Learning for Journalists
Sep. 25th, 2006 11:39 pmSince I was bitching out lots of journalists in an earlier post, I thought I'd try and help the problem. Here's a list of things all journalistic students should be exposed to, from Mark Kleiman. There's also links in the entry I linked there to a bunch of important books any journalist should read. Honestly, most people would probably benefit from them too.
Here's the list of concepts, with handy wikipedia links for some.
* Institutional culture
* Regression toward the mean
* Moral hazard
* Expected value (of an uncertain outcome)
* Present value (of a stream of gains and losses over time)
* Statistical control
* Correlation v. causation
* Benefit-cost analysis and willingness-to-pay
* Cost-effectiveness
* Separation of powers
* Mill's "harm principle"
* Rent-seeking
* Opportunity cost
* Cognitive dissonance
* Milgram experiment
About half of these would be solved by making them take a basic level economics course.
Here's the list of concepts, with handy wikipedia links for some.
* Institutional culture
* Regression toward the mean
* Moral hazard
* Expected value (of an uncertain outcome)
* Present value (of a stream of gains and losses over time)
* Statistical control
* Correlation v. causation
* Benefit-cost analysis and willingness-to-pay
* Cost-effectiveness
* Separation of powers
* Mill's "harm principle"
* Rent-seeking
* Opportunity cost
* Cognitive dissonance
* Milgram experiment
About half of these would be solved by making them take a basic level economics course.
no subject
Date: 2006-09-26 04:09 pm (UTC)And I'm certainly not going to defend the looniness of the Libretarian party, because they are mostly nuts.