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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Develops a framework to access, analyze, evaluate, create and interact with messages in a variety of digital forms, including social media. Restricted to majors/minors outside the School of Journalism & Broadcasting.
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3.00 Credits
(Must be taken by majors prior to enrolling in any 300-level course.) A study of newspapers, radio and television, magazines, public relations, advertising and allied topics. Includes consideration of communication theory, current practices, history, involvement of minorities and women, legal restrictions, ethics, government-press relations and career opportunities.
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3.00 Credits
A beginning course in reporting and writing with emphasis on, journalistic style and grammar, basic news story structure, the interview, the coverage of speeches and meetings and elementary feature writing. **Effective FALL 2009** Writing for print, online and broadcast media, and public relations with primary focus on news writing. Accuracy, responsibility, clairty, style and structure techniques emphasized. (Lab fee)
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3.00 Credits
Introduces photojournalism majors to the technical, aesthetic and ethical aspects of digital photography through weekly projects. Adjustable digital SLR camera required. Must bring camera to first day of class. (Lab fee)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Must be enrolled as a journalism major. A hands-on introduction to computer programs and technologies used by journalists and other media practitioners to collect, process, analyze, and publish information. (Course Fee)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: JOUR 231 or JOUR 232 (non-majors) or JOUR 332 (photojournalism majors), BCOM 264, or permission of instructor. Introduction to journalistic storytelling on the Web and other forms of new media using photographs, words, video, audio and design. Emphasis will be placed on how to integrate these forms of communication and how journalistic storytelling and packaging for the new media audience differ from traditional forms of content delivery. Weekly projects will emphasize producing stories from the latest hardware and software. **Effective SPRING 2009** Prerequisites: JOUR 231 for photojournalism majors; JOUR 131 for non-majors. Journalistic storytelling on the Web and other forms of electronic communication using photographs, words, audio, video, screen design, and navigation. Weekly assignments require transportation, digital SLR camera, audio recording device, and external hard drive. (Lab fee)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: JOUR 201, 202, 232, MKT 220, a course in statistics (ECON 206, SOCL 300, MATH 203, PSY 201 or AMS 271) and either JOUR 355 for majors in public relations or JOUR 341 for majors in advertising. Prepares students to perform and supervise preliminary research in advertising and public relations environments. Includes consumer analysis, media tracking, attitude measurement, copy testing, online research and evaluation of externally supplied research.
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3.00 Credits
**Effective Fall 2009** Prerequisites: JOUR 201 and JOUR 202 and Junior standing or permission of instructor. An in-depth study of concepts basic to freedom of expression, with emphasis on libel, privacy, free-press and fair-trial guidelines, access to government information, and obscenity. Attention is given to attendant ethical considerations.
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3.00 Credits
**Effective FALL 2009** Reporting and writing for print and online media. Emphasis on using journalistic style and grammar, interviewing and writing news stories on a range of topics including governmental affairs. (Lab fee)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: JOUR 202 A course of basic instruction in copy editing and headline writing, as well as an introduction to picture handling, cutline writing, and the use and abuse of the language.
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