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The Gender Report

A closer look at gender and online news

female bylines

Six months: Findings on women as sources, authors in Gender Check monitoring project

July 27, 2011August 23, 2011Jasmine R. LinabaryLeave a comment

Editor’s note: Six months ago, we set out to look at how women are represented in online news both as sources and as authors. To mark our progress, this week we’re reviewing our findings as well as unveiling new statistics based on what we’ve uncovered thus far in a series of posts. View other six-month coverage here.

—–

On Jan. 18, 2011, we began a project to monitor U.S. news websites as part of an effort to look at gender representations in online news.

In this effort, we monitored two websites — one associated with a newspaper and one that was online-only — in four different geographic regions once a week. These websites included the Seattle Times, Seattle P-I, New York Times, ProPublica, Stltoday.com, St. Louis Beacon, Miami Herald and Patch (Seminole Heights).

We pulled the lead article from each site at the time we visited and performed a “Gender Check” by recording information on the gender of the author and the breakdown of the genders of the human sources referenced in the articles among other details. (For more on what Gender Checks are, read our introductory post here.)

Last week, with our Gender Check from the South, we completed six months’ worth of monitoring. Between Jan. 18 and July 22, we monitored a total of 190 articles, averaging about 32 articles a month. This included 52 articles each from the West and Midwest regions, 46 articles from the Northeast and 40 articles from the South. These lower counts in the Northeast and South may have some slight affect overall, but these regions’ standings among the others have remained fairly consistent over time.

Without further ado, here are our findings:

Sourcing

During our first six months of Gender Checks, women made up 25.3 percent of human sources referenced in the articles we monitored. This broke down to 572 male sources and 194 female sources. This does not include those whose gender could not be identified.

The high came with women as 30.4 percent of sources in the fourth month followed by our low at 19.5 percent in the fifth month.

Seventy-one of the 190 articles monitored contained only male sources (no female sources), or roughly 37.4 percent. This compared to 11 articles with only female sources, or 5.8 percent. Four articles contained no sources at all.

Among geographic regions, the West and the South both had the highest percentage of women as sources at roughly 30 percent. The Northeast was the lowest at 20.7 percent.

Here’s how that broke down geographically:

  • West: 128 males, 55 female (Women at 30 percent)
  • Northeast: 207 males, 54 females (Women at 20.7 percent)
  • Midwest: 158 males, 51 females (Women at 24.4 percent)
  • South: 79 male, 34 female (Women at 30.1 percent)

Online-only outlets have continued a trend of using a slightly higher percentage of female sources than those associated with a newspaper that we first started observing in our first quarter findings. After six months, women were 28.1 percent of sources at online-only sites versus 22.4 percent at newspaper-connected sites. This trend of the online-only sites having the higher percentage of female sources held true in every region. Among the newspaper sites were the two lowest percentages of woman as sources, coming from the New York Times (only 14.2 percent) and Stltoday.com (at 19 percent). We’ll note that when you divide out the numbers by individual news sites, the number of articles in our sample is still low, so that should be kept in mind. We’ll still need to see if those trends for specific news sites hold over time.

Online-only sites also had a few more sources overall, attributable to the fact that the St. Louis Beacon and then ProPublica had the highest number of sources in our study. However, the number was brought down by the Patch site in the category, which had the lowest number of sources in our sample.

  • Newspaper website: 291 males, 84 females (Women at 22.4 percent)
  • Online-only:  281 males, 110 females (Women at 28.1 percent)

Authorship

Overall, women wrote 66 of the articles in our study, while men bylined 109. Fourteen articles had a shared byline between a man (or men) and a woman. One article was by contributors. This meant women bylined 34.7 percent of articles in our study, and 37.7 percent of articles by a person (or persons) of one gender or the other.

Eleven articles were written by more than one man, but no articles in our sample were written by more than one woman.

During one month of our study, the count of women’s bylines exceeded that of men. In the fourth month, women bylined 16 of 32 stories. Men wrote 12 and the remainder were shared bylines between a man and a woman.

When the numbers are looked at by geographic region, the Northeast had the lowest percentage of female bylines with 23.9 percent of the articles. In our sites from the South, women were near parity with 45 percent.

