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Category Archives: Reach and Impact
When they get it wrong
It’s one of the most commonly-cited deterrents to doing media interviews: not having control over how the words you speak will be used in the resulting story, whether it’s in a newspaper, on the radio or on TV. But just … Continue reading
The Motivational Power of Guilt
Guilt didn’t play a big role in my upbringing: I was never discouraged from having sex in order to prevent my mother from having a heart attack, nor was I warned to do well in school to compensate for any … Continue reading
Posted in Media Interviews, Op Eds by IO Grads, Reach and Impact, Scholarly Concerns, Uncategorized, Workshop Insights
Tagged CBC, CTV, guilt, heart attack, how to be effective in media interviews, impact, interviews, Kelly Grindrod, media, motivation, overprescribing antibiotics, pharmacy, radio, resources, sex, Toronto Star, TV, University of Waterloo
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Getting Ahead
… of the news story, that is. It’s a great strategy to increase your likelihood of publication: if you know that a research report, government announcement or legal decision is about to be released, and your informed opinion about the … Continue reading
Posted in Effective Commentary Strategies, Op Eds by IO Grads, Pitching Your Piece, Publishing Opportunities, Reach and Impact, Uncategorized, Workshop Insights
Tagged analysis, Carissima Mathen, David Watson, Elizabeth Sheehy, insight, newspaper, op ed, Ottawa Citizen, Supreme Court
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New Year’s Resolution: How to disregard criticism by applying the “reasonable man” test
Celebrated American poet and critic, Ezra Pound, in his considered advice to beginning poets offered the following advice: “Pay no attention to the criticism of men who have never themselves written a notable work.” But he could have been speaking to … Continue reading
WTF???
The confession made by the Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies doubled as both a great tip and the best laugh of the day. Last week during one of three Informed Opinions workshops I delivered in Winnipeg (thank you, Jane Ursel, … Continue reading
Most common errors made by aspiring op ed writers – part 2
Far too much research has already documented that when something goes wrong, women are highly inclined to blame the problem or setback on their own deficiencies. This tendency operates in stark contrast to men, who are more likely to blame … Continue reading
Posted in Better Writing, Effective Commentary Strategies, Reach and Impact, Scholarly Concerns, Uncategorized, Valuing Women
Tagged assumptions, bias, care, cartoon, commentary, conceptual, families, hard-to-visualize, new, op ed, readers, refute, research, resonance, social justice, sports, women, writing
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Deferring to Jay Smooth on trolls
Don’t take my word for it… On the retrograde troll front, I defer to hip hop DJ and vlogger, Jay Smooth, who recently weighed in on the classic, cautionary Internet story involving media critic, Anita Sarkeesian. He offers a compelling and persuasive analysis … Continue reading
“It’s not about you”
Will Dena McMartin’s recent op ed in the Regina Leader-Post help prevent a flooding disaster and save lives? It just might. And even if it doesn’t, the informed analysis of the University of Regina professor of environmental systems engineering offered … Continue reading →