1 / 16

Reporting Methods Course Syllabus

JOUR 5206: Develop the skills needed to gather and shape information into accurate and compelling stories. Complete four assignments and adhere to Canadian Press style. Attendance, punctuality, and participation are evaluated. Time management and outlines are emphasized.

dcowan
Download Presentation

Reporting Methods Course Syllabus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Pressjim.bronskill@thecanadianpress.comDavid McKie, CBCdavid_mckie@cbc.ca JOUR 5206: Reporting Methods

  2. Course syllabus http://www.davidmckie.com

  3. JOUR 5206: Goals • 1) Obtain a thorough grounding in journalistic research methods. • 2) Acquire skills needed to make sense of the information gathered. • 3) Develop the ability to shape the information into accurate and compelling stories. • In short: become a critical thinker

  4. Textbook

  5. Optional textbook 1

  6. OPTIONAL TEXTBOOK 2

  7. Readings • * Assigned readings are listed on the syllabus for relevant weeks • * With the obvious exception of this week, please read chapters before class to help prepare

  8. Assignments • * Four assignments, each worth 20 per cent of overall grade • * Stories involving business, access-to-information records, an event from the past, databases • * Final 20 per cent of grade based on presence, punctuality, participation, professionalism

  9. Elements of evaluation • Each assignment has three components, all of which will figure in the grade: • A. Copies of the actual documents compiled / gathered • B. A description of how the documents were obtained, and why they were useful • C. The resulting story • Please use Canadian Press style

  10. The “good story” test • * If your story reads easily, chances are it is A-level work • * If we must read your story two or three times to make sense of it, chances are it is B- or C-level work at best • * Tip: have a friend read your story to gauge flow and readability, and to see if there are obvious holes

  11. Time management • * We are giving you as much time as the short term will allow to complete your stories • * However, in order to succeed in this course you must work progressively at each story, sometimes tending to two or even three in the same week • * This is good practice for the newsroom, where work on different stories often overlaps

  12. OUTLINES / Drafts • We require outlines of your stories. See the syllabus for due dates. • The idea is to ensure your story is on the right track. • For each story, we will tell you what must be included in the outline. • If you do not submit an outline, we reserve the right to deduct half a grade when marking the story. • Fuller drafts of your stories are welcome, but must be submitted at least four days before the final deadline.

  13. What we expect Think of class as news meeting Regular attendance Inform us in advance if cannot attend Punctuality Participation Breaks only during break time No cell phones or emailing in class Please help us learn your names

  14. Contacting us Contact information on syllabus: click on our names Email is best Please avoid contacting us late in the afternoon on weekdays Virtual office hours: Wednesdays 11 a.m. to noon, we will be available for phone calls Other calls / meetings: by appointment

  15. Emails • * Please use your Carleton account for all correspondence with us • * cc: the other instructor • * Please acknowledge our replies to your questions and comments. It lets us know you received our message.

  16. Apprenticeships * No more than one week of class time * If two weeks, one week must be a break week * Please inform us in advance

More Related