JOMC 457: Advanced Editing Spring 2013

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JOMC 457: Advanced Editing Spring 2013 Meeting time: Tuesday/Thursday, 2 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. Meeting place: 58 Carroll Hall Instructor: Andy Bechtel Email: abechtel@email.unc.edu Office hours, 213 Carroll: Tuesday-Thursday, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Blog: editdesk.wordpress.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/andybechtel About the course OVERVIEW: Advanced Editing is a hands-on course that will build on your previous editing experience in print and online media. For much of the semester, you will be a copy editor and page designer for publications, some real and one mythical: THE TRIANGLE TATTLER: This is our fictional newspaper and website. It s a hard-charging regional news organization that is competing against the Herald-Sun and The News & Observer. Its audience consists of readers in Orange, Durham and Wake counties. For this publication, you will use wire services to put together pages, edit stories, etc. You will edit various types of stories, including sports and features. THE CARRBORO COMMONS, DURHAM VOICE and WHICH WAY NC: These are our real publications, part print and part online. It s a joint project with students in JOMC 459, Community Journalism. The Commons and Voice are intensely local publications. For these publications, you will edit the work of your fellow students. See more at carrborocommons.org and www.durhamvoice.org. In addition, we will work with two sections of JOMC 253, editing their work for publication on the Which Way NC site, a part of the Reese News Lab. REQUIRED TEXTS: The Newspaper Designer s Handbook (7th edition) by Tim Harrower The Subversive Copy Editor by Carol Fisher Saller The Associated Press Stylebook Stylebook of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication available at jomc.unc.edu/stylebook. RECOMMENDED TEXTS: Webster s New World College Dictionary. You should also

read a daily newspaper such as The News & Observer, USA Today or The Herald-Sun as well as The Daily Tar Heel. ACADEMIC INTEGRITY: You must adhere to the University s honor code. Some assignments will be collaborative, but in general, there should be no sharing of information while you are working on assignments. ATTENDANCE and PUNCTUALITY: They are crucial, especially because many assignments will be team projects that require collaboration. If you miss an assignment because you are late, you may not make it up. If you miss class, you may only make up assignments if you provide documentation of illness or other cause for your absence. If you cannot attend class because of a University-related trip, please let me know ahead of time so we can arrange makeup work. GRADING: Your assignments will be graded on a point system. The more important the assignment, the more it s worth. A story-editing exercise could be worth 100 points. In the end, I will divide the number of points you earned by the total possible points and use the following scale to calculate your grade: A = 93-100 A- = 90-92 B+ = 87-89 B = 83-86 B- = 80-82 C = 70-79, with +/- ranges the same as for B D = 60-69, with +/- ranges the same as for B F = 0-59

Tentative schedule Thursday, Jan. 10 Topic: Introductions. Tuesday, Jan. 15 Topic: Refreshing your editing skills. Readings: AP Stylebook, A-M; section on social media. Saller, chapters 1, 2. 3. Assignments: Style quiz; story editing. Thursday, Jan. 17 Topic: Refreshing your design/headline skills. Readings: Harrower, chapters 1, 2, 3. AP Stylebook, N-Z; section on food guidelines. Assignments: Style quiz; designing pages and writing headlines and captions. Tuesday, Jan. 22 Topic: Editing and Wikis. Assignment: Creating and editing an entry at https://trianglewiki.org. Readings: Saller, chapter 4 and 5. Thursday, Jan. 24 Topic: Editing legislative news. Assignment: Editing stories from JOMC 253 class reporting from General Assembly. Readings: Saller, chapters 6, 7 and 8. Tuesday, Jan. 29 Topic: Alternative story forms. Readings: Harrower, chapter 6. In-class viewing: NewsU webinar: Eyetrack and Alternative Story Forms. Assignment: Brainstorming ideas for story forms. Thursday, Jan. 31 Topic: Alternative story forms online. Assignment: Using Storify to compile and edit an FAQ or list. Tuesday, Feb. 5 Topic and assignment: Carrboro Commons/Durham Voice. Thursday, Feb. 7 Topic: Editing columns and editorials.

