Associate Professor, Journalism 

BA (Qld) 

MA Hons (Wollongong) 

Roger began his journalistic career in the early Sixties as a cadet on the now-defunct
Adelaide afternoon tabloid, The News. He also worked for radio 5DN and NWS 9 in Adelaide
before moving to the newsagency, Australian Associated Press (AAP) in Sydney, in the hope
he’d be sent to Saigon to report on the Vietnam War. (He finally made it to Saigon in
1999). Less than two years in Sydney, and he moved to Brisbane to join the ABC, where he
spent 11 years, rising to the position of Chief Line-Up sub-editor (in charge of the 7pm
news bulletin weekdays). In 1979, after obtaining a BA part-time at UQ, he left daily
journalism for tertiary teaching. He spent the next 20 years at what was then Mitchell
College of Advanced Education in Bathurst, later Charles Sturt University, spending most
of the time as undergraduate course coordinator. During that time, with co-author Dr
Murray Masterton he penned three editions of the broadcast journalism text, Now the News
in Detail. His contribution to tertiary journalism education was recognised in the
mid-Nineties by him being made a life-member of the Journalism Education Association. In
1999 he accepted a short-term contract at Bond, and then spent the next five plus years
at QUT. In that time he contributed to the text, Reporting in a Multi-media World (a
section on sports reporting), and his major work of late, co-authoring for Oxford,
Journalism Ethics: Arguments and Cases with colleague, Dr Martin Hirst. Off and on the
past decade he’s been writing a text of sports reporting and looking for a publisher. 

Roger’s research interests for broadcast journalism, ethics, sports reporting and
international journalism. During his 20 years in Bathurst he took a number of short-term
courses in Malaysia, Thailand, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. He worked for
the Olympic News Service during Sydney 2000, helped supervise student journalists at the
Goodwill Games in Brisbane a year later, and was also associated with covering the
national athletics titles in Brisbane for an internal intra-net news service a couple of
years later. 

Articles

Link

Girls, girls, girls. A study of the popularity of journalism as a career among female teenagers and its corresponding lack of appeal to young males (with Mike Grenby, Molly Kasinger, and Mark Pearson), Australian journalism monographs (2009)

Australian journalism programs have long reported a disproportionate number of female students and the industry...

 

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Government media relations: A 'spin' through the literature (with Mark Pearson), Humanities & Social Sciences papers (2008)

Extract:

Government media relations is deserving of serious study because it sits at the interface...

 

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Sport Rules - OK? A Study of Media Usage in 2005, Humanities & Social Sciences papers (2006)

They say there are only two certainties in life – death and taxes. The author...

 

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Gender preference in journalism education: why sport misses out (with John Cokley and Paul Scott), Humanities & Social Sciences papers (2006)

Sports and research into sports journalism features in only a tiny minority of international articles...

 

Afghanistan? Somewhere west of India, isn't it?, Australian Journalism Review (2003)

For more than 10 years the senior co-author has been regularly testing tertiary journalism students...

 

Book Chapters

Censorship through spin: How democratic governments attempt to control the media, with a focus on Australia, Changing media, changing societies: Media and the millennium development goals (2009)

In the midst of amazing discoveries, inventions and scientific advancements that we have achieved today,...

 

Conference Papers

Multimedia journalism as a research method - A new approach (with Mark Pearson), 19th AMIC Annual Conference (2010)
 

Theses