Stephen Quinn
Stephen Quinn
Stephen Quinn
Spring 2009
Syllabus JRNL 10
(Journalism Tools)
Assistant Professor Mo Krochmal
Department of Journalism, Media Studies, and Public Relations.
Instructor Information
Website: http://krochmal.synthasite.com
Monday – 12:00-1:30
Tuesday – 3:00-4:00
Thursday – 5:00-6:00
And, by appointment.
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Every student enrolled in this course is responsible for understanding and
complying with the information, requirements and policies contained in this
syllabus. Please read this syllabus thoroughly so that you are familiar with the
format, policies, requirements and any deadlines. You should also have it for
reference throughout the rest of the semester.
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DISABILITIES
If you have any documented disability-related concerns that may have an impact
upon your performance in this course, please meet with me within the first two
weeks of the semester, so that we can work out the appropriate
accommodations. Accommodations are provided on an individualized, as-needed
basis after the needs, circumstances and documentation have been evaluated by
the appropriate office on campus.
Ann Marie Ferro in 101 Memorial Hall at 516 463-5341 (for physical and/or
psychological disabilities) or Dr. Diane Herbert in 202 Roosevelt Hall at 516 463-
5761 (for learning disabilities and/or ADHD).
COMMUNICATION
Please make sure that you forward your Hofstra e-mail address to your favored e-mail
address. The professor may send you class or individual information through your
official Hofstra e-mail address. I am available to you in my office, and via text message
or other channels. Do not expect immediate answers, but don't be surprised. Courtesy
is expected.
COURSE DESCRIPTION
Journalism Tools is just what it sounds like. It’s about the tools journalists use.
Journalists in the multimedia age need a variety of skills and tools to effectively tell their
stories to the public and succeed in the profession. This course will introduce students
to a number of different tools journalists use to gather information, audio and
pictures/video as well as produce the stories for a converged media environment.
The course is an elective, but, pending regulatory approval, will become a requirement
in the accredited journalism curriculum of the Department of Journalism, Media Studies,
and Public Relations.
GOALS
The journalism program aims to make sure students are exposed to the skills they will
need in multimedia journalism early in the journalism curriculum and then go on to
master them in later, more-specialized classes. This is an introductory skills class.
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OBJECTIVES
Students who go through the Journalism Tools class become familiar with a variety of
technical methods of enhancing the gathering and disseminating of news stories. The
class is not expected to give students a mastery of any one tool, but instead, expose
them to a variety of tools available for their use in news production to the highest
standards of ethical and responsible journalism.
Students learn the basics of gathering information through interviews, covering events,
public record searches of computer databases, and other online sources. They will also
be introduced to the use of audio recorders, digital still photography and videography
and their use in news gathering. The ethics of the uses of these tools will also be
emphasized.
Students will learn: how to use computers and software for writing and editing copy, how
to use HTML in online journalism, how to gather data for information graphics, how to
record and edit audio, video and digital images and how to weave these together into
articles for publication.
Students also learn how to put stories together for the department’s online news outlet,
Nassau News (NassauNews.org/news). As part of that, students are required to work
at least 1 hour a week in the department’s multimedia newsroom.
Tests on lectures and graded exercises using the actual equipment will help assess how
well students learn these journalism tools.
REQUIRED TEXTS/READINGS
Multimedia journalism is a new and growing field. We will use two textbooks to cover the
range of tools that this course addresses.
Available at the student bookstore, this is your official textbook for this course:
In addition to the required readings in the textbooks, you are required to be informed on
the news.
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GRADING CRITERIA
No letter grades will be given for papers, tests, quizzes or projects during the semester.
You will receive points for each assignment. At the end of the semester I will add up the
points and weight them according to the percentages listed below. Your points then will
determine your grade based on this scale:
A = 95-100
A- = 90-94
B+ = 88-89
B = 84-87
B- = 80-83
C+ = 78-79
C = 74-77
C- = 70-73
D+ = 68-69
D = 64-67
F = 0-63
Assignments/events 50%
NewsHub participation 10%
Midterm Exam 5%
Final Exam 10%
Class attendance, participation, punctuality 25%
TOTAL 100%
You will in a shift of at least 1 hour per week in the NewsHub working on the
assignment desk. This is a proud activity of the JRNL10 class where you learn
how to research events in the surrounding community and how to keep an active
assignment calendar that serves as a resource for the rest of the school.
