom, one felt as though the curtain were going up on a Broadway play, with a living legend in the lead. He reminded students (not surprisingly) of a British Army officer, tall, erect, handsome, clean-shaven, and impeccably dressed. He consistently gave his audience a commanding performance... he gave his students an extraordinary intellectual experience, capped by a showmanship perhaps unparalleled in the American college classroom." In this book, the author wants to find out, not what should be taught, but how the teaching can best be done. The first essential of good teaching is that the teacher must know the subject, which really means that he must continue to learn it. The second essential is that he must like it. The two are connected, because for it is almost impossible to go on learning anything year after year without feeling a spontaneous interest in it. If a teacher does enjoy the subject, it will be easy to teach even when you are tired, and delightful when you are feeling fresh. The first essential is that the teacher must know the subject; the second essential is that he must like it, and the third essential of good teaching is to like the pupils. One of the most important qualities of a good teacher is humor--it keeps the pupils alive and attentive because they are never quite sure what is coming next. Memory, will-power, and kindness are three of the qualities that make the best teachers. Derived from a Kirkus review: In spite of the depressing statistics in the newspapers, there are still those who find teaching a stimulating and inspiring experience -- Professor Highet's book is for them. Here with wisdom and tolerance is a discussion of the rewards of teaching and the qualities of a teacher -- knowing his subject, continuing to learn it, liking his pupils and knowing them. Preparation, communication, classwork are the methods; there is the stimuli of competition and tradition, and the precepts of the great teachers of the past., Vintage Books, 1989, 3, Study in how interpersonal communication can be used to convey health information. Book cover sun tanned around the edges; owner's name in ink on cover and title page. No marks in text, East-West Communication Institute, 1975, 3, Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
usa, u.. | Biblio.co.uk |
2016, ISBN: 9780773051935
Toronto: MacLear & Co., 1855. Book. Fair. Wraps (soft-cover). Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. Original paper covers. A clean and unmarked volume, showing chipping to bottom an… Mehr…
Toronto: MacLear & Co., 1855. Book. Fair. Wraps (soft-cover). Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. Original paper covers. A clean and unmarked volume, showing chipping to bottom and fore edges, and loss to spine. Internally near fine. Includes articles on "The Arctic Expeditions" (of M'Clure), "On the Formation of a Canal between Lakes St. Clair and Erie, &c." by Major R. Lachlan, "The Late Earthquake", "Ship Canal across the Isthmus of Suez" and "Marine Losses on the Lakes in 1854", among others.., MacLear & Co., 1855, 2, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2016. as new. Paperback. ISBN:9781473913554 194pp; clean & tight ., Sage, 2016, 5, CA: Ins Contemporary Studies, 1985. Softcover. Good. Good in wrappers. Book's front cover has writing on it. Bumped corners. Rubbed on spine. Please Note: This book has been transferred to Between the Covers from another database and might not be described to our usual standards. Please inquire for more detailed condition information., Ins Contemporary Studies, 1985, 2.5, Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
can, u.. | Biblio.co.uk CARDINAL BOOKS ~~ ABAC/ILAB, The Old Library Bookshop, Between the Covers- Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Fully Booked Versandkosten: EUR 59.66 Details... |
1994, ISBN: 9780773051935
University of California Press, 1991-01-07. Paperback. Like New. Softcover. Good binding and cover. Minor shelf wear. Small scuff marks to edge. Clean, unmarked pages., University of Ca… Mehr…
University of California Press, 1991-01-07. Paperback. Like New. Softcover. Good binding and cover. Minor shelf wear. Small scuff marks to edge. Clean, unmarked pages., University of California Press, 1991-01-07, 5, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. New. Special order direct from the distributor, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 6, Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
usa, c.. | Biblio.co.uk |
1994, ISBN: 9780773051935
Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS… Mehr…
Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
Biblio.co.uk |
1994, ISBN: 0773051937
Taschenbuch
[EAN: 9780773051935], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., Mississauga], LANGUAGE,COMMUNICATION,MEDIA, Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Fron… Mehr…
[EAN: 9780773051935], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., Mississauga], LANGUAGE,COMMUNICATION,MEDIA, Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall, Books<
