National newspapers coverage of the coronavirus pandemic in nigeria
Table Of Contents
Chapter ONE
INTRODUCTION
- 1.1Introduction
- 1.2Background of Study
- 1.3Problem Statement
- 1.4Objective of Study
- 1.5Limitation of Study
- 1.6Scope of Study
- 1.7Significance of Study
- 1.8Structure of the Research
- 1.9Definition of Terms
Chapter TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
- 2.1Overview of Literature Review
- 2.2Theoretical Framework
- 2.3Conceptual Framework
- 2.4Previous Studies on the Topic
- 2.5Key Concepts and Definitions
- 2.6Current Trends and Gaps in Literature
- 2.7Methodological Approaches in Previous Research
- 2.8Critique of Existing Literature
- 2.9Relevance of Literature to Current Study
- 2.10Summary of Literature Review
Chapter THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
- 3.1Research Methodology Overview
- 3.2Research Design
- 3.3Population and Sampling Techniques
- 3.4Data Collection Methods
- 3.5Data Analysis Techniques
- 3.6Research Instrumentation
- 3.7Ethical Considerations
- 3.8Validity and Reliability
Chapter FOUR
DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS
- 4.1Data Presentation and Description
- 4.2Analysis of Findings
- 4.3Comparison with Research Objectives
- 4.4Interpretation of Results
- 4.5Discussion on Key Findings
- 4.6Implications of Findings
- 4.7Recommendations for Future Research
- 4.8Practical Recommendations
Chapter FIVE
SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- 5.1Conclusion and Summary
- 5.2Recap of Research Objectives
- 5.3Summary of Findings
- 5.4Contributions to Knowledge
- 5.5Limitations of the Study
- 5.6Recommendations for Practice
- 5.7Recommendations for Further Research
- 5.8Final Thoughts and Closing Remarks
Project Abstract
<p> </p><p>The media are a major player during periods of disease outbreak by virtue of the influence they can exert on the public’s understanding and perception of public health situations. The agenda the media set and how issues are framed can also impact on the direction or outcome of health situations. A novel coronavirus that originated in China and has since spread to more than 20 other countries has dominated headlines across the globe since it was first announced in December 2019, as scientists and media outlets (including this one) scramble to understand the virus’ origins, trajectory and impact. The aim of this study was to examine the extent and patterns of coverage of the COVID-19 by national newspapers in Nigeria. The agenda-setting theory, media framing theory, and the social responsibility theory formed the theoretical foundation to this study.</p><p>The research method adopted for this study was content analysis. Three Nigerian national newspapers- <em>The Punch</em>, <em>The Guardian</em>, and <em>Vanguard</em>– were purposively selected. The timeframe for this study spanned a period of 4 months from January 1, 2020 to April 20, 2020. The purposive sampling technique was used to select weekday editions and exclude weekend editions of the selected newspapers. The census or complete enumeration technique was used to study the entire weekday editions of the three newspapers published within the 4-month period, resulting in a sample size of 1,305 editions from an accessible population of 1,827 editions. A total of 687 contents on the coronavirus were found, coded, and analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics.</p><p>Findings revealed that the selected newspapers were episodic in their coverage by presenting the CORONAVIRUS pandemic overwhelmingly through news reports while, comparatively, doing little in terms of interpretation and analysis. The newspapers largely accorded low prominence to issues on the herders-farmers conflict with the placement of a majority of stories on the inside pages and far less on the front page. It was shown that the newspapers varied their coverage across the six geopolitical zones of Nigeria. Results showed that the newspapers were reliant on government officials such as Nigeria centre for disease and control , security personnel and victims/eyewitnesses as their major news sources.</p><p>The study concluded that the selected newspapers played some parts in the mitigation of the coronavirus reportage, and performed their watchdog role over the society effectively. The study recommended, among other things, that the Nigeria press should be more interpretative and analytical in their coverage of the coronavirus cases ;that journalists should be regularly trained in health sensitive reporting.</p> <br><p></p>
Project Overview