  • West: 17 stories by an individual woman, 32 by one or more man, two with a shared byline between a man and a woman, one by contributors (Women at 32.7 percent overall)
  • Northeast: 11 by an individual woman, 28 by one or more man, seven with a shared byline (Women at 23.9 percent overall)
  • Midwest: 20 by a woman, 28 by one or more man, four with a shared byline (Women at 38.5 percent overall)
  • South: 18 by a woman, 21 by one or more man, one with a shared byline (Women at 45 percent overall)

In bylines we again observed another trend we began seeing during our first quarter findings. Though newspaper-related sites may have fewer female sources than their online-only counterparts, they do fair better than them when it comes to bylines. Of the articles from newspaper sites in our study, 38.9 percent were bylined by women. This compared to 30.5 percent at online-only outlets. The same trend held true in all geographic regions, except the Northeast, where ProPublica had a very slightly higher percentage of female bylines than the New York Times — a difference at this point of less than a percent.

  • Newspaper website: 37 by a woman, 47 by one or more man, 10 with shared bylines between a man and woman, one by contributors (Women at 38.9 percent overall)
  • Online-only: 29 by a woman, 62 by one or more man, four with shared bylines (Women at 30.5 percent overall)

Author gender and source selection

Like we have with our other recent monitoring studies, we also looked at how the author’s gender affected the use of female sources. Again, we saw a difference, with women having a higher percentage of female sources than men, though the difference was not as large quite as large as in the other studies.

In this case in our first six months, females were 28.1 percent of sources in articles written by women and 21.8 percent in those written by men. Articles with a shared byline between a man and women had women as 33 percent of sources. Though differences in sourcing between articles by men and those by women have been consistent across our three studies, these shared bylines have not, which is something we’ll continue to explore.

In review

We’ll still be doing our weekly Gender Checks for the next six months. Be sure to keep an eye out for our other monthly tallies as well as individual Gender Checks. Review past posts on Gender Check findings below:

  • Women wrote more than 40 percent of articles in month six of Gender Checks
  • Gender Checks show higher count of female bylines in fourth month, fewer female sources in fifth
  • First quarter: Women are 24.6 percent of sources, 31 percent of authors
  • Third month finds dip in percentage of female authors
  • Second month sees decrease in female sources
  • Women make up 27.6% of sources in first month

As a note to our readers, we hope you remember that our study is still young and has some limitations. Further research is still needed. For other data on gender representations in online news and to compare these findings to others’, check out our “Findings and Statistics” category and our “Useful Resources” page.

We’re interested in what you make of the findings. Share your thoughts in the comment section below or email us at genderreport@gmail.com. Stay tuned for posts coming Friday and Saturday that recap all of our findings here at The Gender Report thus far and what we’ve learned from them.

Findings and Statistics, Our studies, Six monthsauthorship, female bylines, gender, Gender Checks, online news, sources, women in journalism, women in the news

Six months: Our findings of gender representation in the New Media Index

July 26, 2011August 16, 2011Jasmine R. LinabaryLeave a comment

Editor’s note: Six months ago, we set out to look at how women are represented in online news both as sources and as authors. To mark our progress, this week we’re reviewing our findings as well as unveiling new statistics based on what we’ve uncovered thus far in a series of posts. View other six-month coverage here.

—–

“Of the most talked about articles on the web, how many feature women? How many are produced by females?”

Those were some of the questions we asked at the start of our project that led us to monitor each of the top articles in the Project for Excellence in Journalism‘s weekly New Media Index reports based on the links provided. The New Media Index presented an avenue to look for answers to these questions since it culls the top five linked to and discussed stories and opinion pieces from the web during a Monday through Friday week based on commentary from blogs and social media sites. We chose to focus in on the main top five in the blogosphere.

Each month between 12 and 29 articles could be checked, for a total of 118 articles over the six-month period between January and June 2011. Even though there were on average five subjects each week, at times more than one link was offered on the subject. In those cases, we chose to monitor the first mentioned or that which appeared based on the writing as more dominant, unless it was specifically mentioned that two articles shared the attention, in which case we checked both. For some weeks or subjects, no links were provided, resulting in lower numbers during those months’ totals.

