Friday, April 27, 2012

Reporting ANZAC Day: Help Wanted

Sometimes it takes a different set of eyes to provide a fresh perspective on something familiar.  

And so it is with ANZAC Day, arguably Australia's most iconic day when Australians around the world gather to commemorate the lives of loved ones lost in war.

I have worked with journalists helping them to report ANZAC Day for five years.  Each year their questions are predictably the same and often their coverage repeats similar themes.  Each crop of young reporters is keen to get basic details right and a lot of effort goes to educating them.

This year Sharon Mascall-Dare, an independent researcher based at the University of South Australia  has produced an ANZAC Day Media Style Guide. Sharon who has worked with the ABC and BBC brings an independent and experienced perspective to ANZAC Day reporting.

The Guide provides journalists with a concise history of Anzac Day, as well as advice on identifying new story angles and avoiding overused clichés, words and phrases. It aims to be an objective resource for journalists throughout Australia.

Sharon's efforts were backed by a highly experienced editorial advisory board that brought together academia and industry.  The Narratives of War Research Group of the University of South Australia, also provided its expertise to the project.

I along with many others was pleased to share some thoughts with Sharon.

This year the Guide has been well received by the media, and as a living document it will become an even more valuable media tool as we head to 2015, the Centenary of the Gallipoli Landings.





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