6533b872fe1ef96bd12d2f72

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Literary Construction of Journalism Education: A Review of the Course Literature in the Nordic Academic Journalism Programmes

Maarit JaakkolaPanu Uotila

subject

Sosiologia - Sociologycurriculumbachelor’s degree050801 communication & media studiesjournalism educationCourse (navigation)Syllabus0508 media and communicationsPedagogy050602 political science & public administrationSociologyCurriculumammattikirjallisuusoppimateriaaliPohjoismaatCommunication05 social sciencesMedia- ja viestintätieteet - Media and communications0506 political scienceBachelor's DegreeNordic countriesoppimäärätkorkea-asteen koulutuscourse literaturejournalistiikkaJournalismcourse syllabusKasvatustieteet - Educational sciencesopetussuunnitelmat

description

This article investigates the course literature in the curricula of 12 major journalism schools at Northern European universities. This analysis of the course literature listed in documentation of bachelor programmes traces how journalism education institutions constitute their knowledge base on journalism. It is found that Nordic journalism students are required to read almost four books per study credit on average. Undergraduate academic journalism programmes are professionally oriented, and professional literature by non-scientific publishers occupies a major place in the course literature. A strong emphasis is placed on professional books written in the domestic language, with an average age of seven years. Though the Scandinavian languages show high degrees of similarities with each other, there is very little circulation of literature across the countries within the Nordic area. This analysis of the literature points to a relatively homogeneous educational culture with small differences and raises questions about the qualitative dimensions of instructional design. peerReviewed

https://doi.org/10.1080/17512786.2019.1596037