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ATTENDANCE POLICY
Attending class and arriving on time will be important to your grade. There are no grace
days; every day counts for attendance. Do not be late.
Attendance will be taken at the start of class. If you are late, you will have points
deducted. If you tell me a few weeks after a class that you were there, I will be
sympathetic, but will not excuse the absence, relying on my attendance records as the
official attendance roster. Internship/job interviews, doctor’s appointments, late night at
The Chronicle, etc. are not excused absences. You must provide documentation for
funerals, sickness when you return to class.
If you miss class, you must communicate with me via e-mail that day you missed the
class to explain why.
ASSIGNMENTS/REQUIREMENTS
See Course Schedule for assignments. Assignments not e-mailed to me before the
start of class will not be counted.
You will have a 1-hour window, from 10 p.m. until 11 p.m. the night before the class, to
earn a deadline point.
You must use Microsoft Word for your assignments and you have to save your file as a
Word 93-2003 Document -- without formatting such as paragraph indents and "curly"
quotes -- and attach it to an e-mail with the Class and Assignment Name in the subject
line.
Clues for success: Come to class on time, every time. Do your work on deadline, show
your work/cite your sources, communicate with your professor and your classmates.
Ask questions, get excited/inspired, share your learning.
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COURSE SCHEDULE
The goal of this class is to quickly establish community and a collaborative atmosphere
and to get students prepared for the semester. Welcome, Social media/tagging
exercise, Review, 1-minute paper.
Drawing on the readings, the students will examine the different types of writing styles
required to participate in the different disciplines of journalism.Writing is the cornerstone
of journalism, no matter the medium. In this class, we will establish practices and
disciplines for turning in work.
Review the reading and discuss the idea of personal information online. Students will
expand their use of search techniques and learn how to set up RSS feeds and alerts for
text and multimedia. This skill will be tested in a practicum.
Class 4 -- Ethics
Students will learn about credibility, attribution, copyright, corrections and other
fundamental considerations in using information in ethical journalism.
Reading:
Jan. 19, 2008 Poynter Online - New York Times' Policy on Facebook and Other Social
Networking Sites
Jan. 22, 2008 CNN: Social-networking sites share breaking news
Assignment – Students will select a current national news issue and search for articles related
to that topic. Having searched, read and recorded the information they found, write a summary
article, providing links and citations and locate and provide a copyright-cleared photograph.
Students, building on their knowledge of personal information, their "ego surf" inventory
and profile, will examine the growth of social networks in journalism, explore the ethics,
and the limitations and benefits of using these new tools.
Reading:
-- Convergent Journalism, Chapter 2 "The Multimedia Assignment Editor and Producer."
-- Journalism 2.0, Chapter 4: "New Reporting Methods"
Assignment – Find five journalists on social media networks, identify then and their
organization and provide clickable links to their profiles.
Class 6 -- Reporting
Students will be introduced to best practices and expectations in reporting. They will
practice interview techniques and get practical hints for success.
Reading:
Assignment -- Conduct an interview with people -- not your friends -- on a current news event.
Take notes. Identify the person with name, age, and hometown. Write a short article of 200
words with headline that integrates the quotes you get, and provides proper attribution.
Class 7 – Production
Students will learn how to use the MovieMaker software to edit audio, video and create
slideshows. This will be the backbone for production in the remainder of the semester.
Students will be responsible for being able to edit audio and levels, edit video by frame,
combine audio and video and voiceover, create slideshows with narration, create lower-
third graphics and post for publication.
Assignment: Students will check out FlipCams to conduct interviews and learn how to
interact properly with the Equipment Room and care for equipment.
Production assignment: Interview people about a current news event, collect natural sound
and then produce a 1-minute audio story using video from the FlipCam, voice on tape, natural
sound. Save it as an MP3 file
Class 8 – Convergence
Students will look at the news and journalism environment to get an understanding of
the idea of convergence and multimedia in journalism and ideas surrounding that in
journalism higher education.
