Close Menu
John Mahama News
  • Home
  • Ghana News
  • Anti-Corruption
    • Corruption Watch
  • Economic
    • Education & Innovation
  • Environmental
    • Governance & Policy
  • Health & Welfare
    • Historical & Cultural Insights
    • Infrastructure & Development
    • International Relations
  • Ministerial News
    • Presidential Updates
  • Public Opinion
    • Regional Governance
      • Social Issues & Advocacy
      • Youth & Sports
What's Hot

Mahama vows to fix power fluctuations in North East Region

June 15, 2025

10 kinds of women who have denied men the joy of fatherhood

June 15, 2025

Don’t buy contaminated food – Environmental director advises 

June 15, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Mahama vows to fix power fluctuations in North East Region
  • 10 kinds of women who have denied men the joy of fatherhood
  • Don’t buy contaminated food – Environmental director advises 
  • Ghana’s Path to Energy Sovereignty, Industrial Transformation, and Ecological Sustainability
  • Trump administration lists Ghana, 24 other African countries for possible travel ban – Report
  • 12 out of 14 districts suffering from illegal mining – Western Regional Minister
  • A Call for Legal and Institutional Reforms
  • Ghana’s Real Estate: A Booming but fiercely competitive market- Who’s Buying, Who’s Watching, and Where is the Market Headed?
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
John Mahama News
Sunday, June 15
  • Home
  • Ghana News
  • Anti-Corruption
    • Corruption Watch
  • Economic
    • Education & Innovation
  • Environmental
    • Governance & Policy
  • Health & Welfare
    • Historical & Cultural Insights
    • Infrastructure & Development
    • International Relations
  • Ministerial News
    • Presidential Updates
  • Public Opinion
    • Regional Governance
      • Social Issues & Advocacy
      • Youth & Sports
John Mahama News
Home » Framing, tone, and source analysis

Framing, tone, and source analysis

johnmahamaBy johnmahamaJune 14, 2025 International Relations No Comments5 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Online news portals’ representation and coverage of the COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination promotion stories in Africa are produced and disseminated to inform and give all-around updates on the COVID-19 pandemic to the respective audience.

During the coverage of news stories, various news media platforms, including online news portals attach a given definition to the COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination campaign, relate the interpretation to the information regarding COVID-19 vaccines, and presented evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic to promote, strengthen, as well as naturalize the interpretation.

Digital media platforms, especially news portals in Africa produce and circulate news stories on the COVID-19 vaccines and vaccinations, as well as pertinent issues that confront the daily lives of the citizenry. In the production as well as distribution of news, journalists do not just share information but also paint reality.

Journalists across the globe depict reality by describing events and employing some aspects of those events as proof or justify their interpretations. In reality, the news portals often portray a particular perspective of the situation and thereafter follow the reporting of evidence not only strengthens and legitimizes the news event but also naturalizes the interpretation.

Another important news portal strategy that influences COVID-19 representation or portrayal is framing. Framing contends that images, as well as the portrayal of reality, are indicators of selection as well as the portrayal of reality by media. The perceptions, representations, and the creation of images, depend on a given media, since people do not only understand but also explain various matters as presented in the news. The construction of images requires information, which should be provided by a given media within a selected as well as crystallized manner.

Universally, media outlets, especially news portals employ different tones in reporting news stories, intending to influence the audience to hold or have an attitudinal change towards a phenomenon. A tone can be deployed to tell a story from the perspective of either positive neutral or negative angles. The attribute of a tone in reporting a news item on a particular issue is influenced primarily by characteristics and the media environment.

News portals sourcing or search that considers what kind of information a journalist acquires from whom is undoubtedly essential as it affects the type of news that a website disseminates. Traditional media and website sourcing offer individuals an opportunity to present their stories and provide important evidence relating to the argument. By sharing information from a single source over another’s information, news sourcing not only portrays reality but also represents the image of society.

