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College of Journalism | Undergraduate Courses | Harvey Home Page JOUR 352: Online Journalism, Summer 2006
Instructor: Chris Harvey E-mail: charvey@jmail.umd.edu; phone: 301-405-6256 (office) or 301-314-2696 (Maryland Newsline lab) Classes, Section 0101: MTuWThFri, 9:30 a.m. to 11:10 a.m., Room 3117 Journalism Building. Office hours: Immediately after class, 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 and new-media topics. The class will include lectures on emerging media themes, such as Internet-spawned media partnerships and mergers; the business, ethical and legal implications of publishing online; the characteristics that distinguish news Web sites and their stories from their print and broadcast counterparts; and guidelines for doing research on the Internet. In addition, a core portion of the class will include hands-on assignments: Students will be introduced to basic html and to Web-editing and photo-editing tools. And they'll learn about site structuring and navigation, hypertext linking and basic page layout, while building a multi-page biography (with photos) and discussing news and feature packages. Prerequisites: JOUR 201 (News Writing and Reporting I) and 202 (News Editing) or the broadcast equivalents. Assignments/Tests: More detailed instructions on these 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.
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 will result in grade deductions, as noted on each assignment. Letter-grade deductions also 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 or text 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 will 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 textbooks and handouts (printed and online) in this
course:
Computer Access: Our 3rd floor WAM lab is equipped with Microsoft FrontPage, and JOUR 352 students may also access software for this class from Rooms 3102, 3101 and 3111, when classes are not in session. Students with Special Needs: Should talk to the instructor at the end of the first class. (The instructor reserves the right to make changes to the weekly schedule to fit the needs of the class and to accommodate guest speakers. All readings should be done before class meets, except for readings for the first class, which should be done before the second class. Please be sure to constantly check the Web site of this syllabus to check for any changes to the schedule.) Week 1:June 5: Course and syllabus overview and student introductions. Readings: Chapter 1 in the Carole Rich book, "Gutenberg to Gigabytes." Plus "Fear.com" by Chip Brown in the June 1999 issue of American Journalism Review. June 6: An overview of why newspapers are on the Web, and a bit about the unique features news Web sites offer readers--including personalization, multimedia, searchable databases, 24-hour updates, interactive chats and blogs and in-depth special reports. . Plus: A brief history of the Internet. And begin discussing search engines and directories. Readings: Chapters 2 & 3 & 12 ("Browsing Basics," "Searching Skills" and "Online Reporting and Research") in the Carole Rich book; Wired News' "Dot-com Still the Main Domain," from May 6, 2002. June 7: More on search engines and directories, wikis and RSS feeds. Plus a tutorial and Web surfing exercise from John R. Henderson, a reference librarian at the Ithaca College Library. Readings: A Web research handout that I'll give you in class. Plus: "Non-traditional sources cloud Google News results," by Eric Ulken in the May 19, 2005, edition of Online Journalism Review; "RSS for journalists: Your own personal Web butler," by Jonathan Dube, in the Feb. 15, 2005, edition of PoynterOnline; "Wikipedia: Teapot Tempest," by Wade Roush, in the Dec. 7, 2005, issue of Technology Review;" Collaborative Conundrum: Do Wikis Have a Place in the Newsroom?" by Mark Glaser in the Sept. 10, 2004, edition of OJR. June 8: Introduction to basic html, with a discussion of the skeletal coding needed to build every Internet page, plus font sizes and faces, bolding and italicizing, making paragraphs and page breaks, creating hyperlinks and e-mail links, creating horizontal rules and bulleted lists, and changing background, font and link colors. I'll also show you how to read "source code" on Web pages created by others. Please bring a printed or electronic copy of your resume to class. We'll work together, using this basic html handout from Harvey as a guide. Readings: Chapter 6 ("Basic HTML") in the Rich book. June 9: More on evaluating online information: Distinguishing between reliable sources and junk on the Web. You will be given a surfing exercise to complete for a class grade; it must be turned in by e-mail to me (as a double-spaced Word doc attachment) no later than 11:10 a.m.
