<aside> βŒ› Estimated student time on platform: 45 minutes (+ blending)

</aside>

<aside> πŸ—£ Lesson host: Enrique Acevedo, Univision Noticias

</aside>

<aside> 2️⃣ Difficulty level: 2 (for middle school, high school and higher education)

</aside>

<aside> βœ”οΈ Assessments: 15 total ****(11 auto-graded and 4 teacher-evaluable)

</aside>

<aside> πŸ—’οΈ Standards: This lesson has Common Core, ISTE, C3 and state-specific alignments. Find your standards in the Checkology alignments dropdown menu to learn more.

</aside>


Learning objectives:

Essential questions:

Background:

The standards and practices of quality journalism are complex, numerous and dynamic, and are implemented differently by different journalists and different news organizations under different circumstances on different pieces of journalism. But the general purpose behind them is the same: to produce the most credible information possible.

Some journalism standards are obligatory (such as the prohibition against making things up) and quantifiable (such as newsroom policies about the use of anonymous sources), while others are aspirational (such as the attempt to eliminate bias and to be as fair and impartial as possible) and require judgment and discussion to apply (such as assessing newsworthiness, evaluating sources and determining fairness).

In almost all cases at major news organizations, these standards are subject to constant reconsideration and revision β€” whether to prevent the recurrence of an error or to adapt to new tools and methods of gathering and reporting information (for example, using social media to locate sources, or livestreaming breaking news events).

By introducing students to the major standards of quality journalism, and helping them understand their nature and rationale, you’re providing them with conceptual and analytical tools that they can use to evaluate the credibility of the information they encounter daily and, in some cases, to critically respond to it. This knowledge can also activate a wide variety of high-level news literacy discussions in your classroom as you continue to use Checkology β€” and afterward.

This lesson is a highly interactive, immersive learning experience in which students are placed in the role of a rookie reporter on the scene of a breaking news event and learn the standards of quality journalism by doing. They are guided by their editor and a veteran reporter back in the newsroom throughout the process, and can use their virtual notebooks to see their progress in following the standards. At the end of the lesson, they build the story, selecting the most appropriate headline, lead, image and more.


<aside> πŸ”™ Back to lesson list

</aside>

Full lesson guide: Practicing Quality Journalism

From the field: Practicing Quality Journalism