cdn | AbeBooks.de Past Pages, Oshawa, ON, Canada [8557964] [Rating: 5 (von 5)] NOT NEW BOOK. Versandkosten: EUR 83.02 Details... |
1994, ISBN: 9780773051935
New York, N.Y.: Vintage Books, 1989. Tenth Printing [stated]. Trade paperback. Very good. xvii, [1], 268, [2] pages. Some page discoloration noted. Includes Preface, Acknowledgments, N… Mehr…
New York, N.Y.: Vintage Books, 1989. Tenth Printing [stated]. Trade paperback. Very good. xvii, [1], 268, [2] pages. Some page discoloration noted. Includes Preface, Acknowledgments, Notes, Introduction, and Index. Chapters include The Teacher; The Teacher's Methods; Great Teachers and their Pupils; and Teaching in Everyday Life. Gilbert Arthur Highet (June 22, 1906 - January 20, 1978) was a Scottish-American classicist, academic, writer, intellectual, critic and literary historian. He believed it was the duty of the intellectual to support freedom and defend pluralism. In 1938 he was appointed to the chair of Latin & Greek at Columbia University. He stayed at Columbia until 1971 (except for British Army service during WWII). He became an American citizen in 1951, following his appointment as Anthon Professor of Latin Language and Literature in 1950. Highet devoted most of his energy to teaching, but he also aspired to raise the level of mass culture and achieved a broader influence by publishing essays and books, hosting his own radio program, acting as a judge for the Book-of-the-Month Club, and serving on the editorial board of Horizon magazine. He himself was a highly praised teacher. Robert J. Ball, wrote: "When Gilbert Highet entered the classroom, one felt as though the curtain were going up on a Broadway play, with a living legend in the lead. He reminded students (not surprisingly) of a British Army officer, tall, erect, handsome, clean-shaven, and impeccably dressed. He consistently gave his audience a commanding performance... he gave his students an extraordinary intellectual experience, capped by a showmanship perhaps unparalleled in the American college classroom." In this book, the author wants to find out, not what should be taught, but how the teaching can best be done. The first essential of good teaching is that the teacher must know the subject, which really means that he must continue to learn it. The second essential is that he must like it. The two are connected, because for it is almost impossible to go on learning anything year after year without feeling a spontaneous interest in it. If a teacher does enjoy the subject, it will be easy to teach even when you are tired, and delightful when you are feeling fresh. The first essential is that the teacher must know the subject; the second essential is that he must like it, and the third essential of good teaching is to like the pupils. One of the most important qualities of a good teacher is humor--it keeps the pupils alive and attentive because they are never quite sure what is coming next. Memory, will-power, and kindness are three of the qualities that make the best teachers. Derived from a Kirkus review: In spite of the depressing statistics in the newspapers, there are still those who find teaching a stimulating and inspiring experience -- Professor Highet's book is for them. Here with wisdom and tolerance is a discussion of the rewards of teaching and the qualities of a teacher -- knowing his subject, continuing to learn it, liking his pupils and knowing them. Preparation, communication, classwork are the methods; there is the stimuli of competition and tradition, and the precepts of the great teachers of the past., Vintage Books, 1989, 3, Study in how interpersonal communication can be used to convey health information. Book cover sun tanned around the edges; owner's name in ink on cover and title page. No marks in text, East-West Communication Institute, 1975, 3, Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
2016, ISBN: 9780773051935
Toronto: MacLear & Co., 1855. Book. Fair. Wraps (soft-cover). Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. Original paper covers. A clean and unmarked volume, showing chipping to bottom an… Mehr…
Toronto: MacLear & Co., 1855. Book. Fair. Wraps (soft-cover). Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. Original paper covers. A clean and unmarked volume, showing chipping to bottom and fore edges, and loss to spine. Internally near fine. Includes articles on "The Arctic Expeditions" (of M'Clure), "On the Formation of a Canal between Lakes St. Clair and Erie, &c." by Major R. Lachlan, "The Late Earthquake", "Ship Canal across the Isthmus of Suez" and "Marine Losses on the Lakes in 1854", among others.., MacLear & Co., 1855, 2, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2016. as new. Paperback. ISBN:9781473913554 194pp; clean & tight ., Sage, 2016, 5, CA: Ins Contemporary Studies, 1985. Softcover. Good. Good in wrappers. Book's front cover has writing on it. Bumped corners. Rubbed on spine. Please Note: This book has been transferred to Between the Covers from another database and might not be described to our usual standards. Please inquire for more detailed condition information., Ins Contemporary Studies, 1985, 2.5, Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