Week 2: June 12: More basic html: Making anchor (internal page) links and creating comment tags. Plus: Using html to create image source tags to add graphics and photos to a Web page. June 13: A basic introduction to photo scanning, sizing and cropping in PhotoShop, along with a discussion of shooting and selecting strong photos. Please bring in at least one photo of yourself for possible use in your bio package; we will scan and size it. Readings: "Digital History, A Guide to Gathering, Preserving and Presenting the Past on the Web," by Daniel J. Cohen and Roy Rosenzweig. Plus: Please review "NPPA's Best of Photojournalism Web Site Contest 2005" and photos on "NPPA's Best of Photojournalism 2003." The ambitious among you may also want to click through photos and galleries on The Digital Journalist. I'll have photo scanning and photo shooting handouts for you in class. June 14: Intermediate html: An introduction to the Web-editor tool FrontPage and to table building. Tables are used to create photo and caption boxes, to create modular page layouts and to build columns and rows for charts. I'll have a table-building handout for you in class. Assignment: Due at the beginning of class June 14: Turn in to the x drive a one-page resume, with text, subheads, internal (anchor) links, an e-mail address link, at least one external hyperlink and at least one bulleted list. Your resume should also include a horizontal rule. Background colors are optional, as are changed link colors. Each factual mistake (such as a misspelled proper name) will result in one letter-grade deduction, as will each broken link. Unreadable resumes (because of bad color choices for fonts or backgrounds) will result in an automatic F. Resumes should follow AP style for print throughout, and be readable on-screen and as printouts. Resumes will lose one letter grade for each day that they're late. June 15: Ethics, taste and restraint in new media. Just because a news organization can publish something doesn't mean it should. A look at how the speed of the 24-hour news cycle has affected news judgment; whether or not online sites are properly differentiating between editorial and advertising content; corrections and linking policies, and more. Plus: Legal issues in cyberspace. Among the legal questions to consider: Can news sites be held liable for comments posted on bulletin boards? Is it OK to copy source code from another site to mimic design? What about republishing someone else's text, photos and graphics? Can you get in trouble for forwarding a published story to a friend? Readings on ethics: Chapter 14 in the Rich book ("Legal and Ethical issues"); Robert I. Berkman's "Is It Appropriate for Reporters to Lurk in Online Chat Rooms?" in the Feb. 2, 2004, issue of Online Journalism Review; Barb Palser's "Charting New Terrain" and Michael Oreskes' "Navigating a Minefield" in the November 1999 AJR; plus Matt Welch's "What If You Couldn't Trust the New York Times?" in the April 24, 1999, issue of OJR; and Howard Kurtz's "Dallas Paper's Story: A Scoop That Wasn't," in the Jan. 28, 1998, Washington Post. Readings on copyright: A handy online guide: "10 Big Myths about copyright explained," new-media publisher Brad Templeton's wise-guy analysis of a complicated subject. And "Copyright Issues Present Ongoing Dilemma: To Link or Not To Link? by Robert I. Berkman, in the Oct. 1, 2003, edition of Online Journalism Review. Readings on Credibility issues: Aly Colon's "Putting Old Values to Work with New Tools," in the Dec. 12, 2003, edition of poynter.org; and Chris Harvey's "Journalists Are Still Wary of Online News," in the December 2001 issue of AJR. June 16: Complete an ethics assignment in class, which will count as an in-class grade. Week 3: June 19: Writing succinctly and conversationally for the Web, session I: Narrative nonfiction. I will give you handouts of several nonfiction narratives written by other students. We'll read and discuss them, then you will begin roughing out the text for a personal, nonfiction essay for your bio package. You'll turn it in to me by the start of next class. Your essay should be 300-700 words and should be on a topic that reveals something about your background or character: A relative or teacher who had a great impact on you; an incident that came as a turning point in your life; an anecdote about why you ended up in journalism heading toward a career as a writer. Please try to avoid being too negative or flip; this is intended to be the opening narrative on the home page of your biography package. Potential employers may be reading it. The essay will count as an in-class grade; it will be edited and returned to you for a write-through for