Journalism Fundamentals: Reporting, Ethics & Craft

Master news values, sourcing, verification, writing, press law, and the modern business of journalism

Journalism Fundamentals: Reporting, Ethics & Craft - Codeintra

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This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.

Journalism in 2026 is more important and more contested than at any point in living memory. Readers are flooded with synthetic media, platform algorithms decide which stories reach them, and the financial models that once funded local reporting have collapsed in much of the world. In that environment, the fundamentals of the craft, including verification, fair sourcing, clear writing, and ethical judgment, are not nostalgic relics but the core skills that separate journalism from everything else competing for attention. This course gives you those fundamentals in a single, structured journey.

You will begin with the role of journalism in democracy, exploring why an independent press exists and what functions it performs. From there you will move into news values and the daily decisions editors make about what counts as news, followed by deep coverage of sourcing and verification, including how to handle anonymous sources, how to spot manipulated media, and how to use freedom of information laws to extract documents from public institutions. A full section on interviewing covers everything from confronting evasive officials to interviewing trauma survivors with care. You will then learn the structural craft of news writing, including the inverted pyramid, lead writing, quotation, headlines, and the longer arcs of feature journalism. Press law and ethics receive their own dedicated section, covering libel, privacy, contempt, reporter's privilege, codes of ethics, conflicts of interest, fact-checking workflows, and the corrections culture that defines trustworthy newsrooms. The course closes with the economics of news, including subscriptions, advertising, nonprofit models, platform dependency, artificial intelligence, and the realities of building a journalism career today.

This course is built for aspiring journalists, communications and media students, public relations professionals who work alongside reporters, and engaged citizens who want to understand how news is actually made. No prior journalism experience is required. By the end you will be able to evaluate the newsworthiness of a story idea, plan and conduct a rigorous interview, structure a news article from lead to kicker, recognize the major legal hazards in a piece of reporting, apply a coherent ethical framework to hard editorial decisions, and speak fluently about the business pressures shaping the profession.

What sets this course apart is the integration of timeless craft with the realities of journalism as it is practiced in 2026, including AI in the newsroom, platform power, and the global press freedom landscape. Every lecture grounds principles in concrete examples drawn from real reporting, and every section builds toward the kind of clear-eyed, principled, useful work that has always defined the best journalism. Enroll now and start building the skills, instincts, and judgment that the next generation of trusted reporters will be known for.

Learning Objectives

🔹Explain journalism's role as the Fourth Estate and its core democratic functions
🔹Apply news values to evaluate whether a story idea is genuinely newsworthy
🔹Cultivate sources, negotiate ground rules, and use anonymous sources responsibly
🔹Verify claims, geolocate visuals, and detect AI-generated and manipulated media
🔹Conduct interviews that yield revelation, including with powerful or vulnerable subjects
🔹Structure hard news using the inverted pyramid and craft compelling leads
🔹Write feature journalism with scene, character, and narrative arc
🔹Navigate libel, privacy, contempt, and reporter's privilege across major jurisdictions
🔹Apply professional ethics codes to real-world editorial dilemmas
🔹Understand the modern news business, from subscriptions to AI to platform power

Prerequisites

🔹A strong command of written English at the college level
🔹Curiosity about current events and the news media landscape
🔹Willingness to think critically about ethics, power, and public interest
🔹Basic comfort with internet research and digital tools
🔹No prior journalism experience or formal media education required

Who This Course Is For

🔹Aspiring reporters preparing for their first newsroom role or freelance career
🔹Journalism, communications, and media students seeking a structured foundation
🔹Public relations and communications professionals who work with journalists
🔹Content creators and newsletter writers who want to apply journalistic standards
🔹Engaged citizens who want to understand and evaluate the news they consume

Course Details
Price FREE
Views 1
Lectures 44
Duration 6 hours
Last Update 16-Jun-2026
Release Date 16-Jun-2026
Category Business
This course includes:

📹 Video lectures

📄 Downloadable resources

📱 Mobile & desktop access

🎓 Certificate of completion

♾️ Lifetime access

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