1994
ISBN: 9780773051935
University of California Press, 1991-01-07. Paperback. Like New. Softcover. Good binding and cover. Minor shelf wear. Small scuff marks to edge. Clean, unmarked pages., University of Ca… Mehr…
University of California Press, 1991-01-07. Paperback. Like New. Softcover. Good binding and cover. Minor shelf wear. Small scuff marks to edge. Clean, unmarked pages., University of California Press, 1991-01-07, 5, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. New. Special order direct from the distributor, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 6, Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
1994, ISBN: 9780773051935
Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS… Mehr…
Mississauga: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994. Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news.. First Edition 2nd Printing. Trade Paperback. Very Good. Illus. by Steve MacEachern/Smart Work. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., 1994, 3<
1994, ISBN: 0773051937
Taschenbuch
[EAN: 9780773051935], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., Mississauga], LANGUAGE,COMMUNICATION,MEDIA, Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Fron… Mehr…
[EAN: 9780773051935], Gebraucht, sehr guter Zustand, [PU: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd., Mississauga], LANGUAGE,COMMUNICATION,MEDIA, Previous Owner Markings (Underlining); Light Creasing on Front Cover; Front, Rear Covers, Spine Lightly Chipped; Edges Lightly Soiled. CONTENTS: Preface CHAPTER 1 NEWS: A MIRROR TO OURSELVES The Psychology of the Source; Defining News; The Ingredients of News; A Problem of "Narrowness"; The Violence Question; Pack Journalism and Stereotypes CHAPTER 2 CREATING IMAGES: JOURNALISM AND THE PSEUDO-ENVIRONMENT Ellul and the Idea of Propaganda; Innis and McLuhan; The Sociological Tradition; New Departures; Semiotics and the Language of News; Linguistics CHPATER 3 THE PRESS AND ITS FREEDOM: EVOLVING CONCEPTS A Growing Enlightenment; John Milton; John Locke; Fox's Libel Act; John Stuart Mill; The New Collectivity; Social Responsibility; The Five Tenets CHAPTER 4 THE QUALITY CONUNDRUM: TOWARD A FREE BUT ACCOUNTABLE JOURNALISM An Uncertain Philosophy; Historic Divisions; The Penny Press; Yellow Journalism; A Blending of Traditions; The Canadian Connection; The Canon of Objectivity; A Question of Ethics; Journalism and Professionalism; The Ombudsman; The Press Council CHAPTER 5 THE CONSUMING SYMBIOSIS: JOURNALISTS, POLITICIANS, AND OTHERS A Net for Large Fish; Living by Disclosure; An Intolerable Tradition?; A Proper Pipeline; Glibness and Superficiality; A Case Study: The Mohawk Crisis; "Lied to rather a lot . . . "; The Infocan Experience; A Moral Right of Media?; Other Institutions; Television's Impact; A Rapid-Fire Flow CHAPTER 6 SOCIAL CONTROL: BASIS IN LAW Prior Restraint; Contempt of Court; Libel and Defamation; Civil Defamation; Libel as a Crime; Obscenity and the Media; Questions of Hate; Emergencies and Official Secrets; The Constitution CHAPTER 7 REGULATION: THE CANADIAN WAY Periodicals; Taming the Airwaves; The CRTC and on to the 1990s; An "Air of Death"; Regulation and the Daily Press; LaMarsh, Infocan, and others; Black Wednesday; The Draft Legislation; A History of Concern CHAPTER 8 TOWARD TOMORROW: CHANGING PATTERNS A Subtle List; Journalism of the Stars; The Imperative to Entertain; A Struggle for Survival; Journalism and the Marketeers; Softer and Narrower News; At the Bottom Line APPENDIX Areopagitica; On Liberty; The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom; Code of Ethics of the American Society of Newspaper Editors; The Canadian Publishers' Code; Index. SYNOPSIS: Andrew M. Osler is an associate professor in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario where he also holds a cross-appointment in the Department of Sociology. The book draws on Osler's long and varied experience as a working journalist to provide a unique, insightful exploration of the nature of journalism and its function in Canadian society. Here is a comprehensive overview of the patterns and influences that continue to define news. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall, Books<
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Detailangaben zum Buch - News The Evolution of Journalism in Canada
EAN (ISBN-13): 9780773051935
ISBN (ISBN-10): 0773051937
Gebundene Ausgabe
Taschenbuch
Erscheinungsjahr: 1994
Herausgeber: Copp Clark Pitman Ltd.
Buch in der Datenbank seit 2008-12-10T03:16:10+01:00 (Berlin)
Detailseite zuletzt geändert am 2024-04-27T08:27:07+02:00 (Berlin)
ISBN/EAN: 0773051937
ISBN - alternative Schreibweisen:
0-7730-5193-7, 978-0-7730-5193-5
Alternative Schreibweisen und verwandte Suchbegriffe:
Titel des Buches: evolution
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