J-Topics
Feb 16, 2010
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
A new Toronto Star series shows just how far computer-assisted reporting has come. Race Matters is a follow up the monumental 2002 Race and Crime project. Reporter Jim Rankin fought seven years to obtain several police databases and found police were three times more likely to stop and question blacks than they were to do the same to whites. The new series uses web-based Flash maps to help the reader drill down into the details.
Feb 01, 2010
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
A number of journalists filing requests for data to federal departments are finding the "data" has been converted to image files, quite literally pictures of data, prior to release. This has the potential to take access to electronic records back a decade if the trend spreads.
Jan 25, 2010
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
Once in a while software designers do something little that makes life
a lot easier. The folks at Microsoft have done that by adding
a shortcut command to remove hyperlinks from cells in Excel
2010. I've been testing the beta version to see what
it offers for journalists.
If you have ever cut and pasted some data that has hyperlinks from the Web into Excel you have no doubt found...
Nov 23, 2009
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
Reporters who use Microsoft Excel to crunch government data have something to cheer about with the release of the beta version of Office 2010. A new add-in to Excel brings Excel's ease of use to the analysis of huge datasets.
Nov 16, 2009
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
Love it or hate it, Microsoft Office is the king of the mountain when it comes to desktop spreadsheet and database software, and you'll soon be able to have a close up look.
Aug 17, 2009
- Posted by Regan
Ray
The Nova Scotia government has cut the fee for applications under the
Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act to $5 from $25, the Halifax Chronicle-Herald reports. The rate change is effective immediately. Mary Agnes Welch, president of the Canadian Association of Journalists said...
Jul 01, 2009
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
Check out this story from the Winnipeg Free Press on dirty restaurants.
It's a great example of how far we have come in doing this kind of
probing journalism.
The earliest reporters doing the restaurant story, and I was one of them, had to fight long battles with government officials just to get the data. Jen Skerritt got it in a few weeks just by asking.
Skerritt came to the CAJ conference in Vancouver in May and took the day of CAR training I did with David McKie of CBC. She was so pumped when she left that she headed right back to Winnipeg and asked the city and province for restaurant inspection data...
The earliest reporters doing the restaurant story, and I was one of them, had to fight long battles with government officials just to get the data. Jen Skerritt got it in a few weeks just by asking.
Skerritt came to the CAJ conference in Vancouver in May and took the day of CAR training I did with David McKie of CBC. She was so pumped when she left that she headed right back to Winnipeg and asked the city and province for restaurant inspection data...
Jun 16, 2009
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
Computer-Assisted Reporting was a big part of this year's winning Michener Award entry. The CBC and the Canadian Press teamed up to analyze Taser use by police officers across Canada, building a unique database from use-of-force reports obtained from police forces across the country. Read the press release from Government House here.
The reporters analyzed the data and found that between 2002 and 2008, RCMP members fired their tasers more than 3,200 times and administered multiple shocks in more than 40 per cent of those cases. The CBC and Radio Canada also conducted tests that showed older models sometimes produce a stronger zap than the maker advertised.
Congratulations to the whole CBC/Radio Canada/Canadian Press team.
The reporters analyzed the data and found that between 2002 and 2008, RCMP members fired their tasers more than 3,200 times and administered multiple shocks in more than 40 per cent of those cases. The CBC and Radio Canada also conducted tests that showed older models sometimes produce a stronger zap than the maker advertised.
Congratulations to the whole CBC/Radio Canada/Canadian Press team.
Jun 16, 2009
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
Reporters from across Canada are headed to Halifax for the second annual University of King's College Summer School in Computer-Assisted Reporting.
The school is sponsored by the Canadian Newspaper Association and is the only "boot camp" style CAR training available in Canada. CAR skills give you a leg up in today's brutal journalism job market by helping you get big stories everyone else will miss. To sign up for the CAR school contact Kelly Goldenberg at 902-422-1271. You can pay using VISA, Mastercard or Amex.
The school is sponsored by the Canadian Newspaper Association and is the only "boot camp" style CAR training available in Canada. CAR skills give you a leg up in today's brutal journalism job market by helping you get big stories everyone else will miss. To sign up for the CAR school contact Kelly Goldenberg at 902-422-1271. You can pay using VISA, Mastercard or Amex.
Apr 28, 2009
- Posted by Fred
Vallance-Jones
There are some excellent statistical resources available to those working on swine flu stories...
Computer-assisted Reporting
This section features news and notes on computer-assisted reporting in Canada. For additional resources, visit CARinCanada or J-Source's Teaching CAR section. Fred Vallance-Jones is assistant professor of journalism at University of King's College and co-author
of Computer-Assisted
Reporting: A Comprehensive Primer from Oxford University Press.
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