The top news source of the links PEJ provided during this time frame was the LA Times, with more than 60 of the 118 articles we monitored, followed by the Washington Post and then the BBC. All other news sources had two or fewer articles in the sample. From each article, we recorded the subject matter, the gender breakdown of the sources and the gender of the authors or producers, similar to what we’ve done with our weekly “gender checks.”

Here’s what was found:

Sourcing

Women made up 20.2 percent of sources whose gender could be identified during the first six months of the year. This calculated out to 323 male sources and 82 female sources.

The low point for female sources came in May, in which they were only 13.3 percent of sources. The high was in February with 28 percent.

Startling was the fact that 49 of the 118 articles contained no female sources at all (but did have male sources) — or 41.5 percent. Only three articles were the reverse with no male sources. Ten articles had no sources and these were mostly op-eds.

We also took a look at the number of articles with a single male vs. a single female news subject as the focus. Eighteen articles featured a single male subject, versus eight that were about a single female subject. Four of the articles were interviews. All of the interview subjects were male (an interview with Microsoft chief executive officer Steve Ballmer popped up twice but is counted once). Of the eight about women, three were about Sarah Palin, the former Alaska governor and Republican political figure, and two featured GOP presidential candidate Michele Bachmann.

Authorship

A woman (or two) bylined 31.3 percent of articles by authors of one gender or the other and 26.3 percent overall. A total of 68 articles were by one or more man, 31 by one or more woman, 10 with a shared byline between a man (or several) and a woman, and nine were not bylined.

The low for female authorship occurred in May, when women made up a minuscule 11.1 percent of authors of one gender or the other. The high was again in February with women as 41.7 percent.

Nineteen articles linked to were op-ed or commentary pieces during the past six months. Only three of those were by women. One of the 19 was a staff editorial.

Seven articles were written by more than one person of the same gender. Two were shared bylines with females and five shared bylines among males.

Author gender and source selection

We also decided to take a closer look at whether the gender of the author affected the percentage of female sources.

Females made up 28.9 percent of sources in articles by women in the sample. That percentage dropped to 19.3 percent in articles by men. In articles with shared bylines between a man (or men) and a woman, 11.9 percent of sources were women.

We also examined this during our recent study of the lead articles from 40 online news outlets situated nationally in the Columbia Journalism Review’s News Frontier Database. In that study, women were 38 percent of sources in stories by women and only 10 percent of sources in stories by men. Different than the findings here, in that study the percentage of female sources in stories with a shared byline between both a man and a woman were closer to that of those by female authors, at 37 percent.

This issue is something we will continue to look at with our studies in the future.

A look back

We’ll be continuing to monitor the New Media Index for the next six months, so be sure to check back for our monthly counts. To review our past posts on our New Media Index studies, see the links below:

  • Examining gender representations in the New Media Index (June-April)
  • May brought few female sources, bylines in New Media Index stories
  • Women’s presence higher in June after low showing in May’s New Media Index count

As a note to our readers, we hope you remember that our study is still young and has some limitations. Further research is still needed. For other data on gender representations in online news and to compare these findings to others’, check out our “Findings and Statistics” category and our “Useful Resources” page.

Findings and Statistics, Our studies, Six monthsauthorship, female bylines, gender, New Media Index, online news, sourcing, women in journalism

Women wrote more than 40 percent of articles in month six of Gender Checks

July 25, 2011August 13, 2011Jasmine R. LinabaryLeave a comment

Editor’s note: Six months ago, we set out to look at how women are represented in online news both as sources and as authors. To mark our progress, this week we’re reviewing our findings as well as unveiling new statistics based on what we’ve uncovered thus far in a series of posts. View other six-month coverage here.

—–

Women had more than 40 percent of bylines in the sixth month of stories we monitored in our weekly Gender Checks. Females also rebounded from our lowest showing of 19.5 percent of sources in the fifth month.

Since this marks our sixth month of our Gender Checks project, we’ll be unveiling the half-year roundup of our findings later this week. For now, here’s a look at the representation of women during just our sixth month:

Sixth Month: June 28 – July 22, 2011

During our sixth month of Gender Checks, we reviewed 32 articles, two in each Gender Check. This month that included four Gender Checks from each geographic region. For each Gender Check, we looked at two websites from that region — one associated with a newspaper and one that was online-only. For our monitoring, we pulled the top or lead articles on their websites at the time of the check and gathered information on the gender of the author, the breakdown of the genders of the human sources referenced in the articles and other details. (For more on what Gender Checks are, read our introductory post here.)

