|  | Course 
        Description
       This is a beginning news reporting course, concentrating on the fundamentals 
        of news gathering and news writing, through instruction and through practice. 
        We will focus on reporting skills for all news media. However, emphasis 
        is on the language and style used in print and online and in learning 
        how to write news stories. 
       This course is intended to prepare you for courses and careers in publication 
        relations, broadcast news, online news and any profession that requires 
        interaction with the media.
 We will focus on strategies for reporting, but make no mistake, good writing 
        will be valued. You can expect, during this one semester, to develop a 
        nose for news, an ear for writing, an eye for editing, a feel for reporting 
        and a thirst for the truth. You will learn to be reporters -- fair, accurate 
        reporters, ready to make a difference on paper, on air, or online.
 
 On the road to our objective, you are expected to read at least one newspaper 
        every day. If you don't, you won’t understand the text nor will 
        you be able to practice this craft.
 
 You can read as many newspapers online as you wish, but you must subscribe 
        to the print edition of the Sacramento Bee. You can expect regular news 
        quizzes to test the attention you are paying to current events (including 
        geography). Note: Quizzes ordinarily will be given at the very beginning 
        of class. If you are late to class, you will not be allowed to make up 
        the quiz. Your grade for that quiz will be a zero.
 
 You are expected to complete all other assigned readings before each class 
        and to come to each class with at least two typed question -- handwritten 
        questions will not be accepted -- drawn from the reading. These are to 
        be thoughtful questions the readings raised in your mind and for which 
        you are seeking answers. They should not be a recitation of the obvious.
 
 You are expected, as you will see in other sections of this syllabus, 
        to complete all work on time. It's called making deadline, which is what 
        real reporters at real newspapers, real television stations and real online 
        sites must do every day, often many times a day.
 
 In the end, you are will be expected to improve each week to the point 
        that by Week Eight you will be able to go out and find, report and write 
        a story for publication -- a publication that the whole world can see 
        and critique on the World Wide Web. You will have finely honed news judgment, 
        and be able to apply that judgment is determining what news stories your 
        campus audience needs and wants to know about.
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