BROADCAST JOURNALISM TEXTBOOKS
If you've signed on to teach journalism at the college level, you'll
probably want to use a textbook. But how can you figure out which
one works best for you? Take advantage of publishers' review programs.
Most will send you a text at no charge for review; if you adopt
it for a course you can keep the text for free.
Here are a few titles to get you started. Our number one recommendation
should be no surprise:
Advancing
the Story: Broadcast Journalism in a Multimedia World by NewsLab's
own Deborah Potter and VCU's Deb Halpern Wenger, CQ Press. 2007.
Associated
Press Broadcast News Handbook
by Brad Kalbfeld, McGraw Hill. 2000.
A style guide that also includes tips on broadcast writing.
Broadcast
News, 4th edition, by Mitchell Stephens. Wadsworth, 2004.
Widely used overview text for broadcast journalism courses.
Broadcast
News Handbook: Writing, Reporting, And Producing in a Converging
Media World, 3rd edition, by C. A. Tuggle, Forrest Carr, Suzanne
Huffman. McGraw-Hill Companies, 2006.
Comprehensive text for introductory broadcast courses.
Principles
of Electronic Media
2nd edition, by Bill Davie and Jim Upshaw. Allyn & Bacon, 2005
Surveys the field: history, technology, business and ethics/law.
Television
Field Production and Reporting ,
4th edition, by Fred Shook. Allyn & Bacon, 2004.
An introduction to the art of visual storytelling
Television
News ,
2nd edition, Teresa Keller and Stephen Hawkings. Holcomb Hathaway
Publishing, 2005
Covers writing, reporting, shooting and editing TV news.
Writing
News for Broadcast ,
3rd edition, by Edward Bliss, Jr. and James L. Hoyt, Columbia University
Press, 1994.
The best broadcast news writing text ever produced. Dated now, but
still fun to read.
Check our writers' bookbag for other suggestions. Click
the links if you want to buy from Amazon (note: NewsLab makes a small commission
on each sale) If you have other suggestions to add, please let
us know.
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