Abstract

This case study uses a diversity and critical thinking exercise in a photojournalism class to show how journalism educators can incorporate race and gender conversations about ethics and judgment into traditionally skills-oriented courses. It is crucial that journalism students learn how to apply their skills properly in an era of social unrest, inequality, and dwindling media trust. Democratic citizenship and journalism are intertwined, but often the bigger ethical conversations are left out of skills-oriented courses. This can lead to a disconnect between the skills themselves and the responsibility of practicing the skills, especially when it comes to matters of power and representation. The field of photojournalism remains predominately White and male, which makes it all the more crucial for students to interrogate their own biases to ensure ethical coverage of their communities. The assignment asks students to make 36 portraits of strangers, and the subsequent classroom exercise has them confront their inherent biases by looking at the demographics of the people they photographed compared to the general population. Data for this case study consist of observations of the classroom conversations and a reflexive journalism exercise the students completed afterward. Findings indicate this exercise is a successful way to introduce racial and gender considerations as part of photojournalistic ethics and judgment. Students initially neglected to think about representation and diversity in their selection of people to photograph but afterward said they could effectively incorporate reflexivity into their work in an effort to provide more representative imagery and confront their own biases.

Highlights

  • This case study uses a diversity and critical thinking exercise in a photojournalism class to show how journalism educators can incorporate race and gender conversations about ethics and judgment into traditionally skills-oriented courses

  • The role of journalism education is fraught with a long-standing controversy: Should journalism educators provide vocational training or is it their responsibility to incorporate critical theory beyond skills training? Skills classes give students the tools necessary to carry out journalism, but critical thinking gives them the ethical tools they need to properly report on their communities

  • For the purpose of this exercise, our definition of diversity places an emphasis on “the sources and content available to media users” (Napoli, 2011, p. 246). We explored this by addressing the following research questions (RQs):

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Summary

Literature Review

The notion of objective reporting and finding the truth may be holding journalism educators back from including a critical approach in their classrooms. Without a critical approach to teaching objectivity, scholars have argued, journalism schools are reinforcing systems of power and dominance among races (Alemán, 2017) This issue surfaced again recently in the industry, as people reignited the advocacy for and/or debate over the need to hire and promote the work of Black photojournalists during the Black Lives Matters protests in the summer of 2020 (Matsuda, 2020; Photo Bill of Rights, 2020). Hoops (2009) found that because of the power structures embedded within language in journalism education, international students and students of color often received failing grades in journalism classes or chose to drop journalism courses This study addresses these concerns by contributing and analyzing one way in which skillsbased courses in journalism schools can incorporate critical theory. While allowing for new themes in the analysis, the authors initially focused on topics relating to the research questions, including experiences with the assignment, experiences in the classroom when discussing the critiques, and news-gathering techniques

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