The aim of this blog is to display news and information regarding Journalism from Winchester University
Total Pageviews
Monday, 28 February 2011
HCJ Lecture-Existentialism
WINOL HITS HARD!
The email that made me smile!
Hello Karen
I'm Jemma, i'm the editor of videojug.com, the world’s leading ‘how to’ website. We’re about to get bigger and better and i'm looking for some keen & skilled writers to be a part of it.
We've just launched a powerful new self-publishing website that helps people with unique know-how & expertise (i.e. you) connect with our knowledge-hungry audience. The website is called Videojug Pages - http://pages.videojug.com
I am searching for a select group of writers & bloggers to become Founder Members on Videojug Pages. I came across your blog - 'Uni Blog' - and was really impressed.
I'd like to invite you to join our growing community of writers (it's 100% Free).
Videojug Pages is a great way for you to connect with a wider online audience. You can share your knowledge quickly & easily by creating pages about your favourite subjects. As part of our writers' community you will receive support & feedback from other skilled writers; you can also help our budding writers and encourage them in their efforts.
WINOL Week 3 Debrief
Saturday, 26 February 2011
Work Relationships vs Friendships
I fear the same goes for University. The people you live with, people on your course, people you meet on a night out: Friendships are so easy to form, yet so difficult to maintain.
My own personal experience, is that out of all the people I've met whilst at Uni, I can only think of maybe 5 or 6 whom I will truly try to keep as friends after I graduate. These are a mixture of people I've lived with and people off my course, but considering how many people I currently know, it is a small percentage whom I will attempt to keep in my life. This is not to say that I don't want to keep in contact from people I currently know, but from previous experience, I wonder how many people, in 10 years time, will still be in contact with, or even remember the names of, people they currently class as friends.
There are several types of friends: childhood friends, college/university friends, work friends, and social friends. These types of friends rarely mix in most cases, except at birthday parties, and some last longer than others. For example, I am still friends with a girl I've known since I was 5, but I cannot remember the names of all my friends from school, because we all went our separate ways to different colleges or universities. Some friends may be both college friends and work friends, as is also the case for me.
In my opinion, with my work friends, most of them will remain my friends until I leave that place of work, There will only be a small number whom I will keep in contact with. This is also the case for University. In the situation I find myself in, I work very closely with everyone on my course for WINOL, and I would class myself as "friends" with several of them, but I've realised it's important not to confuse friends with colleagues, or work associates. This is where the difference between work relationships and friendships come in. Work relationships, as the name instigates, are people you work with and form friendships with, which only really apply to working in close proximity to them. Alot of people find that once out of work, they have very little in common with each other, and so when one person leaves, the friendship disintegrates.
It doesn't help at University when people come from all areas of the country, meet new people on thir course, live with new people and form friendships with them, and 3 years down the line they all go off to their respective hometowns, promising to keep in contact. But, as expected, life gets in the way, and friendships fall apart, when eventually one wonders "I wonder what happened to that Jo Bloggs I used to know".
If you've actually managed to read this far, instead of rambling on about friendships and work friends and all that jazz, I'm going to point out a solution to stop the afforementioned from happening. It would appear that the best way to maintain friendships is social networking. With everybody on Facebook and Twitter, it has become a lot easier to keep in contact with old friends.
I think an important message in this long and tedious blog is to treasure your friendships, and the memories you make along the way, because they may not last forever.
Wednesday, 23 February 2011
Promotion Ideas
- WINOL business cards, to hand out to sports fans, interviewees and the general public.
- WINOL banners to put up anywhere possible, in a similar fashion to the painted bedsheets that get put up for people's birthdays on roundabouts etc.
- Some kind of summer fair event on the Dytch, but this needs a lot of planning and I need to check on any health and safety issues, for example, if its possible to have a barbeque.
- I would also like to get people out in town in fancy dress with WINOL signs, to get more attention from the people of Winchester, and not just students from the University.
- Possible ideas for WINOL does Comic Relief, not only to raise money but to give us some publicity.
WINOL week 3
Monday, 21 February 2011
WINOL Week 2
Tuesday was a rather calm day, just making sure everyone was up together and confident that they would meet their deadlines.
Wednesday was spent advertising and promoting, with the help of the 1st year runners. The uni have banned us from putting up posters, due to them being put up on painted walls, so I have since sent an email to the President of the SU and had it forwarded to the management apologising for this. They have now said we can display posters on floors 2 and 3 on the activity boards.
An hour before the bulletin went live, our "and finally" fell through. I managed to find another story about a protest in Southampton to link into the package about council cuts, which we set up as an OB. I had to find a picture to go with this, and found a journalist from Southampton, who has been to the protest and posted a picture on Twitter. We asked his permission to use it, and said we would credit it on the site, but not in the bulletin, to which he agreed. With the OB ready to go, I was in charge of making sure it all ran smoothly in the news room: keeping background noise to a minimum, and making sure the camera was positioned correctly and all the equipment was working.
So far, our audience figures show that we are on a par with the Hampshire Chronicle, double the views of the Echo, and about a quarter of the Basingstoke Gazette. We have also had approximately 100 individual hits from the university site.