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Read for Next Class:
J-School: The Right Tools Teach the Right Mindset, by Amy Gahran
Journalism training must face up to rapid change, by Andrew Grant-Adamson, Jan. 17,
2007
Assignment: Write a summary of each of the Class 2 chapters in 200 words. Separately, write
a reaction and set a goal for your learning in this course that reflects an understanding of your
reading, including the two links above.
Content management systems are the backbone of today's journalism enterprises and
their functionally is inherently similar. Students will get experience in the concepts of
CMS, and learn how to enter stories, how to mark them up, and correct them in these
systems.
Read:
Convergent Journalism, Ch. 7, " Digital Still Photography."
Journalism 2.0, Chapter 8 "Shooting and Managing Digital Photos."
Going beyond Facebook pictures. Students will leave this session with knowledge
that will improve their skills in taking journalistically sound still photographs and writing
full and complete captions to accompany them.
Assignment: Take at least 72 pictures of a Day in the Life of someone interesting. Print out
your photographs, select a dozen pictures that tell the story of this day. Write captions for each
picture that are full and complete. Create a slideshow and embed this in your wiki page.
Read for Next Class: Journalism 2.0, Chapter 4: "New Reporting Methods."
Students will learn how to access and evaluate web 2.0 tools that can enhance
productivity and efficiency in reporting.
Assignment: Find 5 different verified sources for a news article using Facebook, Twitter,
MySpace, Linkedin, or YouTube. List these sources with links.
Read: Journalism 2.0, Ch. 6, How to Report News for the Web,
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Class 12 – Spreadsheets, Databases
Spreadsheets can be the backbone of many a reporters' repertoire. Students will learn
how to do simple mathematics and analysis using spreadsheets. Students will be
expected to master the processes and applications determining percentage and
percentage change.
Assignment: Find and evaluate 5 databases from public sources and export data to a
spreadsheet for analysis.
Read for Next Class: Convergent Journalism , Ch. 6, ”Converged Graphics Across All Media."
Class 13 – Graphics
Students will examine the use of graphics in broadcasting, print and online. They will be
responsible for understanding the value that graphics can add and appropriate and
value-adding use of graphics.
Read for Next Class: Convergent Journalism, Ch. 8, "Digital Video Photography."
Class 16 – Videography
Students will begin to integrate Flipcams into their reporting techniques by looking at
how they are use, learning proper techniques for shooting and storing portable video.
Assignment: Pairing up, students will read their profiles for video. These will then be
uploaded to the wiki sites for archiving.
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Assignment: Go out on campus, 30 minutes to gather raw interviews from at least five
people on a news topic.
Read for Next Class: Chapter 11: Writing Scripts, Doing Voice-overs, Journalism 2.0
Assignment: Edit your videos into sound bites and place them on a timeline in
MovieMaker. Be able to save the work and reopen it again.
Assignment:
Write a script for the story that goes with the video bites.
Write an article that complements the video, and shows that you can tell a story
in text, and in video and that the two pieces are complementary.l;op[0-
Students will present a pitch for a final package that will demonstrate their ability to
report and produce a converged article that has video and text elements as well as
other multimedia. The pitch should show evidence of research and preparation and
should have a good chance to be executed.
Class 21 -- Blogging
Assignment: Write a blog post on a news event with links. Write a script for a breaking
news event you are reporting live via stream.
Read for Next Class: Chapter 3: Tools and Toys, Journalism 2.0
Assignment: Students should have rough drafts of a 1:30 video package and a 500-
word article with hyperlinks. Students will present their packages in class for critique
and final editing instructions
Assignment: Students will collaborate to write a script for a 5-minute newscast for
webcast, mobilecast and then produce it.
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Class 24 -- How everything comes together in the world of new media. What’s
expected of today’s multimedia journalists.
Read for Next Class: Journalism 2.0 "Epilogue: Putting It All Together."
Class 26 – Students will present their final projects with edits for review and critique.
Final Examination
Students will upload their final projects into a content management system the take a
practical examination and a written test covering the readings and lectures of the
semester.
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