inclusion in your bio package. Readings: Chapter 13, "Writing for the Web," in the Rich book; Judith Silverstein Gray's "Turning Personal Experience Into Narrative"; Walt Harrington's "How Memories Become Memoirs"; and Poynter.org's Chip Scanlan on "Writing the Personal Essay" and "Tips for Writing a Personal Essay." June 20: Review for midterm. Plus: turn in your narrative essay (see above). June 21: MIDTERM. Get back your narrative essays with edits. June 22: Begin discussing online design and navigation issues and the importance of folder structure to Web building and Web addresses. You'll be asked to sketch out (or storyboard) the page layouts for each of your bio packages. These hand-drawn sketches will show where your navigation bar will go on each page and where photos, headlines and stories or other text will go. Navigation must be consistent on all pages. Also, in a Word document, you'll type a brief description of the content and art that will go on each page; be explicit about the background/banner/text color schemes you will use to tie the pages together, along with the font styles and sizes for headlines, photo captions and text. If you're going to change link colors, please note that, too. This will count as an in-class grade; turn in by start of next class. We'll review Web design tips in class. Readings: Chapters 9 ("Media Site Planning") and 11 ("Web Site Design") in the Rich book. Plus: Webmonkey's "The Foundation of Web Design" and "Information Architecture Tutorial"; and "Surfing the Web for Design Lessons," by Anne Van Wagener, for PoynterOnline, Jan. 31, 2005, edition. June 23: Get back your midterms. Turn in your bio package layouts and descriptions (on paper) at the start of class. Go over bio package checklist. Then, more on good and bad Web layout and eye-tracking studies. I'll also allow time for photo scanning for your bio packages. Readings: Webmonkey's tutorials on site design; Dan Farber's "Eye tracking Web usability" on ZDNet's "Between the Lines," March 27, 2006; and Edward C. Baig's "Survey Offers a 'Sneak Peak' Into Web Surfers' Brains," on USA Today March 26, 2006.
Week 4: June 26: Get back bio page layouts with comments. Discuss different storytelling structures that work on the Web--including nonlinear ones such as photo galleries and interactive ones such as news quizzes and chats. I'll also allow time to answer questions on your bio packages. Readings: Please read Jonathan Dube's page on "Online Storytelling Forms," on CyberJournalist.net. Please spend some time reviewing packages on "InteractiveNarratives." Plus: Mindy McAdams' "Flash Journalism: Professional Practice Today," published on OJR on Sept. 22, 2005; and Elizabeth A. Ferris' "Rethinking the Multimedia Experience," published on Poynteronline on Nov. 16, 2005. June 27: CLASS CANCELED; Harvey's house flooding emergency. June 28: Begin discussing/working on headline writing for the Web. Before the start of our next class, please find a good and not-so-adept headline on one or more news Web sites, and explain diplomatically why you think so on this class discussion blog: http://online-journalism-for-beginners.blogspot.com/. Please be sure to give the full URL and headline for each. Please don't write anything you don't want the world to see. Readings: Check out these headline writing tips from John Schlander, Joel Pisetzner and Wayne Countryman on www.copydesk.org. Plus: Harvey's Writing for the Web handout. June 29: More discussion and work on headlines and blurbs, with an in-class assignment (to be graded). June 30: We'll have a discussion of interactive databases on the Web, including issues of privacy vs. the public's right to know. Where should the line be drawn? For example, is it OK to publish the salaries of low-ranking public employees, coaches, etc.? How about property records? Divorce and death notices? Assignment: Due at the beginning of class June 30: Turn in your three-page Web bio/resume package, with internal and external links; at least two photos and one graphic; and text. All links must work; busted links result in letter-grade deductions. Any factual mistakes in your text will result in a full letter-grade deduction; any packages turned in late will lose a full letter grade for each day that they're late. Readings June 30: Jeff South's "No Secrets" in the April 2000 issue of AJR. Week 5: July 3: Students will give presentations on the databases they analyzed; presentations will be counted as part of students' oral class grade. July 4: UMD Holiday. No class. July 5: We'll have a discussion of the proliferation of Web logs (or blogs), and their impact on emerging democracies in other countries and on politics and mainstream