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Model Curricula for Journalism Education for Developing Countries and Emerging Democracies


Author

Michael Cobden
Gordon Stuart Adam
Hans HenrikHolm
Magda Abu-Fadil

Publication Date

2007

Summary

From the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Series on Journalism Education, these proposed journalism curricula are generic models that can be adapted according to each country’s specific needs. The series is intended to take full cognisance of the social, economic, political, and cultural contexts of developing countries and emerging democracies, highlighting the connection between democracy and journalism and arguing for a more cross-disciplinary approach within journalism training centres. It provides a Bachelor's level curriculum, a Master's level for those with an undergraduate degree in Journalism, and one for those entering journalism studies. The appendices discuss a two-year post secondary curriculum, journalism competencies, and syllabi for courses listed in the curricula.

There are three categories of courses in these curricula, corresponding to three axes: professional practice, journalism studies, and arts and sciences.

  1. Professional practice - An axis comprising the norms, values, tools, standards, and practices of journalism, which prepares students to report, write, and edit for the various media;
  2. Journalism studies - An axis emphasising the social, cultural, political, economic, legal, and ethical aspects of journalism practice both within and outside the national borders, which gives the student the institutional and societal contexts within which journalists function and connects the practice of journalism to related human activities; and
  3. Arts and science - An axis comprising knowledge of the world and journalism’s intellectual challenges; which places journalism education in combination with education in the disciplines of arts and sciences.

Publisher

Number of Pages

148

Contact

Michael Cobden

University of King’s College

Halifax NS
B3H 2A1
Canada
Tel: 902 422 5668


Gordon Stuart Adam

Carleton University
Ontario
Canada, and
Journalism Scholarship Fellow
The Poynter Institute for Media Studies
801 Third St.

St. Petersburg FL
33701
United States
Tel: 727 821 9400


Hans-Henrik Holm
Jean Monnet Professor, Head of Department

Danish School of Journalism
Olof Palmes Alle 11 DK 8200

Aarhus N
Denmark
Tel: 4589440321


Magda Abu-Fadil
Director, Journalism Training Program

American University of Beirut
P.O. Box 11-0236
Riad El Solh 1107

Beirut
2020
Lebanon

Source

UNESCO website on April 11 2008.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site April 11 2008
Last Updated April 14 2008



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Thanks for this useful material

obviously as a student of journalism whose diploma is subject to0 a research work, i find this page educative and of very high value just as most of my colleagues would attest to.

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