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Description

All you need to report and write a feature story and get it published
Do you want to interview the Dalai Lama, report on a local issue in your community, write up a good story for your blog or website, or break into journalism as a possible career?

Journalism for Beginners is a “fast track” course infused with practical advice on how to report and write a feature story with the aim to get it published.

Journalism for Beginners – in a total of over 80 lectures and 3 hours of videos - includes an overview of the whole reporting and writing process, and then is split into three main sections – Reporting, Writing, and Getting Published.

The emphasis of this course is on reporting, writing and selling your story – making an income from the sale of your story. That is the goal medium to long term, deriving income from the sale of your stories. But it also includes some of the tactics needed to build up a portfolio of stories – some of which may be published for free – in order to demonstrate to prospective editors that you can report and write, and know your subject.

KEEP YOUR EDITOR HAPPY: In addition, the course includes “secret tips” on how to deal with editors. These tips are entitled: Keep Your Editor Happy. And with good reason! If you are going to get your story published, you need to keep your editor happy – in other words, communicate with them in the right way and provide them with a story they are happy to publish.

If you are looking for a good introduction to how to report and write stories and get them published, this is it.

The aim is to produce a real story and send it to a newspaper, magazine or news service for publication. In other words – and this is important – the focus is on getting published, not just going through the motions. What matters is getting published and seeing your name online or in print.
Who this course is for:
Beginners
New freelancers
Those keen to break into journalism
Those who seek to brush up their journalism skills
Website owners who seek to tell a good story
Bloggers keen to tell good stories
Those seeking to add journalism skills to their skill-set
Those who recognize storytelling skills can benefit their existing career

What you'll learn

Over 80 lectures and over 3 hours of content!

Report and write a good feature story

Write a story and get paid

Learn how to get published

Learn how writing for free can lead to getting paid

Learn key reporting practices

Learn key writing practices

Learn the secrets of how to please editors

Prepare a feature story for publication

Understand how to get published

Understand the opportunities for getting published

Understand the need to build a portfolio

Understand the benefits of internships

Understand the pitfalls

Understand the Journalist’s Code of Ethics

Understand why failure is part of the road to success

Take care with your image on social media

Gain a glimpse of why journalism is a great career

Requirements

  • You will need a copy of Adobe XD 2019 or above. A free trial can be downloaded from Adobe.
  • No previous design experience is needed.
  • No previous Adobe XD skills are needed.

Course Content

27 sections • 95 lectures
Expand All Sections
1-What's in the course
6
1.1-Introduction
1.2-Is this course for you?
1.3-What's in the course
1.4-What's not in the course
1.5-Why you are lucky
1.6-How to take the course
2-Journalism Skills Overview
7
2.1-Introduction
2.2-Are you fearless?
2.3-A useful secret to know
2.4-Brainstorming story ideas
2.5-Write for a specific market
2.6-Getting paid vs writing for free
2.7-Work on your story idea
3-Focus is key
2
3.1-Your guiding light
3.2-When it is okay to change your focus
4-Journalism 101
5
4.1-The five Ws and one H
4.2-Feature stories vs news
4.3-The feature story approach
4.4-The pitfalls of passion
4.5-Attribution
5-Code of Ethics
2
5.1-Be honest in your reporting
5.2-The Journalist's Code of Ethics
6-Safety in the field
3
6.1-Take care
6.2-Calculated risks and commonsense reporting
6.3-Specialized training for conflicts
7-Reporting your story
3
7.1-Don't skip preparation
7.2-But don't overdo it
7.3-Are you an expert but don't realize it?
8-Practical stuff
6
8.1-Note taking vs recording
8.2-Pen and note pad
8.3-Note-taking practice makes perfect
8.4-The lost art of shorthand
8.5-Using a recorder
8.6-The secret every boy scout knows
9-Getting out into the field
6
9.1-Visit the scene
9.2-Face to face
9.3-Take care to get a variety of voices
9.4-Waiting for the "bell" to go off
9.5-Covering the ground
9.6-Calling it a day
10-The art of interviewing
10
10.1-Getting down to the nitty-gritty of interviewing
10.2-Choosing your interviewing situation
10.3-Preparing the questions
10.4-Ask the right questions
10.5-Avoid leading questions
10.6-Follow-up questions
10.7-The secret that even professionals fail at
10.8-Professional behavior
10.9-Finishing on a high note
10.10-Summing up interviewing
11-Tackling complex issues
6
11.1-You don't need a PhD to tackle complex issues
11.2-Do your homework
11.3-Don't jump in if it is too complex
11.4-Examples of tough subjects
11.5-Reporting summary
11.6-FUN BONUS
12-Preparing to write
2
12.1-Introduction and the bonus - Keep Your Editor Happy
12.2-Get organized
13-Writing basics
9
13.1-The five boxes feature template
13.2-A secret that will be invaluable for your writing
13.3-Your focus
13.4-Weaving your focus through your story
13.5-Grab your reader
13.6-Examples of good leads
13.7-The importance of anecdotes and description
13.8-Letting it flow
13.9-Still a bit rough?
14-Editing Your Story
4
14.1-From creative to critic
14.2-A secret that sounds worse than it is
14.3-Check everything is there
14.4-Check grammar, spelling and names
15-Getting feedback
1
15.1-Get a friend or colleague to check your work
16-Selling your story
9
16.1-Working to get your story published
16.2-For money or fame or exposure?
16.3-Make sure the conditions of submission are clear
16.4-The importance of getting published
16.5-The problem and opportunity of working for free
16.6-Building a portfolio
16.7-Keeping things professional
16.8-Many reporters' first attempts suck
16.9-Your blog or website
17-Your future in journalism
3
17.1-Stick at it
17.2-BONUS - The answer to that question about "All the President's Men"
17.3-BONUS - Adding photos to the mix