Skip Navigation
The Missouri Honor Medal Missouri School of Journalism
University of Missouri
 
MU Home
  Real-World Experience
Journalism A to Z Index
KOMU Columbia Missourian Vox Magazine Adelante! KBIA Public Radio Global Journalist MOJO Ad Missouri Digital News



About the J-School A Brief History
Centennial Timeline
Connections
The Journalist's Creed
Media Outlets
Mission
Missouri Honor Medal
Calendar
Career Center
Contact Us
Faculty and Staff Convergence
Radio-Television
Journalism Studies
Magazine Journalism
Photojournalism
Print and Digital News
Strategic Communication
Doctoral Faculty
Graduate Faculty
Adjunct Faculty
Endowed Chairs
RJI
Professors Emeriti
Show All Faculty
Show All Staff
Show Everyone
Giving to the J-School
J-School Home
News Releases
RJI
School Tours
 

Journalistic Principles Can Survive and Thrive in Digital Environment

Hurley Symposium to Present Results of Yearlong Research Project

Bill Kovach Bill Kovach
Journalism Studies
Faculty
Tom Rosenstiel Tom Rosenstiel
Journalism Studies
Faculty
Links

Columbia, Mo. (Sept. 25, 2007) -- It's the question that is on the minds of many editors and reporters these days: How can we ensure that the most important journalistic principles survive this time of fast-paced change?

Some insights into how these values can make the transition will be shared Monday, Oct. 29, at the 2007 Curtis B. Hurley Symposium at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. "New Media, Enduring Values" will be held from 9-11 a.m. with a continental breakfast served at 8:30 a.m.

The program will feature the results of a yearlong project by three different kinds of media organizations to see how the time-honored values of the journalist's craft can be brought alive in a digital world. The values selected - verification, creating a forum for public compromise and criticism, and making important news interesting - are three of those identified in the seminal book The Elements of Journalism by Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel. The projects are a cooperative venture among the Missouri School of Journalism, the Committee of Concerned Journalists, the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute and the three media partners.

"We have had a wonderful opportunity here to work with three terrific news organizations on projects that show you can do an even better job of making journalism useful and ethically sound in new formats," said Geneva Overholser, who holds the Hurley Chair at the School. "It's been a lot of fun, and we think we've learned some important lessons to share with others trying to ensure a healthy future for journalism."

The projects and partners to be highlighted are:

Martin Kaiser
Martin Kaiser
  • Verification:
    Milwaukee (Wis.) Journal Sentinel

    The goal of this endeavor is to make the Journal Sentinel the "encyclopedia of education for Wisconsin" by putting into the hands of news consumers the tools of verification. The news consumer can go directly to original sources, for example, to test the truthfulness/fairness/comprehensiveness of a news story from his or her own perspective. Martin Kaiser, the paper's editor, will speak on this project.
Michael Skoler
Michael Skoler
  • Creating a Forum for Public Compromise and Criticism:
    American Public Media (the national brand of Minnesota Public Radio)

    APM is building on the effectiveness of their Public Insight Journalism, which calls on the wisdom of their listeners to enrich their reporting. The project's emphasis is on a tool called "the Idea Generator." Michael Skoler, director of the Public Insight Journalism program, will share progress on this venture.
Dave Price
Dave Price
  • Making Important News Interesting:
    WHO-TV, Des Moines, Iowa

    This innovative television station is working to enrich its coverage of the important Iowa presidential caucuses with creative Web features that bring new participants into the political process. Dave Price, a television reporter who almost exclusively covers politics, will present information about this project.

The results of the "New Media, Enduring Values" project will serve as a catalyst for training journalists in digital media and for future research, Overholser said.

"These projects are far from over. We keep learning as we move along how many more opportunities there are for bringing journalism ethics even more richly alive. Now we're eager to share those opportunities with others," Overholser said.

The alliance formed by the Missouri School of Journalism, the Committee of Concerned Journalists and the Reynolds Journalism Institute was announced in October 2005 when the Knight Foundation awarded a $2.28 million grant to the School and CCJ. The funds allow CCJ to update and expand its training activities using the School's nationally recognized research capabilities.

Related


Jeffrey Dvorkin Pam Johnson Bill Kovach Dean Mills Geneva Overholser Tom Rosenstiel Esther Thorson
"New Media, Enduring Values" Partnerships to Drive Innovation and Change Introduced at Hurley Symposium The Missouri School of Journalism, the Committee of Concerned Journalists (CCJ) and the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute announced the details of upcoming research partnerships with three news organizations around the country during the 2006 Curtis B. Hurley Symposium at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. The announcement is the first of what all hope will be many opportunities to collaborate on research and outreach that will drive innovation and positive change in journalism. [More]
Upcoming Symposium to Discuss "New Media, Enduring Values" The Missouri School of Journalism and the Committee of Concerned Journalists will commemorate their alliance at an upcoming symposium at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. The new partners will announce projects that exhibit the kind of work their partnership makes possible. All are designed to point toward promising ways in which journalism's most important values can be translated, and made even more effective, in the digital world. [More] Merrill Brown William Buzenberg Martin Kaiser Rod Peterson Michael Skoler
Reynolds Institute East Elevation Knight Foundation Awards $2.28 Million Grant to School and Committee of Concerned Journalists The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation has awarded a $2.28 million grant to the Committee of Concerned Journalists and the Missouri School of Journalism. The three-year grant will support the CCJ's Traveling Curriculum and constitutes the Committee's first step to joining the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute. [More]
Symposium to Address Improved Access to Government Information An upcoming seminar will examine the off-the-record briefings, anonymous sourcing and official leaking that plague Washington -- and the atmosphere of heightened government secrecy underlying them. "To address the thicket of Washington secrecy requires us first to acknowledge some of the unspoken truths about its allure, both for government and for the press. We hope to emerge with actionable steps that address this longstanding problem," said Geneva Overholser, moderator of the program and the Curtis B. Hurley Chair in Public Affairs Reporting. [More] Geneva Overholser
Geneva Overholser Pam Johnson Charles Davis Upcoming Hurley Symposium to Address Issue of Citing Anonymous Sources The Fifth Annual Curtis B. Hurley Symposium will be held at 9 a.m., Thursday, March 17 at the National Press Club, 14th and F Street NW, Washington, D.C. At this meeting, a coalition of organizations will gather to discuss access to government information on the record, with an intent to craft steps toward a solution to the increasing reliance on anonymous sources and off-the-record briefings. [More]
Upcoming Hurley Symposium to Discuss: "Where Is the Public in Public Affairs Reporting?" Journalists talk endlessly about what's wrong with the press. Academics, politicians, business executives and other "experts" regularly get into the discussion. But what about the people whom the press supposedly exists to serve? The Fourth Annual Curtis B. Hurley Symposium, at 7 p.m., Thursday, April 15, will feature five panelists answering the question, "Where is the Public in Public Affairs Reporting," from broadly different perspectives. [More] Geneva Overholser
Panel Discusses, Offers Tips Regarding Journalistic Accountability Journalists shaken by five weeks of scandal at The New York Times were reminded Thursday that living up to their own standards is the first line of defense. The panel, examining the fallout from the Jayson Blair misdeeds, and the resignation of the two top Times editors, was co-sponsored by the Curtis B. Hurley Chair in Public Affairs Reporting at the Missouri School of Journalism and by Investigative Reporters and Editors. It was held in conjunction with the annual IRE convention in Washington, D.C. [More] Dean Mills Geneva Overholser
The J-School Arch Stone Lions  
Revised: 23 September 2008. Copyright © 2009 The Curators of the University of Missouri  |  Contact the J-School