Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to www.scribd.com

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views6 pages

Journalism Ethics Capstone

This document provides the syllabus for an upper-level ethics course in American journalism. The course will examine philosophical underpinnings of the First Amendment and ethical issues facing journalists today. Students will analyze readings on topics like objectivity, privacy, undercover reporting, and national security. Assignments include weekly reading responses, three essays using interviews with journalists, blogging, and a final paper. The course aims to help students confront real ethical challenges in journalism.

Uploaded by

JM Robertson
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views6 pages

Journalism Ethics Capstone

This document provides the syllabus for an upper-level ethics course in American journalism. The course will examine philosophical underpinnings of the First Amendment and ethical issues facing journalists today. Students will analyze readings on topics like objectivity, privacy, undercover reporting, and national security. Assignments include weekly reading responses, three essays using interviews with journalists, blogging, and a final paper. The course aims to help students confront real ethical challenges in journalism.

Uploaded by

JM Robertson
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6

0166-420-01/American Journalism Ethics Fall 2011

Dr. Michael Robertson Office: 119 Kalmanovitz Hall Phone: 422-6250 (office); 510-836-4870 (home) Email: [email protected] Office Hours: Monday & Wednesday 3:30p-430p. If you need to see me, don't hesitate to ask for a time convenient for you. (Coffee in Crossroads is always pleasant.) Course Description: American Journalism (4). Analysis of the ethical constraints and obligations of U.S. journalism and their grounding in the First Amendment. Current ethical and legal issues facing journalists. Development of systems and techniques for confronting ethical challenges. Offered once a year. American Journalism Ethics is the capstone course for the journalism minor. Students should take the course after the completion of Introduction to Journalism I, Journalism II and two 300-level journalism course. (Those of you in the old minor were required to take Introduction to Media Studies.) Rationale: The First Amendment is the bedrock of American journalism ethics. Nothing is more compelling (I hope) than investigating its philosophical antecedents, particularly the way in which the philosophical, the political, the practical and the ideal intermingled to produce the constitutional right to a free press that some would argue guards all our other freedoms. Nothing is more vexing than a consideration of how that freedom, by its very nature, seems to produce ethical dilemmas, tangles, abuses and outrages that may threaten the continued existence of that section of the First Amendment that applies to the press. Much has changed since founders deemed a free press the guarantee of an informed and engaged electorate. Advances in technology; the rise of the so-called objective mainstream press; ebb and flow in government control and suppression of information; media consolidation; the splintering of audiences resulting from rise of the internet and social media all have changed the nature of news gathering and distribution. This class will examine the background of the First Amendment and the special protections it affords the news media, as well as

the responsibilities implied by the powers granted the press. It will pay particular attention to the ethical problems that arise when journalists, sometimes driven by the highest motives, find themselves tempted to do things that the law says they may do but which the community feels those journalists should not do. We shall also pay attention to those instances when journalists decide to break the law, going beyond the protections afforded by the First Amendment but acting in what they believe to be the spirit of the First Amendment. We will pay particular attention to the ethical tension between the ideals of fair and balanced journalism and the desire to use journalism as an instrument for social justice. Texts: J. Herbert Altschulls From Milton to McLuhan, The Ideas Behind American Journalism. Additional required reading will be required in the form of handouts or links. Additional Required Media. Subscribe to Romaneskos Media News at www.poynter.org. Students are required to create a blog on which they will post at least once a week on issues of journalism ethics. (More about your blogging responsibilities will be described in a separate handout.) Class meets twice a week. Students should expect to put in an additional six to nine hours a week in outside reading, writing, research and consumption of required media. Reminder: Under the current policies of the Media Studies Department, a student will not get credit in the Journalism Minor for any course in which he or she receives a grade of less than C; that is, a grade of C-minus or lower means you must retake the course or, if you receive a D, graduate without earning the minor. Academic misconduct: Instances of source fabrication or plagiarism will result in the most severe sanctions possible. We will use Turnitin. Deadlines: If you have any handicap or any other physical, emotional or personal problem that will interfere with your performance, you should discuss it with the professor by the end of the first week of the course or as soon as the problem arises. Every effort will be made to accommodate legitimate problems if they are discussed in a timely fashion. Some chronic problems may receive a sympathetic hearing but result in no adjustment to

