From Library Journal
Specialists in nonjournalism areas who are interested in the problems of professional training in their field in different parts of the world may find this book useful as a prototype. Gaunt offers a chapter on the conflicting views of training of primarily newspaper journalists in the developed and developing worlds, which parallel the differing views toward guidance in other fields by government, industry, colleges, and technical institutes. The author next summarizes the differing basic assumptions of how journalists collect the news, saying that these approaches have to be agreed upon before training can be successful. He leaves in the air what should be taught and how. The rest of the book will be more useful to journalists: a country-by-country discussion of training approaches, followed by a lengthy address list. His discussion of Eastern Europe catches only the end of communism and not the newest restructuring of training programs. Gaunt provides the most complete report since the 1958 UNESCO classic, The Training of Journalists: A World-Wide Study on the Training of Personnel for the Mass Media (o.p.). Gaunt's handbook is essential for its current lists and useful for its country-by-country text, even though some countries are skipped. Making the Newsmakers is recommended for academic journalism collections.
- Abraham Z. Bass, Northern Illinois Univ., DeKalbCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
“Specialists in nonjournalism areas who are interested in the problems of professional training in their field in different parts of the world may find this book useful as a prototype. Gaunt offers a chapter on the conflicting views of training of primarily newspaper journalists in the developed and developing worlds, which parallel the differing views toward guidance in other fields by government, industry, colleges, and technical institutes. The author next summarizes the differing basic assumptions of how journalists collect the news, saying that these approaches have to be agreed upon before training can be successful. He leaves in the air what should be taught and how. The rest of the book will be more useful to journalists: a country-by-country discussion of training approaches, followed by a lengthy address list. His discussion of Eastern Europe catches only the end of communism and not the newest restructuring of training programs. Gaunt provides the most complete report since the 1958 UNESCO classic, The Training of Journalists: A World-Wide Study on the Training of Personnel for the Mass Media (o.p.). Gaunt's handbook is essential for its current lists and useful for its country-by-country text, even though some countries are skipped. For academic journalism collections.”–
Library Journal“This book is a hitchhiker's guide to journalism education; an eminently readable, fascinating, and exhaustive compilation study that examines journalism and J-schools around the world. It should be required reading for foreign correspondents and bureau chiefs. For college professors, it can be a valuable resource of lecture material.”–
Quill