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9780199732340

The Responsible Journalist An Introduction to News Reporting and Writing

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780199732340

  • ISBN10:

    0199732345

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2014-10-15
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

The Responsible Journalist: An Introduction to News Reporting and Writing teaches reporting and writing skills from a liberal arts perspective with the understanding that at its heart, journalism is about public service. The text presents journalism as an approach--one that involves careful thought, ethical decision-making, skepticism, an attention to accuracy and an emphasis on truthfulness.

Author Biography


Jennie Dear is a former English professor who is now a freelance writer.

Faron Scott is Professor of English and Communications at Fort Lewis College.

Table of Contents


Unit 1: What Distinguishes a Good Journalist?
Habits of mind
Initiative
Persistence
Curiosity
Conclusion

Chapter 1: The Public's Champion
Defining news media in an era of new media
If people govern themselves, they need a free press
-- A bit of historical review
-- The press as watchdog
Box 1-1: Bezos buys Wapo
Box 1-2: The First Amendment
Exercises for Chapter 1

Chapter 2: How Do Ethics and Critical Thinking Apply to Everyday Reporting?
Justice
-- Stakeholders
-- Fairness in stories
-- Fairness and diversity across coverage
Stewardship
-- Transparency
Freedom and Autonomy
-- Freedom from manipulation
-- Conflict of interest
Humaneness
Truth telling
-- Factual accuracy
-- Contextual truths
---- A caveat
An ethics case study: The facts of the case
-- Who are the stakeholders?
Truth telling: What do we know is true?
-- Factual accuracy
---- Is the autopsy report factually accurate?
---- Do you include the blood test results?
---- Do you include the murderer's accusation?
-- Contextual truth
Humaneness-to whom?
Freedom: keeping the decision independent
Justice: What's fairest to all the stakeholders?
Stewardship: stepping back to think about journalism's credibility
Making the decision
How the Durango Herald explained its decision
Box 2-1: Facebook co-founder says magazine's profits linked to quality
Box 2-2: Prize-winning journalism
Box 2-3: The autopsy story
Exercises for Chapter 2

Unit 2: Get It in Writing
Habits of mind
Framing
-- What's this mean for a working journalist?
News values
Deeper cultural concerns

Chapter 3: How is News Language Different?
Newswriting emphasizes reports
-- Information you can verify
-- Inferences may be based on insufficient information
-- Judgments sometimes shut down thought
Newswriting usually avoids first-person references
Newswriting is concise and direct
-- Fewer modifiers
-- Simple sentence structures
-- Active voice
Newswriting uses short paragraphs
Newswriting tries to use language fairly
Newswriting is consistent: an introduction to AP Style
Conclusion
Exercises for Chapter 3

Chapter 4: How Do You Tell a Basic News Story?
The inverted pyramid: an introduction
-- Begin with what's most important and save the rest for later
-- A news story example
-- Avoid suspense when you're delivering news
-- Your audience helps determine a story's form
Inverted pyramid leads
-- Who, what, when, where-and sometimes how and why
-- Brevity
-- Leads include the most important details
-- Delay precise identification
-- The language of inverted pyramid leads
-- Good leads are like poetry
Beyond the lead
-- The second paragraph
-- The third paragraph
-- Later paragraphs
Box 4-1: literary journalism is the un inverted pyramid
Box 4-2: Here's what literary journalism looks like
Box 4-3: writing a broadcast lead
Exercises for Chapter 4

Chapter 5: The Story Changes with the Medium
News stories in print
Radio news stories: an overview
-- Writing a radio news story
-- Introduce sound bites clearly
-- A story with voice-over
-- A story with sound bites
Adding the visual element
-- Writing a television or video news story
Online news stories: an overview
-- Writing an online news story
---- Online news stories use brief summaries or decks
---- Online news stories link to other information
---- Online news stories are more likely to use subheadings
Conclusion
Box 5-1: a comparison of storytelling across media
Box 5-2: tips for print writing
Box 5-3: tips for radio/audio writing
Box 5-4: tips for television/video writing
Box 5-5: tips for online writing
Exercises for Chapter 5

Unit 3: Background for Your Stories
Habits of mind
-- A bit of internet history

Chapter 6: A Journalist's Skeptical Research
Filtering for accuracy: Two examples
Time to start searching
Searching the Internet
-- Search engine insights
-- Websites for journalists
-- What does a journalist use from the Web?
Website credibility
-- Identity and motivation
-- Authority
-- Accuracy
-- Timeliness
-- Blogs and aggregator sites
Social media for journalists
-- Evaluating social media videos
Going offline
Box 6-1: using social media to report breaking news
Exercises for Chapter 6

Chapter 7: Plagiarism and Copyright Infringement: Stealing Other People's Stuff
Plagiarism
-- Avoiding plagiarism is a skill
Copyright and Fair Use
-- What can be copyrighted-and for how long?
-- Some copyrighted information is fair game: The Fair Use Doctrine
Box 7-1: Five ways to avoid plagiarizing by mistake
Box 7-2: What's public?
Box 7-3: How do you know whether your use is "fair"?
Box 7-4: when would a journalist be in danger of violating copyrights?
Exercises for Chapter 7

