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Welcome to  arnegar.org , The real Journalism services innovator in UNITED STATES, Khabarnegar is dedicated to trying to understand the information revolution. We specialize in using empirical methods to evaluate and study the performance of the press, particularly content analysis. We are non partisan, non ideological and non political. Our goal is to help both the journalists who produce the news and the citizens who consume it develop a better understanding of what the press is delivering, how the media are changing, and what forces are shaping those changes. We have emphasized empirical research in the belief that quantifying what is occurring in the press, rather than merely offering criticism, is a better approach to understanding.

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Journalism Service

arnegar.org offers a unique journalism Services.

Journalism Benefits! :

These are tough times for journalism and communication graduates, according to a report released this month by the University of Georgia. Salaries are down, benefits are reduced, jobs are less plentiful and the satisfaction with those jobs is declining, the report found. The university has been compiling the report, considered a barometer of the communications industry, since 1997 after taking responsibility from Ohio State University, which began the annual survey in 1987. The current report included a survey of about 2,900 graduates from 103 universities. The average starting salary for a 2001 graduate with a bachelor's degree was $26,000, down from $27,000 for graduates in 2000.

For graduates with a master's degree, the average starting salary dropped to $30,120 from $31,304 in 2000. Adjusted for inflation, those are the lowest salaries in the industry since 1998 and below the average starting salary of $28,667 for graduates of other liberal arts programs in 2001. Finding a job became more difficult for graduates last year. About 90 percent of the 2000 graduating class found work while only about 82.4 percent of the 2001 graduates found jobs. Benefits provided with those jobs also declined. Medical insurance benefits were offered to 78.2 percent of those surveyed compared with 82 percent in 2000. Even for those finding jobs, their satisfaction with the work declined. About 29 percent of those surveyed said they were "very satisfied" with their jobs compared with almost 35 percent in 2000.

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Journalism foundation

What is Journalism?

Journalism is the craft of conveying news, descriptive material and comment via a widening spectrum of media. These include newspapers, magazines, radio and television, the internet and even, more recently, the cell phone (or mobile phone). Journalists—be they writers, editors or photographers; broadcast presenters or producers—serve as the chief purveyors of information and opinion in contemporary mass society According to BBC journalist, Andrew Marr, "News is what the consensus of journalists determines it to be."

From informal beginnings in the Europe of the 18th century, stimulated by the arrival of mechanized printing—in due course by mass production and in the 20th century by electronic communications technology—today's engines of journalistic enterprise include large corporations with global reach. The formal status of journalism has varied historically and, still varies vastly, from country to country. The modern state and hierarchical power structures in general have tended to see the unrestricted flow of information as a potential threat, and inimical to their own proper function. Hitler described the Press as a "machine for mass instruction," ideally, a "kind of school for adults."

 Journalism at its most vigorous, by contrast, tends to be propelled by the implications at least of the attitude epitomized by the Australian journalist John Pilger: "Secretive power loathes journalists who do their job, who push back screens, peer behind façades, lift rocks. Opprobrium from on high is their badge of honor."

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