David H Weaver
David H. Weaver is the Roy W. Howard Professor in Journalism and Mass Communication Research in the School of Journalism at Indiana University's Bloomington campus, where he has taught since 1974. He has published 11 books on journalists, the agenda-setting function of news media in elections, public opinion polls, and mass communication research methods, as well as numerous book chapters and articles on these subjects and foreign news coverage, mass communication research trends and journalism...See more
David H. Weaver is the Roy W. Howard Professor in Journalism and Mass Communication Research in the School of Journalism at Indiana University's Bloomington campus, where he has taught since 1974. He has published 11 books on journalists, the agenda-setting function of news media in elections, public opinion polls, and mass communication research methods, as well as numerous book chapters and articles on these subjects and foreign news coverage, mass communication research trends and journalism education. He was the 1987-88 president of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) and 1986-87 president of the Midwest Association for Public Opinion Research (MAPOR). He earned his Ph.D. in mass communication research from the University of North Carolina in 1974, after working as an editor and reporter on four daily newspapers in Indiana and North Carolina.Randal Beam is an Associate Professor of Communication at the University of Washington in Seattle. A former newspaper copy editor and manager, his research focuses on the work environment of journalists and on the ways that business and economic factors influence the news. His research has been published in "Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly," "Journalism Monographs" ("Journalism Professionalism as an Organizational Level Concept") and the "Newspaper Research Journal." He also was a contributor to the "Handbook of Media Management and Economics." He previously held faculty positions at Indiana University and the University of Oregon. He received his master's degree from Syracuse University and his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Bonnie Brownlee is Associate Professor andAssociate Dean for Undergraduate Studies at Indiana University's School of Journalism. She holds bachelor's and master's degrees from Indiana University, and a Ph.D. in mass communication from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her teaching, research, and service focus on global media and issues of journalism education in the U.S. and abroad. She has been a consultant for various communication and rural development projects in Central and South America, and has worked for Regional Educational Radio in Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua. She has published articles in the "Journal of Ecology of Food and Nutrition, Gazette, Journalism Educator," and in the "Latin America and Caribbean Contemporary Record." Paul S. Voakes has been the Dean of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Colorado-Boulder since 2003. His Ph.D. is from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and before Colorado he served on the faculty of the Indiana University School of Journalism for nine years. His research and teaching specializations are in mass media law and ethics, news writing, reporting and editing, and math/statistics for journalism. Before entering academia he was a journalist for 15 years at three newspapers in the San Francisco Bay Area, most recently as an editorial writer for the "San Jose Mercury News." In the summer of 2000 he was a political reporter at the Portland "Oregonian," as an American Society of Newspaper Editors fellow. He is the author of "The Newspaper Journalists of the '90s" (ASNE, 1997) and has published his research in "Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly,"" Journal of Mass Media Ethics, Newspaper Research Journal," "Communication Law & Policy" and"The National Civic Review." He is a co-author of "Working With Numbers and Statistics: A Handbook for Journalists" (Lawrence Erlbaum, 2005). G. Cleveland Wilhoit is Professor Emeritus of Journalism at Indiana University, where he taught from 1967 to 2004. He was director of the Bureau of Media Research, 1967-1976 and 1993... See less