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新闻教育路在何方

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楼主
发表于 2011-10-31 20:44:50 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
29/10/11 Margaret Looney
CC-licensed by Flickr, thanks to Korean Resource Center.




当公民通过一个有新闻价值的博客一夜成为记者时,正规新闻教育的必要性受到质疑。
奈特基金会新美国基金会完成的一份报告指出,新闻教育比以往任何时候都重要,但是其中也需要一些变化。
这份名为《塑造21世纪新闻》的报告指出,大学不应该只教如何成为记者的方法,还应该承担社区新闻的使命以产生出更有意义的新闻。这份报告在美国马里兰大学新闻教育和数字媒体会议"Journalism Interactive(新闻互动性)"上发布。
报告作者C.W. Anderson,Tom Glaisyer,Jason Smith和Marika Rothfeld认为大学应该采取医院的教学方式:“不仅仅为学生提供教学演讲,同时也要治疗患者和进行研究。新闻教育不应该局限于课程教学,更应该进行实战训练,成为创新的实验室。”
新闻学院应该用充足的资金,配合其从单纯教育者到值得信赖的新闻机构的转变。学校需要依靠联邦政府、基金会、立法者和媒体来实现自己的目标。
虽然新闻教育和它们的前景仍然存在一定差距,但是这份报告指出,一些新闻学院已经采用了“教学示范医院”的方法。

    伯克利新闻学院的学生为报道奥克兰、旧金山Mission区和里士满的新闻网站供稿。
    News Outlet”是多媒体组织协作的一个范例,报道来自于杨斯顿州立大学、肯特州立大学、阿克伦州立大学和四个媒体合作伙伴——《Vindicator》、《阿克伦灯塔日报》、WYSU-FM和Rubber城市广播。
  • 一些新闻学院开始了自己的新闻业务。西北大学Medill新闻学院在美国首都华盛顿有自己的新闻武夫——Medill Reports Washington(Medill华盛顿报道),内容强调企业报道、多媒体和在线新闻。

这份报告提出了获得可持续拨款的几点建议:
  • 传媒业应该为创新课程提供资金援助。
  • 当地社区基金会可以通过新闻课程为社区媒体提供支持。
  • 联邦政府应该建立一个专门的新闻奖学金,支持学校和媒体之间的新合作关系,敦促美国联邦通讯委员会考虑新闻学院进行媒体实践的实验性牌照申请。
  • 立法者应该让新闻专家出席听证会并提出意见。

点击这里阅读报告全文。

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沙发
 楼主| 发表于 2011-10-31 20:45:05 | 只看该作者
板凳
 楼主| 发表于 2011-10-31 20:46:57 | 只看该作者
Shaping 21st Century JournalismLeveraging a “Teaching Hospital Model” in Journalism Education


  • and Marika Rothfeld

October 27, 2011 |

The Walter Cronkite School of Journalism at Arizona State University (Photo credit: Sean Horan/Flickr) As the media industry evolves to meet the challenges of the emerging digitally-networked era, so too are journalism schools. Democracy and healthy local communities require this evolution. As the media industry reshapes itself, a tremendous opportunity emerges for America’s journalism programs. Neither news organizations nor journalism programs will disappear, but both must rethink their missions, particularly now that many more people can be journalists (at least, on an occasional basis) and many more people produce media than ever before.
Journalism education programs have an opportunity to become “anchor institutions” in the emerging informational ecosystem. Many schools have long embraced elements of this vision, but satisfying the information needs of communities will require schools to take on all the challenges of engaging as serious and valuable producers of meaningful journalism. To date, some programs have avoided or shirked these responsibilities, failing to leverage broadcast licenses as part of their educational mission or inadequately supporting the pursuit of meaningful journalism by students. A move to embrace a community news mission would add a powerful momentum to the recommendation of the Knight Commission Report on the Information Needs of Democracies that “higher education, community and nonprofit institutions [should increase their role] as hubs of journalistic activity and other information-sharing for local communities.” This call was echoed in the recently issued Federal Communications Commission report on the changing media landscape in a broadband age.
Many larger schools have taken significant steps in this direction already. However, for this movement to have real impact, these changes need to comprehensively permeate all types of journalism programs. As Nicholas Lemann, dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, has written, “Like teaching hospitals, journalism schools can provide essential services to their communities while they are educating their students.” Just as teaching hospitals don’t merely lecture medical students, but also treat patients and pursue research, journalism programs should not limit themselves to teaching journalists, but should produce copy and become laboratories of innovation as well. They should beta test new models for journalism and understand how journalistic ecosystems emerge as well as contribute to the policymaking process that underpins them.
For organizations that have occupied a position between journalism students and the journalism industry and have, for the most part, resided at the periphery of universities, this change will require leadership and risk-taking. For schools and programs often looked upon, sometimes disdainfully, by university administrators and other academic units as “professional programs” and considered to make only a small contribution to the overall university mission, this change provides a chance to build considerable value. Journalism education programs will likely operate within an institutional environment where financial resources will be limited and where increased legitimacy with local communities might become highly valued and university presidents could find a broader set of activities attractive. For this to occur in a cash-strapped environment, however, a shift in funding streams will be required to sustain diverse, robust journalism; community-based reporters; and research to support further development.
We call on all journalism programs within higher education institutions to:
  • Redraw the boundaries of journalism education so that programs provide a broader set of skills for the multiplatform (often entrepreneurial) journalist of the future.
  • Extend and increase partnerships among journalism programs and other programs within the university and college.
  • Increase coverage of local communities outside the university or college in conjunction with local media.
  • Collaborate with other journalism schools on state and national news bureaus.
  • Collaborate on adoption of open education materials and freely licensed open software platforms.
  • Experiment with ways to move aspects of journalism education to the center of undergraduate core curriculums.
  • Extend and focus research towards an agenda that clearly locates journalism in relation to its role in local democracy.
We call on the media industry to:
  • Make a stronger financial commitment to supporting innovative thinking, research, and curriculum development in the journalism field.
  • Partner with journalism programs in providing formal internship programs and accreditation of work experience.
We call on local community foundations to:
  • Provide funds for support of community media outlets through journalism programs.
We call on the federal government to:
  • Create a special fund for journalism scholarships to support participation in media production, especially for disadvantaged students, through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). • Support new partnerships between universities and private and public broadcasting entities such as NPR, PBS, and the CPB, and also between local stations and journalism programs.
  • Fund further research through the National Science Foundation to understand the role of community media outlets.
  • Look favorably within the Federal Communications Commission on experimental license applications from journalism and communications schools to explore new forms of media distribution.
We call on regulators and lawmakers at all levels of government to:
  • Regularly call on expertise in journalism schools at hearings and in requests for comments.
  • Support journalism programs so that they can be fully engaged as producers of community journalism, not simply as teachers of journalists.
We hope that journalism programs will embrace the challenge to reinvent themselves in an increasingly digital century.
In a world of proliferating communication technologies, journalism schools have the opportunity to become the anchor for essential community journalism in the 21st century.
The full report is available in a pdf here.
Additional research on indvidual schools is available here.

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地板
 楼主| 发表于 2011-10-31 20:47:21 | 只看该作者
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 楼主| 发表于 2011-10-31 20:47:28 | 只看该作者

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