In one of such a recent study, John Demuyakor, Stevens Justice Avenyo, and Adwoa Sikayena Amankwah adopted a comparative quantitative content analysis to explore how the frames, tones, and information sources can influence the coverage of COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination in four countries in Africa. The news portals and countries for this study were purposively sampled based on the World Press Freedom Index released by Reporters Without Borders for 2021. Namibia, South Africa, Ghana, and Botswana were among the top ten countries in Africa with the best Media Freedoms.

The findings showed that Ghana’s news portals’ coverage of COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination campaigns used mainly non-official sources in the coverage of COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination stories, whereas Botswana, Namibia, and South African media used official sources. Other findings show that Ghana’s news portals covered COVID-19 vaccines, and vaccination stories in a negative tone, and employed conflict, and economic consequence frames. Botswana, Namibia, and South African news portals, however, adopted neutral and positive tones and framed them according to human interest, responsibility, and morality.

The results suggest that the text of the news articles from the four African countries’ on COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination adopted different generic framing styles, and the tones were predominantly a mixture of positive, neutral, and negative.

This study has proposed some practical and theoretical implications. Both traditional and online media’s roles are to educate, inform and entertain. However, the reliance nature of some of the generic frames on how the COVID-19 vaccines and vaccinations news stories are presented as variations in the sources of news, might make it extremely difficult for the news portals to present the issues all around, and substantially.

Also, the unique nature of the COVID-19 pandemic might make it difficult for all the news portals to fully represent all aspects of the COVID-19 vaccine debate. Finally, news portals and online content creators across the four countries, need to be aware of how to access news from rightful sources and also must take advantage of their wide local and global audience to get diverse opinions, before their voices are added to the COVID-19 vaccines for creditable news production and dissemination. Specialization in news reporting and journalism practice must also be encouraged. Health journalists and medical experts must be at the forefront of telling the COVID-19 vaccine story in Africa.

In conclusion, this current study makes some contributions to framing, by demonstrating how the framing theory, could be employed to show how variables like tone and source could be used to explain how the digital media platforms in Africa covered the COVID-19 vaccine stories. For very critical issues like the COVID-19 pandemic, the findings from this study have shown that economic consequences, responsibility, and conflict frames, with official news sources were predominant in the representation and coverage of the COVID-19 vaccines, and vaccination campaigns in Africa.

This study is published by Communication and the Public. Sage Journals. https://doi.org/10.1177/20570473231225299

Dr. John Demuyakor, Mr. Stevens Justice Avenyo, and Prof. Adwoa Sikayena Amankwah, Department of Communication Studies, University of Professional Studies, Accra



Source link

johnmahama
  • Website

Keep Reading

Freddie Blay’s call for a Mahama third term is ill-conceived and dangerous

My heartfelt message to President Mahama on the Zoomlion contract action

Of press freedom in Ghana and foreign interference

This China 0% tariff deal sounds sweet, but is it really good for Ghana?

Stop the political interference — EC must complete its work in Ablekuma North

A reflection on journalism, mentorship, and the unfinished work of democracy

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Ghana validates first National E-Commerce Strategy  

June 15, 2025

Setting the standard for professional cleaning in Accra, Tema, and beyond

June 15, 2025

Consensus reached with COMAC members, preparing for June 16 take off – Edudzi Tamaklo

June 13, 2025

Interior Minister urges new Gaming Commission Board to strengthen regulations

June 13, 2025
Latest Posts

IET-GH inducts new engineers, urges embrace of innovation and lifelong learning

June 14, 2025

Sam George tours Girls in ICT training centres in Volta Region

June 14, 2025

Telcos to invest US$1.2m to improve data quality

June 11, 2025

Subscribe to News

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Welcome to JohnMahama.news, your trusted source for the latest news, insights, and updates about the President of Ghana, government policies, and the nation at large. Our mission is to provide accurate, timely, and comprehensive coverage of all things related to the leadership of Ghana, as well as key national issues that impact citizens and communities across the country.

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 johnmahama. Designed by johnmahama.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.