Friday, March 30, 2012

JOUR 1111 Assessment Item One


My name is Chloe Hill, I am a Journalism student at UQ, an elite rower and my life is one never-ending day-by-day cycle of media and production usage. Before this assignment, I would describe my daily routine fairly simply as: wake, train, eat, work, eat, train, eat, sleep, (with ‘work’ swapped for ‘uni’ a couple of days per week). However, since recording my media and production usage for a period of 10 days, the perspective I have of my daily life has been greatly shifted.


Media is all around us, we can’t escape it. With the portability of internet via phones, laptops and other devices, we can now connect with media while on the move, straight from our bag or back pocket.
As shown in the graph above, my most extensively used sources of media are my phone, radio and internet. When recording my phone usage, I accounted for time spent both texting and using the Facebook and Gmail applications. However, when recording internet usage, I separated general surfing from Facebook and Gmail, hence the less frequent figures in the two end columns.

There are a number of trends in my results that can be explained by the schedule I follow week by week:

  • ·         The days I train both in the morning and evening, radio usage is high due to more time spent travelling.
  • ·         On both Thursdays (15th and 22nd March), phone usage was low as I don’t train Thursday afternoons and spend the afternoon at home, with lesser a need to contact people.
  • ·         I only listen to my iPod while at the gym, on Monday, Wednesday and Friday

When re-reading over the blogs I posted, outlining my routine and media usage day-by-day, I have come to associate high phone and radio usage, with days when I am home less often or not at all. Being away from my computer and internet, creates a need for me to connect to media via other means, hence my phone is pulled out and used, til the battery runs absolutely dry.

On average, per day, my media and production usage resulted in:
  • ·         Phone- 116 minutes
  • ·         Radio- 117 minutes
  • ·         Internet- 72.5 minutes
  • ·         iPod- 59 minutes
  • ·         TV- 18 minutes
  • ·         Newspaper- 2 minutes
  • ·         Facebook- 21 minutes
  • ·         Gmail- 4.5 minutes

So what does this 10 day recording period say about my relationship with Journalism and Communication?

I am a communications addict. Over the 10 days I spent close to 20 hours using my phone, which is close enough to one whole day of texting, Facebook-ing and emailing. If the essence of Journalism is telling stories, then my life is one constant journalistic ride of telling and retelling stories and ideas to family and friends, via the social media and communication.

How do my usage results compare with that of my peers?

None of my results are overly different or varied from my peers, as most of my results fall into the majority. I am not an iPhone user; I fall into the 13.4% with an “other” brand of smartphone, however, like 95.4% of my peers, I have and use the Facebook application on my phone. My internet usage falls just 4 minutes per day short of the 2-3 hours per day majority, however I am sure that if my schedule allowed for it, I would easily be within that category. I am in the minority in terms of listening to the radio. While a 53.9% majority listen to less than an hour of radio per day, I am within the 10.9% of the cohort who listen 1-2 hours per day. This higher usage amount is once again due to my busy training schedule, and the hours I spend in the car travelling each day.

Media and production rules our society. It is ever-expanding, allowing users more and more opportunities to connect with the rest of the world. It seems we have no choice but to embrace the always changing media and communication opportunities, and I personally, am excited for what is next to come.




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