Unit 4: Working with Sources
Habits of mind
Your position, your judgment and your practice
Lenses: A metaphor for worldview
Objective reporting
-- Biased journalism
-- A brief history
-- Critiques
---- Incomplete reporting
---- Passive reporting
Box H4-01: Avoiding false balance
Conclusion

Chapter 8: Who Gets the Spotlight?
Beyond convention and convenience in source selection
-- What's news depends on whom you interview
-- Don't let sources turn you into propagandists
Good practices
-- Confirm facts with more than one source
-- Allow people to defend themselves
-- Report diversity
---- Covering race and ethnicity
-- Be aware of bias-or its appearance-when you select sources
-- Distance yourself from sources
-- Interview primary sources
-- Interview expert sources...
-- ...But also interview the people affected by an issue
-- Avoid using anonymous sources
-- Shield laws help--but don't depend on them too much
-- Don't fabricate sources or quotes
Finding Sources
-- Ask each source for other sources
-- Get out on the street
-- Don't forget your own contacts
-- Use social media
-- When you're stumped for sources, think creatively
Exercises for Chapter 8

Chapter 9: How Do You Conduct an Interview?
Research ahead of time
Plan your questions
Contact your sources
The interview
-- In person
-- By phone
-- By email or text
Privacy-Some information can't go into your story
-- Private facts
-- Intrusion
---- The Electronic Communications Privacy Act
Exercises for Chapter 9

Chapter 10: How Do You Report What Sources Say?
Guidelines for quoting
-- Paraphrase.
-- In general, don't mark dialect in quotes.
-- Quotation marks mean that what appears between them is what someone actually said.
-- Provide context and explanations before a quote, rather than after.
-- A reporter should not take quotes out of context.
-- Just because a source says something does not mean you have to report it.
-- News stories emphasize the speaker rather than the reporter.
-- News stories use "said" or "says."
-- Follow basic punctuation rules for quotes.
Quoting multiple sources
Defamation: When people say you've lied
-- Standard practice
-- Defenses against libel suits
---- Truth
---- Fair comment and criticism and rhetorical hyperbole
---- Privilege
Box 10-01: For broadcast stories, attribution comes first.
Box 10-02: How do you make sure you're not defaming someone?
Exercises for Chapter 10

Chapter 11: Working a Beat
Some basic assumptions about beats
Professional relationships with sources
-- Research before you talk to people.
-- Treat your sources with dignity.
-- Keep a professional distance.
A scenario: The education beat
Watchdog beats
-- Tips for reporting the crime and police beats
---- Getting to know the beat
---- Getting beyond snapshots of violence
---- Campus crime: A special case
---- A checklist for stories about accidents or crimes
Enterprise Beats
-- Covering business
---- Workers
---- Businesses as neighbors
---- Business for consumers
---- What do other businesses need to know about each other?
Exercises for Chapter 11

Unit 5: Storytelling in Other Forms
Habits of mind
What does it mean to be skeptical?
-- Logical fallacies
---- False generalizations
---- Anecdotal evidence
---- False dilemmas
---- The straw man
---- Ad hominem attacks
Box 05-01: A list of fallacies in arguments

Chapter 12: Leading with Something Different
When to use other kinds of leads
-- Making an abstract story concrete
---- Some tips for creating leads that focus on individuals
-- Nut graphs
-- Clarifying a complicated story
---- Some tips for bringing background to the beginning of a story
-- Covering an event with several newsworthy issues
-- Providing a sense of place
---- Some tips for starting with description
-- Following up on breaking news
---- Some tips for leading with a list
-- Establishing tone
---- Some tips for communicating a lighter tone in your lead
Exercises for Chapter 12

Chapter 13: What About Other Kinds of News Stories?
Organizing news stories into pods
Transitions
Stories that explain how-to or why
A problem that needs a solution
A story with a complicated history
Structure and fairness
-- Placement of sources
-- A question of balance
Exercises for Chapter 13

Chapter 14: IMHO: Expressing Your Opinions as a Journalist
What does commentary add?
-- Providing context and analysis
-- Making connections for readers
When are opinions not helpful?
-- When arguments aren't grounded in evidence
-- When too much is based on secondhand information
-- When opinions are based on sloppy journalism
Writing in the first person
-- Persona
-- Features of a news blog
---- A news blog sticks to basic journalistic principles.
---- A news blog presents informed opinions.
---- A news blog can provide in-depth information about niche subjects.
-- Writing a news blog
Box 14-01: "The invisible primary"-commentary with context
Exercises for Chapter 14

How Storytelling Connects to Larger Forces
Habits of mind
Thinking about the audience
-- A bit of history
Forces behind the scenes
-- Culture and society
-- What does this mean for a working journalist?
Final thoughts
Box H6-01: Audience reactions: A case study

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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