expectations for performance. A semester's-end revelation of personal problems will not improve your grade Attendance: Regular class attendance is also expected. Two unexcused absences are allowed, but in-class work missed through absence may not be made up although it may be excused. If you miss class for any reason, it is YOUR responsibility to find out what future class assignments are. Excused assignments will not be averaged into your grade; unexcused assignments will be -- as a zero. Excessive absences will factor into the class participation portion of your grade. Assignments: Weekly written reports are required on certain of the assigned readings. Three essays of 1,200 words are also required. The topics for those essays are currently posted at the class blog. Due dates are the 4th, 9th and 12th weeks of the semester. Each will draw on assigned reading, class discussion, interviews with at least two working journalists and whatever additional research you deem necessary. In the category of working journalists I include reporters, editors of all kinds, news directors, station managers, news anchors and so on. Many (but not all) committed bloggers would be acceptable sources. If you have any doubt if a potential source is appropriate, check with me beforehand. During those interviews, you may explore not only the specific actions of those news workers but also the broader ethical philosophies upon which they base their decisions. A major paper of 2,500 words on a topic chosen in conjunction with the teacher will be due December 7. There will be a midterm. There will be no final exam. Final grade: Essays, 30 percent; weekly reading reports, 10 percent; blogging, blog comments, regular tweeting, 10 percent; midterm, 20 percent; class participation, 10 percent; final project, 20 percent. Blogging and tweeting: You are expected to either post on your own blog or on the class blog once a week. Using the hashtag #usfethics, you are expected to tweet a link to a new post or comment. You are also to follow a list of useful tweeters that I will provide.

Semester Schedule Fall 2009 Week One 8.24.2011 What good is this class? An introduction to the Potter Box. Assignment: For next Monday present me with: 1) the exact words of the First Amendment, accompanied by; 2) a brief essay giving your opinion of its most important ethical implications in regard to contemporary journalism

Week Two 9.5.2011

Finding your ethics. Assignment: No Monday Class. You will have read Christians, et al., Ethical Foundations and Principles on the Potter Box and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time on Wednesday. Topic for the first essay will be discussed. The essay will be due in two weeks. What were the founders thinking and why? Assignment: You will have read Altschull, pages 1-29, and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday. Do the ends justify the means? The ethics of interviewing. Assignment: You will have read the assigned essays on library reserve or to which I have given you links, but no Reading Response is required, although you will probably draw on those readings for citations in your First Essay, which is due at class time Wednesday. The philosophical underpinnings of contemporary journalism ethics. Assignment: You will have read Altschull, pages 33-64, and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday.

Week Three 9.12.2011

Week Four 9.19.2011

Week Five 9.26.2011

Week Six 10.3.2011

The philosophical underpinning of contemporary journalism ethics. Assignment: You will have read Altschull, pages 101-135, 156-166, and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday. No Monday Class. The rise of objectivity as the principal journalism norm. Complicity in power: questioning objectivity. Assignment:You will have read the assigned essays on library reserve or to which I have given you links and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday. Discussion of second essay. Review/Midterm. Privacy: A journalist is always selling someone out. Joan Didion. When journalism becomes nonfiction, does it acquire the privileges and the excuses of art? Assignment: You will have read the assigned essays on library reserve or to which I have given you links but no Reading Response is required. Second Essay is due Wednesday. When journalists bend the rules to do the job by going undercover: Do the ends ever justify the means? Assignment: You will have read the assigned essays and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday. Discussion of the Third Essay, which is due in two weeks. Photojournalism. Showing those things we should not show. Turning away from those things that should be seen. Assignment: You will have read the assigned essays on library reserve or to which I have provided links and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday.

Week Seven 10.10.2011

Week Eight 10.17.2011 Week Nine 10.24.2011

Week Ten 10.31.2011

Week Eleven 11.7.2011

Week Twelve 11.14.2011

National Security vs. the publics right to know. The patriotic press. Prior restraint. The Freedom of Information Act, the Patriot Act and the government control of information. Assignment: You will have read the assigned essays on library reserve or to which I have given you links, but no Reader Response is due. Third essay is due at class time Wednesday.

Week Thirteen Protecting sources. Advocacy journalism. Assignment: 11.21.2011 You will have read the assigned essays on library reserve and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday. Week Fourteen Diversity in the newsroom and in news coverage. If news 11.28.2011 is what happens to editors, what happens when the editors dont reflect the demographics of the community? Assignment: You will have read the assigned essays on library reserve and prepared a Reading Response, which is due at class time Monday. Week Fifteen Newsroom Codes of Ethics. The class builds its own. 12.5.2011 Assignment: You will have read the assigned Codes of Ethics. For class time Monday you will have prepared a brief essay describing the essence of your own personal code of journalistic ethics, those rules or guidelines or insights that you can draw upon when you face what you think will be your own greatest challenges as a working journalist. You will also post this essay on your blog. Final Evaluation on Wednesday : Field Trip to Pig & Whistle

The term paper is due December 12. There will be no final exam.

You might also like