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Goals
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Academic Integrity
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College of Journalism | Undergraduate Courses | Harvey Home Page
JOUR 352:
Online Journalism, Spring '08
Instructor: Chris Harvey
E-mail:
charvey@jmail.umd.edu;
phone:
301-405-6256 (4th floor office) or 301-314-2696 (Maryland Newsline lab, Room 3117, on Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Fridays).
Classes, Section 0101:
Wednesdays,
1-3:45 p.m., Room 3103 Journalism Building.
Office hours:
3:45 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednesdays in the new-media lab in Room 3117 -- or by appointment.
Goals:
This is not a computer
class or an art class. It's
a journalism course in which we'll use computers and readings and discussions to learn about online news
publishing. The class will include lectures on emerging media themes, such
as the ethical and legal implications of publishing
online in a 24/7 environment; the characteristics that distinguish news Web sites and their stories from
their print and
broadcast counterparts; guidelines for doing research on the Internet; and the
impact of blogs, wikis and other citizen journalism on mainstream media. In addition, a core portion of the class will
include hands-on assignments: Students will be introduced to basic html and
to Web-editing, photo-editing and graphics-creation tools (Dreamweaver and Photoshop). And they'll learn about site structuring and navigation,
headline and link writing, and basic Web page layout, while building a resume package and a news feature package.They'll also participate in a class blog (using blogger.com) and learn how to create
their own blogs.
Prerequisites:
JOUR 201 (News Writing and Reporting I) and 202 (News Editing) or the broadcast equivalents.
Assignments & Tests:
More
detailed instructions on some assignments will be supplied in class by
your instructor. Assignments are due at the start of each class, unless
otherwise noted. Please follow Associated Press style for print on all
assignments in this class.
- Feb. 27:
(5 percent of your
grade): One-page Web resume due at the start of class in the x drive, with text, subheads, internal (anchor)
links, an e-mail address link, at least one external hyperlink, a photo and at least one bulleted list. Background colors are optional, as are
changed link colors. Each factual mistake will result in one letter-grade
deduction, as will each broken link or nonfunctional image tag. Unreadable resumes (because of bad color
choices for fonts or backgrounds) will result in an automatic F. Assignments
lose a full letter grade for each day that they're late.
- March 26: (5 percent of your grade) Two-page resume package due at the start of class in the x drive. This is an expansion of
your resume assignment. You will create a second page
and link both to each other. You should use the Web-editor
tool Dreamweaver when building this assignment, but you must work
independently. You may not take layouts from other students. The second page could link to
published writing or broadcast samples --news clips, press releases, audio or video clips. Please do not link to unpublished work. Or the second page could be a
montage of photos you've taken of friends, family or travel. The two pages, when linked together, must include
external links and at least one photo. All links and navigation on your pages must work; all text must make sense and be written in AP
style. Each factual mistake will result in a full letter-grade deduction, as
will each broken link and broken image. Projects turned in late will lose a
full letter grade for each day that they're late. This should be something you'd be
proud to show a prospective employer. Here are examples of student work from
previous semesters:
Grad students (previously required to build four pages): Michelle Williams, Chris Hannas, April Chan, Mary Ellen Slayter
and Lisa Tossey.
Undergrads (previously required to build three pages): Zak Garner, Kathy Park, Lisa Seaman, Jorge Valencia,
Lisa Rassenti,
Damon Curry,
Lindsay Smith,
Mark Pak,
Kendra Nichols,
Jacqueline Sauter
and
Yulia Khabinsky.
- April 2 : (20 percent of your
grade): Test
- April 16: (5 percent of grade): Text-only version of your feature story is due at the start of class. (See next item). This is an originally reported story of 500 to 700 words, on a topic previously approved by the teacher. It should be in journalistic style and be worthy of publication. Stories must be original work and must not have been previously published elsewhere. Stories with factual mistakes will be given an automatic F (55 percent). Stories must be accurate, fair and fully reported, and include strong feature leads, nut graphs and transitions. Assignment should be turned in on paper, doublespaced, with a word count at the top.
- May 7: (15 percent of grade): Web feature package due at the start of class in the x drive. Please copy the whole folder for the package from h to x, with the story page(s) and photo folder inside.This must include an originally reported text story of 500 to 700 words (see above), packaged in an html template (using Dreamweaver); at least two photos (either shot by you or acquired by you); photo captions; at least one graphic (such as a banner); a headline; and at least two related Web links. In addition, one complementary explanatory or interactive element is required: It could include a blog you've created and linked to to encourage comment; a table of information you've compiled and linked to; a google map you've created and linked to; or an interactive quiz you've created and linked to. It could also include a short, basic video clip, which you've shot for this story and uploaded to YouTube (as explained in class). You could either link to the video from your page, or embed the video player from YouTube on your page. Please be sure to include a copyright line and a back to top link at the bottom of your story. This must also be uploaded to the college's assessment site. I'll explain how at the start of class May 7.