Sourcing

Overall, the articles contained 105 male sources and 39 female sources, which meant women were 27 percent of the human sources referenced.

Here’s how it broke down by geographic region:

  • West: 22 males, 11 female (Women at 33.3 percent)
  • Northeast: 43 males, 14 females (Women at 24.6 percent)
  • Midwest: 32 males, 10 females (Women at 23.8 percent)
  • South: 8 male, 4 female (Women at 33.3 percent)

Sites associated with newspapers used a low percentage of female sources this month. Here’s the breakdown by news sites associated with a traditional newspaper and those that are not.

  • Newspaper website: 56 males, 11 females (Women at 16.4 percent)
  • Online-only:  49 males, 28 females (Women at 36.4 percent)

Authorship

This month 13 articles were written by an individual woman and 17 by one or more man, which meant women were 43.3 percent of authors of one gender or the other this month, which is one of our higher percentages by month. The highest came in the fourth month with women as 57.1 percent of bylines, the only month that women were in the majority. There were two shared bylines between a man and a woman.

Here’s how bylines broke down by geographic region:

  • West: 4 stories by an individual woman, 4 by an individual man
  • Northeast: 2 by a woman, 4 by men and 2 with a shared byline between a man and a woman
  • Midwest: 3 by a woman, 5 by a man
  • South: 4 by a woman, 4 by a man (or two)

Here’s how women did in bylines between newspaper sites and online-only sites this month:

  • Newspaper website: 5 by a woman, 10 by men and 1 with a shared byline between a man and woman
  • Online-only: 8 by a woman, 7 by a man, 1 with a shared byline

As always, we remind our readers that these findings reflect a limited amount of data (a month’s worth) from our simple Gender Checks. We hope you recognize the limitations of this data, since we’ve only sampled a few articles from eight news sites. Further research and time is needed to verify any validity across the board.

To look at past month breakdowns and other data on gender representations in online news, check out our “Findings and Statistics” category. Check back later this week for our full sixth-month report.

Findings and Statistics, Our studies, Six monthsauthorship, female bylines, gender, Gender Checks, online news, sources, women in journalism, women in the news

Women’s presence higher in June after low showing in May’s New Media Index count

July 15, 2011July 30, 2011Jasmine R. LinabaryLeave a comment

The number of female authors and sources in the top articles in the blogosphere climbed again in June after a low showing in May.

Here at the Gender Report we’ve been monitoring the top articles based on links provided in the Project for Excellence in Journalism‘s weekly New Media Index roundups, which chronicle the top five linked to and discussed news stories and opinion pieces around the web in a Monday to Friday week based on commentary on blogs and social media sites. We focus on the main top five in the blogosphere. When more than one link was provided on the topic, we’ve monitored the first mentioned or the one that appears based on the writing to be more dominant, unless it is specifically mentioned that two articles shared the attention for that particular subject.

In May, we saw a new low with women as only 13.3 percent of sources and even fewer authors in the 12 articles that could be monitored that month. Women were more present in June’s count, particularly among bylines. Here’s what we found:

June 2011

PEJ New Media Index: June 13-17, 2011

Between May 30 and July 1, the New Media Index included 29 articles could be checked — more than double the amount from last month. For five topics this month, two articles shared the attention, contributing to the higher overall article count. Only one story did not have a link provided this month — Obama’s Afghanistan plan — when instead a special report was done.

Here’s what was uncovered:

  • Women were 20.2 percent of sources in this month’s articles. The articles contained 83 male sources and 21 female sources.
  • This month 16 articles were written or produced by a man and nine articles were written by a woman (or in one case, two). Three were by both a man or two and a woman and one was not bylined.
  • Like last month, two top linked-to articles in blogs were opinion pieces. Both were by male authors.

Again, links this month predominately came from the LA Times, with a few for the BBC and individual articles from four other news sources.

For past months’ findings as well as other findings on gender and the online news, visit our findings and statistics page.

