Introduction
Table of Contents
I. Main Body
1. Chapter 1: Introduction to Journalism
2. Chapter 2: Why Study Journalism?
3. Chapter 3: Ethics and the Law
4. Chapter 4: Integrity and Unacceptable Practices
5. Chapter 5: Potential Conflicts of Interest
6. Chapter 6: What's in a Newspaper (or Online News Website)?
7. Chapter 7: Reporting and Writing Skills
8. Chapter 8: Interviewing a source: Tips
9. Chapter 9: Human Sources and Rules For Quoting/Using Information
10. Chapter 10: Research Materials & Copyright
11. Chapter 11: Writing a News Story - Style, Ledes, and The Inverted Pyramid
12. Chapter 12: Maintaining a Neutral Tone
13. Chapter 13: AP Style Basics
14. Chapter 14: Writing Headlines
15. Chapter 15: Writing Feature Stories
16. Chapter 16: Photographing Interesting People in Your Community: A Guide to Taking Portraits (from the New York Times)
17. Chapter 17: Social Media
18. Chapter 18: Privacy vs. The Public's Right to Know
19. Chapter 19: Covering Death, Suicide and Other Challenging Situations
20. Chapter 20: Best Practices and Recommendations for Reporting on Suicide
21. Chapter 21: Self-Care Tips for Journalists
22. Chapter 22: Student Press Law Center - Top 10 FAQs from Student Journalists
23. Chapter 23: The Rise of Citizen Journalism
24. Chapter 24: 10 Study-based story ideas for community journalists
25. Chapter 25: Back-to-school story ideas, new angles and useful research: From teacher quality issues to student locker rooms
26. Chapter 26: Writing Opinions
Appendix
This is where you can add appendices or other back matter.
Media News and Reporting by Joelle Milholm is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.