- May 16, 3:30 p.m.: (25 percent of your grade): Final due: This is an 1,800- to 2,000-word research / analysis of a news Web site,
selected from a list I will circulate in class. You
will discuss how well the site uses navigation; how clean its design
is; how well it uses photos and graphics, broadcast features (including audio and video
and podcasts) and interactive elements
(such as chats, blogs, polls, Google map mashups, quizzes and searchable databases); how much (if
any) original reporting appears to be done by the online staff; and how well
stories are written and presented and make use of the medium. You should tell me about any other features you loved
or hated and why. And you should tell me what changes editors and
publishers might
consider to better position themselves for the future. I
recommend that you include an introductory paragraph or two at the start of
the paper and a summary paragraph
or two at the end. Subheads throughout may help you organize your thoughts. The analysis should be based on your observations of the
site throughout the semester and on background research you've conducted on the site. Comments should be supported with facts. Factual
mistakes--including misspelled proper names and faulty URLs--will result in
full letter-grade deductions. Information quoted from other sources should be
attributed in the text and further identified in end notes.
Papers must be double-spaced and numbered. They must be printed out and slid under my 4th floor office door, AND e-mailed to me, so I get the time stamp. Assignments turned in after deadline will receive
an F.
- Class participation
(verbal and on the
class blog)
(5 percent) and written in-class assignments: (20 percent.) Class attendance is mandatory. You
must do the assigned readings and participate in discussions to do well on the participation grade.
Missed
written class assignments cannot be made up. Only
one in-class written grade -- your lowest-- will be dropped.
Grading:
Each assignment will be graded for accuracy, meeting of deadlines, substance,
presentation/navigation/links (for Web assignments), quality of writing (headlines,
story blurbs, photo captions and other text), usability and style. Associate
Press print stylebook rules and rules of grammar should be followed on every
assignment. Factual
errors have serioius consequences, as noted on each assignment.
Letter-grade deductions will be taken for broken links, including for
photos, and for navigation that doesn't work. All written and Web assignments
are due at the start of class, unless specifically instructed otherwise. No
excuses, other than the hospitalization of the student or the death of a member
of the student's immediate family, will be accepted for late assignments. A full letter
grade will be deducted for each day an assignment is late, except for the final
paper, which will receive an F if turned in after deadline.
Standards, Ethics and Academic Integrity:
Students
are expected to adhere to the strictest journalistic and academic standards. For this class, you must do all work yourself, without collaboration with classmates or others,
unless I tell you otherwise. Along with certain rights, students also have the responsibility to behave honorably in an
academic environment. Academic dishonesty, including cheating, fabrication, facilitating academic dishonesty and plagiarism (including use of unauthorized
photos, graphics, text or layout from the Web) will not be tolerated. Any abridgement of academic integrity standards will be referred directly to the campus judiciary.
Confirmation of such incidents could result in the earning of an "XF" grade for the
course and may result in more severe
consequences, such as expulsion. Students who are uncertain as to what constitutes academic dishonesty should consult the
university publication called "Code of Academic Integrity," administered by the Student Honor Council. This
code sets standards for academic integrity at Maryland for all undergraduate and
graduate students. For more information on the code or the council, please
visit
http://www.studenthonorcouncil.umd.edu/whatis.html.
Books & Materials:
We will be using a combination of required textbooks and handouts (printed and online) in this
course:
Richard Craig's "Online Journalism: Reporting,
Writing and Editing for New Media"-- available at the campus bookstores and at online bookstores, such as Amazon.com or Barnes & Noble
Associated Press Stylebook and Libel Manual (for print). Please bring the
stylebook to class with you to aid in lab work.
Additional Readings: This syllabus links to various required online reading assignments under the class schedule.
In addition, because the field is changing
so fast, you'll be expected to do additional reading to keep up. You should on a
weekly basis read relevant stories and columns in the
Online Journalism Review.
Students with Special Needs: Should talk to the instructor at the end of the first class.
Go to Class Schedule and Readings
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Copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, Chris Harvey. Published stories, tutorials or personal bios linked from this page are the
property of their respective copyright holders. Latest version written Jan. 7,
2008; last updated Jan. 29, 2008.
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