Coming soon: Check back on The Gender Report for a look at the overall findings from the first six months of our monitoring of the New Media Index articles.

Findings and Statistics, Our studiesauthorship, female bylines, gender, New Media Index, sources, women in journalism

In the newsroom: A look at gender breakdowns at the Seattle Times, Seattle P-I

May 31, 2011July 21, 2011Jasmine R. LinabaryLeave a comment

When it comes to who gets the prominent news story byline, several factors are usually at play.

Thus far here at The Gender Report, we’ve been simply recording the gender of the authors of the articles we turn up in our weekly Gender Checks, which we pull from the articles that appear as top stories on the news sites at the time we examine those sites on that particular day. According to our first-quarter findings, women made up roughly 31 percent of authors of those news stories we examined.

In a series of posts (one from each of our geographical regions), we’re going to look at how these findings reflect the actual makeups of these news sites’ newsrooms. That will help us as we take a look at what other factors may be involved in those top-of-the-website bylines.

As a starting point for context since half of the news websites in our sample are tied to a traditional newspaper, in its most recent newsroom census, the American Society of News Editors reported that women make up 36.9 percent of those working full-time at U.S. daily newspapers.

For the sake of our study, most of our data for the breakdowns of the individual newsrooms we feature will come from what was readily available online through the news sites’ own contact and staff listing pages. From our experience in the industry, we know these aren’t always quite up to date, but it should give us a general idea of what the newsrooms look like. We’ve stuck to newsroom staff for our purposes. This may vary by news site, as some, particularly newspapers, include different staff positions on their lists.

Without further delay, in our first post in the series, here’s a look at the West.

West

In the first quarter, women bylined 26 percent of the stories we “gender checked” in the West. Six stories were by an individual woman and 17 were by one or more man.

Seattle Times

Overall, the Seattle Times newsroom and seattletimes.com staff list (accessed May 25) shows women as 45.5 percent of the staff members listed. That about matches the percentage of female bylines we found (45 percent) in our newspaper-based news sites in the first quarter, of which the Seattle Times is one. Of the articles we examined from the Seattle Times in the first quarter, five were by a woman, five by a man, two with a shared byline with a woman and one or more man, and one by contributors.

Interestingly, on the Seattle Times’ staff, women matched or slightly exceeded the number of men in the executive staff, business and technology staff and local news staff.

As was to be expected, traditionally male-dominated fields within journalism appeared as such at the Seattle Times. Sports had 13 male staff and two female, according to its online staff list. The photography staff had 13 males and three females. The investigations staff had four males and one female. Women made up the majority of the entertainment staff with seven women to three men.

Of those who are specifically listed as staff of seattletimes.com, eight were female while six were male. The managing editor of digital news and innovation has been a woman, Kathy Best, since 2007. According to her LinkedIn page, Best is now the managing editor in charge of content creation after a newsroom reorganization this spring. That same reorganization likely caused other changes on the staff list.

Seattle P-I

The Seattle P-I, formerly a newspaper until it went online only in 2009, has a much smaller staff than its newspaper competitor, the Seattle Times. Of the 20-person news staff (accessed May 25), six are female, or 30 percent. In this case, however, our findings did not match up with the staff list breakdown. During Gender Checks, only one article in the first quarter was by a woman, while 12 were by males. Overall among our online-only news sites, women had 19.1 percent of the bylines in that time frame.

The main reason for this at the P-I, by our deduction, is that we see the same byline often producing the lead stories of the day. Most of the stories given top billing on the website are crime related and, therefore, written by crime news gatherer Levi Pulkkinen. Since we pull from the top stories displayed on the website at the time we visit it to conduct our weekly Gender Checks, the male-female byline ratio in this case is more reflective of editorial choices than the actual staff makeup.

It’s noteworthy that the executive producer of the P-I is a woman, Michelle Nicolosi. She also managed the site’s transition to become online only. Other woman-held positions include news gatherer (including aerospace), producer and community editor.

Watch for the next installment in the series looking at the staff breakdowns at our monitored sites coming soon.

Findings and Statistics, Our studiesauthorship, female bylines, gender breakdown, newsroom, Seattle P-I, Seattle Times
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