Mark Coddington

Coddington teaches courses on digital journalism, media bias, social media and reporting. His research interests include media sociology, online news production, networked and participatory journalism, and social media.

Mark Coddington

Mark Coddington

Department Head and Associate Professor of Journalism and Mass Communications

Curriculum Vitae

Mark Coddington was a newspaper reporter in Nebraska before earning his Ph.D. in journalism from the University of Texas at Austin in 2015. His scholarly monograph, Aggregating the News: Secondhand Knowledge and the Erosion of Journalistic Authority, was published by Columbia University Press in 2019. His research has been published in journals including Journalism Studies, Journalism, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, and the International Journal of Communication. He is the co-author of RQ1, a monthly email newsletter on the latest in news and journalism research.

Education

  • Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin, 2015
  • M.A., University of Texas at Austin, 2012
  • B.A., Wheaton College (Illinois), 2006

Research

  • Media sociology
  • Online news production
  • Networked and participatory journalism
  • News aggregation
  • Social media and journalism

Teaching

  • JOUR 101: Introduction to Mass Communications
  • JOUR 201: Introduction to News Writing
  • JOUR 202: Introduction to Digital Journalism
  • JOUR 204: Media Bias: Beyond Right and Left
  • JOUR 220: Social Media: Principles and Practice
  • JOUR 230: Data-Driven Storytelling
  • JOUR 295: Podcasting
  • JOUR 330: Communication Theory and Research Methods

Selected Publications

Scholarly monograph

  • Coddington, M. (2019). Aggregating the news: Secondhand knowledge and the erosion of journalistic authority. New York: Columbia University Press

Peer-reviewed journal articles

  • Coddington, M., and Molyneux, L. (2024). Alternative epistemologies as distinguishing features of right-wing and left-wing media in the United States. Digital Journalism. [Published online before print]

  • Coddington, M., and Molyneux, L. (2023). When sources contradict: The epistemological functions of contradiction in news texts. Journalism Studies, 24(10), 1316-1333.

  • Coddington, M., and Molyneux, L. (2023). Making sources visible: Representation of evidence in news texts, 2007–2019. Journalism Practice, 17(4), 664-682.

  • Coddington, M., Lewis, S. C., & Belair-Gagnon, V. (2021). The imagined audience for news: Where does a journalist’s perception of the audience come from? Journalism Studies, 22(8), 1028-1046.

  • Coddington, M. (2020). Gathering evidence of evidence: News aggregation as an epistemological practice. Journalism, 21(3), 365-380.

  • Molyneux, L., & Coddington, M. (2019). Aggregation, clickbait and their effect on perceptions of journalistic credibility and quality. Journalism Practice, 14(4), 429-446.