Readings: Harrower, chapter 4. Listening: Interview with Steve Ford, former editor of the editorial page at The News & Observer (http://wunc.org/tsot/archive/steve_ford.mp3/view) Assignment: Editing opinion pieces. Tuesday, Feb. 12 Topic: Editing and the future of local news. Guest speakers: Fiona Morgan, associate in research at DeWitt Wallace Center for Media and Democracy; Charles Duncan Pardo, editor of the Raleigh Public Record. In-class viewing: The Sun Never Sets DVD about The Rio Grande Sun. Thursday, Feb. 14 Topic: The New York Times vs. the Rio Grande Sun. In-class viewing: Page One DVD about The New York Times. Tuesday, Feb. 19 Assignment: Carrboro Commons/Durham Voice. Thursday, Feb. 21 Topic: Editing obits. Assignment: Compiling and editing obituaries using Storify. Tuesday, Feb. 26 Topic: The front page. Assignment: Planning and budgeting a front page. Thursday, Feb. 28 Assignment: Putting together a front page. Tuesday, March 5 Topic: Editing beyond news. Readings: Saller, chapters 9, 10 and 11. Guest speakers: Ayse Erginer, deputy editor at the Center for the Study of the American South; Lisa Chensvold, director of communications at UNC Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases; Lindsey Alexander, freelance book editor. Thursday, March 7 Assignment: Midterm exam. Tuesday, March 19 Topic: Editing features.

Readings: Harrower, chapter 7. Assignment: Writing features headlines. Thursday, March 21 Topic: More features. Assignment: Putting together a features page. Tuesday, March 26 Assignment: Carrboro Commons/Durham Voice Thursday, March 28 Topic: Features with extra flavor: food pages. Assignment: Putting together a food page. Tuesday, April 2 Topic: Photo pages. Assignment: Putting together a photo page. Readings: Harrower, pages 130-138. Thursday, April 4 Topic: Photo slideshows. Assignment: Putting together a Day in Photos slideshow. Tuesday, April 9 Assignment: Carrboro Commons/Durham Voice. Thursday, April 11 Topic: Sports. Readings: Sports guidelines in AP Stylebook. Assignment: Quiz on sports style. Guest speaker: Jim Young of ACCsports.com Tuesday, April 16 Topic: More sports. Assignment: Putting together a sports page. Thursday, April 18 Assignment: Editing Q&A material from JOMC 253 class. Tuesday, April 23 Topic: The art of the redesign.

Readings: Harrower, Chapter 8. Assignment: Critiquing the Durham Voice, Carrboro Commons. Thursday, April 25 Assignment: Final exam.

Guidelines for grading your story editing Misspelled proper name: -50 Missing first reference: -15 Other fact error: -25 Misspelled word: -10 Style error: -5 Garble: -5 Punctuation error: -3 to -5 Grammar error: -5 Redundancy: -5 Other offense: -3 to -25 You can get points by performing heroic acts of editing. These include breaking a long sentence into two sentences, tightening wordy copy and improving the structure of a story. Guidelines for grading your headlines/captions Headlines and cutlines are worth 25 points. Here s how it works: 25: Shows unusual flair and cleverness; represents the story clearly and forcefully. 23: Solid, publishable; reflects the story and attracts reader interest. 21: Usable but lacks precision or feels flat. 18: Vague or difficult to understand; awkwardly structured. 16: Contains a major flaw; misses the major angle of the story; contains a punctuation error such as use of a semicolon where a comma is needed. Has unintended meanings. 0: Contains an obvious grammar error such as subject-verb disagreement. Has a misspelled word, fact error or libelous material.

Assignment: Guest Blogging For this assignment, you will write a guest post for The Editor s Desk. You can read the blog at editdesk.wordpress.com. TOPICS: You have plenty of leeway here, provided that the topic fits the mission of the blog as a place for thoughts on editing for print and online media. Possible areas to explore include grammar questions, headline writing, news judgment and slideshows. Write about something you care about and that matches the interests of the blog s readers. FORMAT: The post should be between four and eight paragraphs in length. Include a suggested headline of up to 40 characters. Think of the post as a short essay in which you introduce your topic, provide evidence and offer a conclusion or recommendation. Turn in your blog post as a Word file, submitted by email to abechtel@email.unc.edu. Include a sentence or two about yourself. Include suggested in links in brackets, with the words you would link to underlined, like so: Bono will be a guest columnist for The New York Times, the paper announced recently. [http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2008/oct/24/bono-new-york-times-columnist] GRADING: This assignment is worth 100 points. I will consider these factors in grading your post: Timeliness and interest: Is the post about a current event or use a recent example? Does it have a news peg? Is the topic introduced in a way that will grab the reader? You will lose 10 points for each day your post is overdue. LINKS: Does the post include relevant, specific links that help the reader understand your point? Also consider how linking is a sort of footnoting that can support an argument. Incorporate the links into the writing itself avoid click here and similar phrases. WRITING: You may have a voice for the post, and first person is OK. But keep the journalistic audience of the blog in mind and write accordingly. Avoid redundancy, jargon and other pitfalls. Use AP style and proper grammar and punctuation.