Practical R for Mass Communication and Journalism

Author:   Sharon Machlis
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138386358


Pages:   246
Publication Date:   18 December 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Practical R for Mass Communication and Journalism


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Overview

Do you want to use R to tell stories? This book was written for you—whether you already know some R or have never coded before. Most R texts focus only on programming or statistical theory. Practical R for Mass Communication and Journalism gives you ideas, tools, and techniques for incorporating data and visualizations into your narratives. You’ll see step by step how to: Analyze airport flight delays, restaurant inspections, and election results Map bank locations, median incomes, and new voting districts Compare campaign contributions to final election results Extract data from PDFs Whip messy data into shape for analysis Scrape data from a website Create graphics ranging from simple, static charts to interactive visualizations for the Web If you work or plan to work in a newsroom, government office, non-profit policy organization, or PR office, Practical R for Mass Communication and Journalism will help you use R in your world. This book has a companion website with code, links to additional resources, and searchable tables by function and task. Sharon Machlis is the author of Computerworld’s Beginner’s Guide to R, host of InfoWorld’s Do More With R video screencast series, admin for the R for Journalists Google Group, and is well known among Twitter users who follow the #rstats hashtag. She is Director of Editorial Data and Analytics at IDG Communications (parent company of Computerworld, InfoWorld, PC World and Macworld, among others) and a frequent speaker at data journalism and R conferences.

Full Product Details

Author:   Sharon Machlis
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   CRC Press
Weight:   0.952kg
ISBN:  

9781138386358


ISBN 10:   1138386359
Pages:   246
Publication Date:   18 December 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Practical R for Mass Communication and Journalism looks to me like a fabulous resource for those folks who always wanted to learn some more R but were afraid to ask. Definitely recommended. ~Carl Howe, Director of Education, RStudio The book can provide a good starting point into working with R. It covers a lot of perspectives that are expected in newsrooms all over the world, especially working with geospatial data. It also provides a lot of good examples and interesting additional resources. The packages used are also mainly part of the standard corpus of R-packages. ~Benedict Witzenberger, Suddeutsche Zeitung I am the data editor of a mid-sized newsroom. I have long wished for an Intro to R book that was geared toward journalists, not data scientists. I've found that fellow journalists are much more likely to pick up on the intricacies of a computing language like R when they encounter it through a relatable example, like visualizing Election Night votes or analyzing a city council budget. Additionally, there are some R functions that simply aren't useful for the quantitative needs of most journalists. This is what I appreciated the most about the book - its practical nature (the title doesn't lie!) Machlis focuses on the concepts that data journalists most frequently encounter and spends little to no time on those they don't...I also appreciated Chapter 17, An R Project from Start to Finish. This chapter is exactly why I've wanted a journalism-specific Intro to R project that I can recommend to my colleagues ~Ryann Jones, Deputy Editor, Data at ProPublica I like the book. It's conversationally written, it walks you through common problems in data journalism and for the most part uses the most common libraries to analyze and visualize data...The book's instructional approach is the real value - it seems aimed at an audience that needs a narrative in order to understand code and analysis. Conveniently, that pretty well describes journalism students and working professionals...I would recommend publication. It advances the field of data journalism and presents a solid text for instructors or practitioners who are interested in R for analysis. ~Matthew Waite I NEED THIS BOOK. I may adopt it as a textbook. ~Alberto Cairo, University of Miami I'm reading this book now and it is terrific. Highly recommended for anyone interested in learning R. I will be using this book in my Data Analysis for Journalists class in the spring. ~Rob Wells, University of Arkansas


The book can provide a good starting point into working with R. It covers a lot of perspectives that are expected in newsrooms all over the world, especially working with geospatial data. It also provides a lot of good examples and interesting additional resources. The packages used are also mainly part of the standard corpus of R-packages. ~Benedict Witzenberger, Suddeutsche Zeitung I am the data editor of a mid-sized newsroom. I have long wished for an Intro to R book that was geared toward journalists, not data scientists. I've found that fellow journalists are much more likely to pick up on the intricacies of a computing language like R when they encounter it through a relatable example, like visualizing Election Night votes or analyzing a city council budget. Additionally, there are some R functions that simply aren't useful for the quantitative needs of most journalists. This is what I appreciated the most about the book - its practical nature (the title doesn't lie!) Machlis focuses on the concepts that data journalists most frequently encounter and spends little to no time on those they don't...I also appreciated Chapter 17, An R Project from Start to Finish. This chapter is exactly why I've wanted a journalism-specific Intro to R project that I can recommend to my colleagues ~Ryann Jones, Deputy Editor, Data at ProPublica I am the data editor of a mid-sized newsroom. I have long wished for an Intro to R book that was geared toward journalists, not data scientists. I've found that fellow journalists are much more likely to pick up on the intricacies of a computing language like R when they encounter it through a relatable example, like visualizing Election Night votes or analyzing a city council budget. Additionally, there are some R functions that simply aren't useful for the quantitative needs of most journalists. This is what I appreciated the most about the book - its practical nature (the title doesn't lie!) Machlis focuses on the concepts that data journalists most frequently encounter and spends little to no time on those they don't...I also appreciated Chapter 17, An R Project from Start to Finish. This chapter is exactly why I've wanted a journalism-specific Intro to R project that I can recommend to my colleagues ~Ryann Jones I like the book. It's conversationally written, it walks you through common problems in data journalism and for the most part uses the most common libraries to analyze and visualize data...The book's instructional approach is the real value - it seems aimed at an audience that needs a narrative in order to understand code and analysis. Conveniently, that pretty well describes journalism students and working professionals...I would recommend publication. It advances the field of data journalism and presents a solid text for instructors or practitioners who are interested in R for analysis. ~Matthew Waite


