
Learn about what news is and news history.
All tortoises are turtles, but not all turtles are tortoises. Similarly, all reporters are journalists, but not all journalists are reporters. Find out about different kinds of journalists, such as feature writers, and photojournalists.
Learn about the ten elements of news.
Find out about what the beat system is, what it takes to be a good beat reporter and see a list of common beats.
Journalists have to put in long hours, and do a lot of research.
A writer isn't expected to know everything about a story they're assigned to, but should know where to find reliable authentic information. This lecture will give you some examples of where reporters can look for information.
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.