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  • Potential Benefits of Teaching Mindfulness to Journalism Students

    Author(s)
    Pearson, Mark
    McMahon, Cait
    O'Donovan, Analise
    Griffith University Author(s)
    O'Donovan, Analise
    Pearson, Mark L.
    Year published
    2018
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Mindfulness can be defined and adopted in many ways, from the simple act of being more thoughtful through to the use of mindfulness-based meditation for a range of purposes and ultimately through to the application of mindfulness-based frameworks such as ‘mindful journalism’ to help navigate ethical dilemmas and avoid moral injury. Each has potential application in journalism education. This article outlines the basic principles and explains the likely benefits for participants in journalism learning, teaching and research, detailing some of the key research underpinning the field and offering some examples of its application. ...
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    Mindfulness can be defined and adopted in many ways, from the simple act of being more thoughtful through to the use of mindfulness-based meditation for a range of purposes and ultimately through to the application of mindfulness-based frameworks such as ‘mindful journalism’ to help navigate ethical dilemmas and avoid moral injury. Each has potential application in journalism education. This article outlines the basic principles and explains the likely benefits for participants in journalism learning, teaching and research, detailing some of the key research underpinning the field and offering some examples of its application. The principal argument is that instruction in mindfulness-based meditation—and in the expanded approach of mindful journalism—has the potential to strengthen journalism graduates’ resilience, deepen their learning and shore up their moral compasses as they enter an occupation where their reporting can expose them to trauma and the upheaval in the industry can subject them to stress, burnout and other mental health challenges.
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    Journal Title
    ASIA PACIFIC MEDIA EDUCATOR
    Volume
    28
    Issue
    2
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1177/1326365X18800080
    Subject
    Curriculum and pedagogy
    Creative and professional writing
    Communication and media studies
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/383749
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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