Understanding media mentalities and logics: institutional and journalistic practices, and the reporting of teachers' work
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This paper explores the ‘media mentalities’ about teachers and their work in the Australian print media. The notion of media mentalities draws on the theoretical concepts of discourse, mentalities, and mediatisation. This refers to the constructed realities and forms of thought in media coverage that circulate particular accounts. These are linked to institutional and journalistic practices in media that are governed by media logics. Drawing on newspaper text and interviews with journalists, the following practices are addressed: agendisation and accountabilisation which are both institutional practices; and the journalistic practices of factualisation, emphasisation, and sensationalisation – all of which operate globally, to some degree, across and within media institutions and media practitioners, and produce the news about teacher's work within the framework of these practices.
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Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education
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40
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4
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© 2018 Taylor & Francis (Routledge). This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Discourse on 08 Nov 2017, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/01596306.2017.1399861
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Education not elsewhere classified
Education
Studies in Human Society
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Baroutsis, A, Understanding media mentalities and logics: institutional and journalistic practices, and the reporting of teachers' work, Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2018, n/a (4), pp. 1-15