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2004-05 Undergraduate Catalog

Academic Programs 2004-05 Home

Journalism

This curriculum leads to a Bachelor of Science in Journalism. Core courses offer students basic preparation. Professional electives allow students to develop strengths in one or more areas.

Core Courses (all journalism majors)

JOU 1000 Introduction to Journalism

1

JOU 3101 Reporting

3

JOU 3110 Fact Finding

3

JOU 4201 Newspaper Editing

3

JOU 4700 Problems and Ethics of Journalism in Society

3

Journalism majors are required to take these courses in addition to the core requirements: MMC 2100, Writing for Mass Communication, and MMC 4200, Law of Mass Communication.

At the beginning of the junior year, journalism majors meet with their assigned faculty adviser to plot the last two years of courses. Students select an area of emphasis from this list: Editing, Graphic Design, Magazines, Online Media, Photojournalism and Reporting. Each area has a designated capstone course, which is taken in the student’s last semester. With the faculty adviser, the student maps a two-year program leading toward the capstone course.

Here are the capstone courses for the areas of emphasis:

Editing: JOU 4202, Advanced Editing & Design

Graphic Design: JOU 4930, Advanced Graphics of Journalism

Magazines: JOU 4445C, Applied Magazine Publishing or JOU 4311, Advanced Magazine Writing

Online Media: JOU 4946, Applied Electronic Publishing

Photojournalism: JOU 4605, Advanced Photojournalism 2

Reporting: JOU 4946, Applied Journalism

One of the requirements of the capstone course will be submission of a professional portfolio.

Selecting an area of emphasis does not preclude students from taking courses in other areas. Students are able to create personalized degree plans in collaboration with a faculty adviser.

A minimum grade of C is required in journalism courses.

Journalism

To remain ‘on track’ for this major, a student must meet the following critical-tracking criteria. The critical-tracking courses appear in bold.

Semester 1:

  • 2.8 GPA on all work at all institutions

Semester 2:

  • 3.0 GPA on all work at all institutions for semesters 2-4
  • Complete 2 of 6 critical courses - AMH 2010, AMH 2020, POS 2041, approved English elective, MMC 2100 and 1 of the following: POS 2112, INR 2001 or CPO 2001

Semester 3:

  • Complete 2 additional courses

Semester 4:

  • Complete 2 additional courses

Semester 1

Credits

ENC 1101 Composition (GE)*

3

POS 2112 American State/Local Govt (GE-S)

3

Physical or Biological Science (GE)

3

Mathematics (GE)*

3

AMH 2010 U.S. Until 1877 (GE-H)

3

JOU 1000 Introduction to Journalism

1

Total

16

Semester 2

Credits

Mathematics (GE)*

3

POS 2041 American Federal Govt (GE-S)

3

English elective*

3

AMH 2020 US Since 1877 (GE-H)

3

Foreign language/quantitative option

3-5

Total

15-17

Semester 3

Credits

Physical or Biological Science (GE)

3

Foreign language or quantitative option

3-5

English elective*

3

JOU 3110 Applied Fact Finding

3

MMC 2100 Writing for Mass Communication*

3

Total

15-17

Semester 4

Credits

JOU 3101 Reporting

3

ECO 2013 OR ECO 2023 Economics (GE-S)

3

SPC 2600 OR ORI 2000 Public Speaking*

3

Electives outside college

6

Total

15

Semester 5

Credits

JOU 4201 Editing

3

JOU courses

6

Outside concentration

3

Electives outside college

3

Total

15

Semester 6

Credits

Outside concentration

6

Elective outside college

3

JOU courses

6

Total

15

For semesters 7-8, students must complete two professional courses.

Semester 7

Credits

JOU courses

6

JOU 4700 Problems and Ethics

3

Outside concentration

3

Electives outside college

3

Total

15

Semester 8

Credits

JOU course

3

JOU capstone course

3

MMC 4200 Law of Mass Communication

3

Outside concentration

3

Elective outside college

3

Total

15

Total Required for Degree

124

* C or better required in these courses

Journalism for Teachers

Special training and supervised research are available for journalism teachers and others interested in working at the high school level. Students seeking state certification in journalism should contact the Department of Journalism or the Office of Student Services, College of Education.

The state headquarters of the Florida Scholastic Press Association is located in the College of Journalism and Communications. A summer institute for high school teachers and journalism students is conducted in cooperation with the Division of Continuing Education.

Students take core courses, an area in methods of teaching journalism, 26 hours of education courses and a minor in English or speech. Students seeking state certification in language arts should contact the Department of Journalism