Use of Development Dialogues in Learning and Changing Journalism Practice
Abstract
The present article analyses a case study in which the author experimented with use of
the interventionist development dialogue method in journalism practice. Journalistic work is conceptualized as a network of multivoiced, contradictory, historically changing and
artefact-mediated activity systems. Through the use of development dialogues, the study
aimed at understanding and facilitating the innovation, change and expansive learning that
can take place in relation to journalistic work. The data include collaboration between the
researcher and four Finnish newspaper journalists, pre- and post-intervention interviews,
and diaries kept by the journalists. The data were analysed using the methods of qualitative
text analysis. The case study indicates that an interventionist research approach that focuses
on journalists’ personal experiences and needs, and makes use of concrete development
tasks, is of value to them. It fosters the imagination and the creation of novel journalistic
and discursive practices that help journalists reflect on, understand and pursue journalism.
As power relations and control impinged on and were manifest in the research process, the
development task-oriented interventionist research approach calls for a thorough evaluation that looks at the power relations within an activity system and at the question of the political aim of an interventionist research approach.
Publisher
Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom
Citation
Nordicom Review, 34 (2) p. 93-106
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2013-11Author
Hujanen, Jaana
Editor
Carlsson, Ulla
Keywords
development dialogue
intervention
expansive learning
newsroom
journalism
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISBN
978-91-86523-77-0
1403-1108
Language
eng