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The content of news has not changed much over the last
century-politicians, celebrities, wars, crime, and sports dominate
past and present headlines. Yet, the ways in which journalists both
gather and disseminate information have been turned on their head.
Gone are the days of editors assigning stories to writers, who then
research, inquire, and present what they found in a compelling yet
accurate fashion. Today's journalists are coding, programming,
running analytics, and developing apps. These "news nerds" are
industry professionals working in jobs at the intersection of
traditional journalism and technologically intensive positions that
were once largely separate. Consequently, news nerds have changed
the institutionalized view of journalism, which now accounts for
these professionals. News Nerds explores how technological,
economic, and societal changes are impacting the institutionalized
profession of journalism. Allie Kosterich draws on a mixed-methods
research design that blends interviews, social network analysis of
LinkedIn data, job postings, and industry publications to make
sense of how skills and practices become entrenched throughout the
news industry. Taken together, these data reveal the ways in which
the profession is evolving to incorporate new technological
skillsets and new routines of production. In telling these stories
and sharing these findings, Kosterich directly confronts what
happens when new skillsets and new ways of understanding and
producing news start to collide with the old routines of
journalism. News Nerds introduces the notion of institutional
augmentation-a process of institutional change that is not
restricted to the expected binary outcome of the
reinstitutionalization of something new or failure as a fleeting
fad. Instead, as in the case of news nerds and journalism, there
exists an alternative possibility in the coexistence of
supplementary institutions. News Nerds provides a timely and
relevant analysis of contemporary journalism and a model for
understanding how industries react to the emergence of new career
trajectories and new categories of employment.
The content of news has not changed much over the last
century-politicians, celebrities, wars, crime, and sports dominate
past and present headlines. Yet, the ways in which journalists both
gather and disseminate information have been turned on their head.
Gone are the days of editors assigning stories to writers, who then
research, inquire, and present what they found in a compelling yet
accurate fashion. Today's journalists are coding, programming,
running analytics, and developing apps. These "news nerds" are
industry professionals working in jobs at the intersection of
traditional journalism and technologically intensive positions that
were once largely separate. Consequently, news nerds have changed
the institutionalized view of journalism, which now accounts for
these professionals. News Nerds explores how technological,
economic, and societal changes are impacting the institutionalized
profession of journalism. Allie Kosterich draws on a mixed-methods
research design that blends interviews, social network analysis of
LinkedIn data, job postings, and industry publications to make
sense of how skills and practices become entrenched throughout the
news industry. Taken together, these data reveal the ways in which
the profession is evolving to incorporate new technological
skillsets and new routines of production. In telling these stories
and sharing these findings, Kosterich directly confronts what
happens when new skillsets and new ways of understanding and
producing news start to collide with the old routines of
journalism. News Nerds introduces the notion of institutional
augmentation-a process of institutional change that is not
restricted to the expected binary outcome of the
reinstitutionalization of something new or failure as a fleeting
fad. Instead, as in the case of news nerds and journalism, there
exists an alternative possibility in the coexistence of
supplementary institutions. News Nerds provides a timely and
relevant analysis of contemporary journalism and a model for
understanding how industries react to the emergence of new career
trajectories and new categories of employment.
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