Thursday, 17 February 2011
John Kenneth Galbraith: The New Industrial State
A central concept of the book is the revised sequence. The conventional idea in economy is that it is a set of competitive markets which are ultimately governed by the decisions of their customers. This is called the Accepted Sequence. The Revised Sequence is the opposite, where businesses exercise control over their customers through advertising.
The revised sequence only applies to the industrial system, made up of about 1,000 of the largest corporations –it does not apply to the market system that is also mentioned in Galbraiths book, which is made up of the vast majority of business organizations, for which price competition remains the dominant form of social control for them.
Galbraith opens with an explanation on how technology has advanced and machines have replaced man power. Quote “The high production and income from technology removes a large part of the population from the pressures of physical want, which makes economic behaviour more malleable.” For example, a hungry, sober man will not be persuaded to spend his last dollar on food, but a well-fed, well-off man can be persuaded with an electric razor or toothbrush. Along with prices and costs, consumer demand becomes subject to management.
“Modern technology defines a growing function of the modern state. The imperatives of technology and organization, not the images of ideology, are what determines the shape of economic society.”
“What counts is not the quantity of our goods but of the quality of life.”
The most important consequence of technology, in terms of economics, is in forcing the division and subdivision of any task into its component parts. This has 6 consequences:
1. The beginning to the completion of a task is separated by an increasing span of time
2. There is an increase in the capital that is committed to production. The increased time, and therefore increased investments in goods, costs money.
3. With increasing technology the commitment of time and money tends to be made inflexible to the performance of a particular task. If a task is changed, new knowledge and equipment is needed.
4. Technology requires specialized manpower.
5. The counterpart of specialization is organisation
6. From the time and capital that is required, the inflexibility of this commitment, the needs of large organization and the problems of market performance under conditions of advanced technology, comes the necessity for planning.
Galbraith predicted in 1966, that a man could land on the moon within the next 5 years.
The subject moves from technology to planning, and the importance of planning. The need for planning comes from the long period of time that elapses during the production process, the high investment that is involved and the inflexible commitment of that investment to the particular task.
Galbraith claimed that planned supply should equal planned use, otherwise there will be surpluses or deficits.
One answer to the problems is to have the state absorb the major risks. It can provide or guarantee a market for the product, can underwrite the costs of development, or can pay for or make available the necessary technical knowledge.
The State is an important factor when looking at economy. The services of Federal, state and local governments now account for between a fifth and a quarter of all economic activity, whereas in 1929 it was only about 8%.
Since the “Keynesian Revolution”, the state undertakes to regulate the total income available for the purchase of goods and services in the economy. It tries to ensure sufficient purchasing power to buy whatever the current labour force can produce. It also seeks to keep wages from forcing up prices, and prices from forcing up wages in a persistent upward spiral.
The state uses its power over taxation and expenditure to provide the balance between savings and their use that the industrial system cannot provide for itself.
Galbraith also writes about how the individual serves the industrial system through savings and capital and by consuming its products. He believes a family’s standard of living becomes an indicator of their achievement.
Galbraith believes that “the men responsible for economic policy must contemplate estimates of intended industrial investment to see whether these, along with probably government deficit, will absorb net savings.” Failure to do so results in recession or depression.
In the classic economic tradition of Adam Smith, Ricardo, Malthus, J.S Mill and Marshall, the business enterprise was assumed to be small in relation to the market supplied. The price it received was competitively determined by the market and so was the priced paid to suppliers. Wages were also set by the market, and the interest on borrowed funds. Profits reduced themselves to a competitive level, and technology was assumed to be stable. However, in the current economy production is dominated by those who supply and control capital. Prices and wages are set in their collective interest. They dominate society and set its moral tone. They also control the state which becomes an executive committee serving the will and the interest of the capitalist class.
The topic then moves on to power. In the New World, as well as in the Old, it was assumed that power belonged to men who owned land. Democracy, in its modern meaning, began as a system which gave the suffrage to those who had proved their worth by acquiring property.
America, South Africa and Australia were later found to have large, unused and useable amounts of land. New land could be obtained easier, and so the need became for capital to pay for seed, livestock and equipment to tide a man over until the first harvest. So power over the enterprise passed to the capital.
Power goes to the factor which is hardest to obtain or hardest to replace. The requirements of technology and planning have increased the need of the industrial enterprise for specialized talent. Unlike capital, it is not something that the firm can supply to itself. The possession of capital is no guarantee that the required talent can be obtained. This led to a new shift in power from capital, to organized intelligence and has since passed to men of diverse technical knowledge, experience, or other talent which modern industrial technology require.
Galbraith goes on to talk about the Technostructure, which is “the group of technicians within an enterprise or an administrative body with considerable influence and control on its economy. It usually refers to managerial capitalism where the managers and other company leading administrators, scientists, or lawyers retain more power and influence than the shareholders in the decisional and directional process”
I found the chapter on the motivation system very interesting. In Galbraith’s motivation system, There are 4 types of motivation: compulsion, pecuniary compensation, identification and adaption.
Compulsion: Failure to accept the goals of the group may result in punishment.
