How journalism students benefit from class blogs about values, practices

As incidences of checkbook journalism, plagiarism and fabrication spring up, I’m repeatedly struck by the importance of what I teach. It seems we’ve never needed ethical and excellent journalism more than we do now.

I try to promote the ethical practice of journalism every single day in my teaching and use technological tools to extend the conversation beyond the classroom. I’ve found that blogs are one way to keep students informed about important values and practices, and they enable me to use current examples to bring lessons to life.

In my intro multimedia course, I use a blog to bring in ethics issues and controversies we often don’t have time to cover in class. I populate the blog with items I think will engage the students — sometimes serious, sometimes humorous. I often introduce items online that we later discuss in lecture and in lab. The students regularly refer to the blog because it’s part of required weekly readings — and thus fair game for the all-powerful weekly quiz.

WordPress is the tool I use for all my blogging needs, though many people enjoy Blogger’s easy interface and the seamlessness of using one Google login for everything. Both services are free, and although they do feed in ads at times, I haven’t found them overwhelming, intrusive or at odds with my content.

Blog commenting has opened a door for students who feel less comfortable speaking up in class. Independence is a key ethic in journalism, and I want students to know that they can and should challenge the things I present to them. I like it when they use comments on the blog to fact-check my fact-checking.

While some students regularly comment on the blog, I’ve found that comment activity in general has dropped off markedly throughout the last two years. (This may be tied to an overall downward trend in blogging activity among this age group.)

I experimented with giving students access to add their own posts, but we quickly learned that doing so led to an excessive amount of material, at times unrelated to class. Now I ask them to email me with posts they’d like me to add.

We benefit from the immediacy and interactivity a blog offers. I can point students to their own successes (such as when they sniffed out problems with the James O’Keefe NPR “sting” well before national news outlets) and together we can highlight ethics failures (such as Bill O’Reilly’s infamous palm-trees-in-snowy-Wisconsin footage).

In my life outside class, I’m a blogging letdown. I’ve never been able to keep up the pace and thematic focus that makes a great personal blog.

But as a teacher, I feel motivated to keep class blogs going because I see how effective they are — not just at getting timely information in front of students, but at helping them keep important values top of mind throughout the year.

How do you use blogs in your own classes, or engage students in ethics exercises?

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  • steve halen

    I pause, my fingers resting on the keys, and reread what I just typed. 
    general
    ———–
    anu

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=183400968 Rebecca Walker

    At the beginning of the semester, each student choose a beat to follow. Throughout the semester (every couple of weeks), they’re required to create a post with a link to the story, art and discuss four things: why they chose the story, what news values are present, how well the lede worked for the story and what questions were left unanswered/what the follow-up story is. Some get it, some don’t. But the ones who do get it do a wonderful job.

    http://com220spring2011.blogspot.com/

    Now, I just have to form some kind of consistency in how they write the posts.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_IGRSUJJZPDOXYHOT62UDHTWWRM DebW

    I have my students blog about three times a year, mostly to discuss editing issues that supplement what we do in class. One of my favorite assignments is for them to imagine themselves as the leader of a media organization, and they have to establish a corrections policy for their operation, including provisions on who approves corrections, whether a correction “points the finger” at the cause of the error (i.e., “because of an editing error …”), whether online corrections “scrub” the original mistake or include some reference to it, etc.
       Another fave is to give three scenarios in which three people use the A-word — one a private person at a public event like a protest rally, another a presidential candidate caught using it when the mic was left on (George W. Bush), and the third using it openly during a media event (Larry Brown, at a news conference as Pistons coach, on why he left coaching the 76ers: “I got tired of coaching a——-”). Same word, different situations, and asking them what standards they would apply in whether to allow the full word in print and why or why not in each case.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_JEWD5DZW227XZOESL66JC4TBJI Mia Kline

    I paid $32.67 for a XBOX 360 and my mom got a 17 inch Toshiba laptop for $94.83 being delivered to our house tomorrow by FedEX. I will never again pay expensive retail prices at stores. I even sold a 46 inch HDTV to my boss for $650 and it only cost me $52.78 to get. Here is the website we using to get all this stuff, LiveCent.com

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