The book can provide a good starting point into working with R. It covers a lot of perspectives that are expected in newsrooms all over the world, especially working with geospatial data. It also provides a lot of good examples and interesting additional resources. The packages used are also mainly part of the standard corpus of R-packages. ~Benedict Witzenberger, Suddeutsche Zeitung I am the data editor of a mid-sized newsroom. I have long wished for an Intro to R book that was geared toward journalists, not data scientists. I've found that fellow journalists are much more likely to pick up on the intricacies of a computing language like R when they encounter it through a relatable example, like visualizing Election Night votes or analyzing a city council budget. Additionally, there are some R functions that simply aren't useful for the quantitative needs of most journalists. This is what I appreciated the most about the book - its practical nature (the title doesn't lie!) Machlis focuses on the concepts that data journalists most frequently encounter and spends little to no time on those they don't...I also appreciated Chapter 17, An R Project from Start to Finish. This chapter is exactly why I've wanted a journalism-specific Intro to R project that I can recommend to my colleagues ~Ryann Jones, Deputy Editor, Data at ProPublica I like the book. It's conversationally written, it walks you through common problems in data journalism and for the most part uses the most common libraries to analyze and visualize data...The book's instructional approach is the real value - it seems aimed at an audience that needs a narrative in order to understand code and analysis. Conveniently, that pretty well describes journalism students and working professionals...I would recommend publication. It advances the field of data journalism and presents a solid text for instructors or practitioners who are interested in R for analysis. ~Matthew Waite I NEED THIS BOOK. I may adopt it as a textbook. ~Alberto Cairo, University of Miami


Practical R for Mass Communication and Journalism looks to me like a fabulous resource for those folks who always wanted to learn some more R but were afraid to ask. Definitely recommended. ~Carl Howe, Director of Education, RStudio The book can provide a good starting point into working with R. It covers a lot of perspectives that are expected in newsrooms all over the world, especially working with geospatial data. It also provides a lot of good examples and interesting additional resources. The packages used are also mainly part of the standard corpus of R-packages. ~Benedict Witzenberger, Suddeutsche Zeitung I am the data editor of a mid-sized newsroom. I have long wished for an Intro to R book that was geared toward journalists, not data scientists. I've found that fellow journalists are much more likely to pick up on the intricacies of a computing language like R when they encounter it through a relatable example, like visualizing Election Night votes or analyzing a city council budget. Additionally, there are some R functions that simply aren't useful for the quantitative needs of most journalists. This is what I appreciated the most about the book - its practical nature (the title doesn't lie!) Machlis focuses on the concepts that data journalists most frequently encounter and spends little to no time on those they don't...I also appreciated Chapter 17, An R Project from Start to Finish. This chapter is exactly why I've wanted a journalism-specific Intro to R project that I can recommend to my colleagues ~Ryann Jones, Deputy Editor, Data at ProPublica I like the book. It's conversationally written, it walks you through common problems in data journalism and for the most part uses the most common libraries to analyze and visualize data...The book's instructional approach is the real value - it seems aimed at an audience that needs a narrative in order to understand code and analysis. Conveniently, that pretty well describes journalism students and working professionals...I would recommend publication. It advances the field of data journalism and presents a solid text for instructors or practitioners who are interested in R for analysis. ~Matthew Waite I NEED THIS BOOK. I may adopt it as a textbook. ~Alberto Cairo, University of Miami


Author Information

Sharon Machlis is the author of Computerworld’sBeginner’s Guide to R, host of InfoWorld’sDo More With R video screencast series, admin for the R for Journalists Google Group, and is well known among Twitter users who follow the #rstats hashtag. She is Director of Editorial Data and Analytics at IDG Communications (parent company of Computerworld, InfoWorld, PC World and Macworld, among others) and a frequent speaker at data journalism and R conferences.

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