Pecuniary Compensation: Acceptance of the goal may bring a reward.
Identification: An individual, after joining a group, may feel their goals are superior to his.
Adaptation: An individual may serve an organization because he hopes to make its goals similar to his.
Some motivations clash and neutralize each other, others combine passively, and some reinforce each other. Compulsion and Pecuniary compensation associate with each other to some degree, because a man who is compelled to accept the goals of the group for fear of punishment, may receive reward for his acceptance. However, compulsion is inconsistent with identification nor adaptation. If a man is compelled to accept the goals of the group for fear of punishment, he is unlikely to find them superior to his own, nor feel that they are similar to his own.
The chapter I am going to analyse is Chapter 22: The control of the wage-price spiral. The chapter begins by explaining that the state regulates aggregate demand by providing a volume of purchasing power sufficient to employ the available labour force. A low level of unemployment shows the success of the economy. There is little need for individuals with low educational qualifications, unless aggregate demand is very high. In this case, when demand is reasonably high, prices and wages in the industrial system are unstable. When the demand is high enough that unemployable people are recruited, wages and prices begin to force each other up in a continuing spiral.
When unemployment is low, union members can face a strike knowing that they cannot be easily replaced. This relates back to what I said earlier, about irreplaceable people holding some degree of power. These individuals also know that strike action will inflict a loss on business for the employer. In this situation, the employer would increase wages, knowing that the strong demand that the extra cost of wages can be passed along to the consumer or buyer. Higher wages seem to be a way of holding or recruiting manpower. Due to collective bargaining, most firms will be affected by the wage increase at the same time, leading to them all increasing prices at the same time.
Price increases become cost increases for customers, which then raise living costs, and sparks off wage demands. The obvious remedy for this is for the wage-price spiral to be controlled by public authority, rather than by the technostructure, who set their prices not to maximise profits, but to contribute to their own security and growth of the company.
A restraint on prices and wages is in fact, beneficial for the industrial system, as uncontrolled price and cost increases are less dangerous to the security of the technostructure than uncontrolled price reductions, resulting from price competition or a severe dip in aggregate demand. When there is strong demand, it is easy to increase wages and cover the extra cost by increasing prices, however when demand is low; it is not easy to reduce wages or other costs.
There is a serious danger however, that wage and price restraints will be expected to accomplish more than they are capable of doing. In a sense, they do not prevent inflation, but keep the wage and price spiral from producing inflationary increases on prices when demand is at a sufficient level to provide almost full employment. However, if it is too high, price increases outside the industrial system, competition to fill vacancies, delivery payments and the unions wanting a share in high profits will act to break down the restraints. The remedy is higher taxes and reduced government spending to cut down on demand.
Regardless of the difficulties and failures, a system of price restraint is inevitable in the industrial system, as neither inflation nor unemployment are suitable alternatives. The necessity for control once again reverts back to industrial planning, as mentioned several times previously in the book. This planning replaces prices established by the market with prices established by the firm. The firm has sufficient power to set and maintain minimum prices, and exercise control over what is purchased at these prices.
With minimum prices established by the firms, demand that is managed by them for specific products, demand managed in the aggregate by the state and maximum levels established by the state for wages and prices, the planning structure of the industrial system is complete. If the state is to manage demand, then the public sector of the economy must be fairly large. This means that the state is an important customer, and is especially needed in developing advanced technology which would otherwise be beyond the capability of industrial planning. Therefore, the industrial system is ultimately dependant on the state.
Monday, 14 February 2011
Week 1 as Managing Editor
This week I am organising camera and graphic training.
WINOL Week 1 Debrief
There were many problems with this weeks bulletin: Black holes after the headlines, caused by not leaving the shots long.
Scripting errors: Winchester City is said twice in two headlines, may have sounded better as Winchester City Centre, followed by Winchester City (F.C)
The wrong camera shots were used at the wrong times in the studio and there was also a slight issue with sound levels during the breaking news story.
Headline: "2,000 homes may be built" Do not use maybe. Maybe also means maybe not.
The Barton Farm package had a very quiet voice-over, and the shot of the field was left a little too long, as well as slightly shaky camerawork. The studio presenters were not muted during this package, and a cough can be heard over the voice-over.
After the crime package, there is a long pause in the studio, and it seems neither presenter knows what is happening. Also, the first few seconds of the sports presenting, Cara's arm can be seen in shot.
In the Winchester City football package, the voice-over is fighting with the tannoy, and the natural sound is far too loud to be able to clearly hear the voice-over and as-live commentary.
The sports graphic needs improving with images, as it is just a red screen with
There is a long pause before the Basingstoke package, and when the VT is finally played, there is no sound over it. This was supposed to be an OOV, but an error in the gallery meant the presenter was muted.
The final handover should have been a 2-shot, as when Gareth hands over to Cara, it changes from a one-shot of Gareth, to one of Cara in which Gareth has completely disappeared.
It was a very good effort on everyone's part for the first week back, but there were many small mistakes made, which need to be tackled ready for next week.
There were a variety of sign-offs used in the packages this week, and so it has been decided that the sign off is {Name}, Winchester News Online, {Location}.