journalism in the United States. We'll also talk about the impact of citizen journalists and podcasts on mainstream media. Readings: Mark Glaser's NOLA.com blogs and forums help save lives after Katrina, in the Sept. 13, 2005, edition of OJR; Barb Palser's "Journalism's Backseat Drivers," in the August/September 2005 issue of AJR; "Gallup Probes Blogs, Finds Most Americans Have Never Heard of Them," from the March 11, 2005, Editor and Publisher. Plus: Plus: Mark Glaser's "Flickr, Buzznet Expand Citizens' Role in Visual Journalism," in the Nov. 15, 2005 edition of OJR; J.D. Lasica's "Citizen's Media Gets Richer," in the Sept. 7, 2005, edition of OJR; Mark Glaser's "Bloggers, Citizen's Media and Rather's Fall: Little People Rise Up in 2004," in the Dec. 21, 2004, edition of OJR; and Mark Glaser's "Will Satellite, 'Podcasting' Bring a Renaissance to Radio Journalism?" in the Oct., 12, 2004, edition of OJR. Plus: Rachel Smolkin's "The Expanding Blogosphere," in the June/July 2004 issue of AJR; Aly Colon's "Blogs and Ethics" in the April 22, 2004, edition of Poynteronline. Cynthia L. Webb's "Blogging the Recall" in the Sept. 12, 2003, edition of washingtonpost.com; Leslie Walker's "New Kids on the Blog" in the Feb. 6, 2003, edition of The Washington Post, and her Web Watch on "Picture Diaries", in the Jan. 19, 2003, edition of the paper; J.D. Lasica's "When Bloggers Commit Journalism," in OJR's Sept. 24, 2002, issue; Catherine Seipp's "Online Uprising," in the June 2002 issue of AJR; Staci D. Kramer's "The Perfect News Incubator" in the Dec. 18, 2002, issue of OJR. See also photoblogs.org and blog tracking sites Technorati and The Truth Laid Bare. July 6: Field trip to usatoday.com. We'll meet with Executive Producer Jody Brannon, who will give us a tour and a talk. Students will be given assigned questions to answer; those typed responses will count as an in-class grade. Responses to questions are due at the end of the next class. July 7: Type up answers to usatoday.com questions; assignment will count as an in-class grade. Week 6: July 10: We'll have a discussion of and a hand's-on example of using story templates and production tools to build stories and packages on news Web sites. (You won't be building story pages from scratch when you're hired as a producer or editor at a news Web site, but you will be expected to understand basic html and how packages are built and structured.) July 11: Presentation of your bio packages. Each student will discuss his or her project with the class. Begin graded in-class production assignment, writing headlines, a caption and links, and sizing and cropping a photo. July 12: Finish graded in-class production assignment, writing headlines, a caption and links, and sizing and cropping a photo. I'll explain how you can move your bio packages from the journalism server onto the university server so you can keep updating them even after you leave this class. You will need a working university e-mail account to participate. July 13: Donuts. Media convergence and the business and future of journalism. A discussion of your future in journalism. Class evaluations. Readings: Chapter 10 ("Web Advertising") in the Rich book. Also: "Online opportunities make journalism's future bright, despite gloomy feelings," by Rich Gordon, in the Oct. 27, 2005, edition of OJR; "Growth of online ads hits high speed," by Jon Swartz, in the Jan. 16, 2005, issue of USA Today; Jonathan Krim's "Does Fast Internet Need a Push?" in the Jan. 15, 2002, edition of The Washington Post, page A1; Cynthia Gorney's "Superhire 2000" in the December 2000 issue of AJR. Plus Alicia Shepard's "Get Big or Get Out" in the March 2000 AJR and her "Tribune's Big Deal" in the May 2000 issue of AJR. "Resurgent Radio: Satellite and Internet radio are about to jump-start a medium that has lagged behind the information explosion," by Marc Fisher, in AJR's December 2000 issue. July 14: Final Paper Due by 11:10 a.m. You may hand it in by e-mail if you turn it in before July 14; please attach it as a word doc if you do so. If you're turning it in to me in person YOU MUST PRINT IT OUT AND GIVE IT TO ME IN THE LAB. See description in "Assignments/Tests," at top of syllabus.
Copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006, Chris Harvey, with readings list supplemented by UMD adjunct instructor Joshua Hatch, a rich media producer at usatoday.com. Published stories, tutorials or personal bios linked from this page are the property of their respective copyright holders. Latest version written May 26, 2006; last updated June 21, 2006. College of Journalism | Undergraduate Courses | Harvey Home Page
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