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Posted on May 10th, 2008 at 4:31pm —
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Ryan Sholin
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To answer your question, I'm actually not sure. We don't have a Journalism department, but instead a Communication Studies department at Michigan, and our courses tend to focus on Communication theory. We do have a few professors who focus on the journalism aspect of the media, and they might teach about media-military relations, but I haven't had any of those courses yet.
You might want to check out the Michigan Comm department's faculty page (http://www.lsa.umich.edu/umich/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=89e86af629641110VgnVCM10000096b1d38dRCRD) for more info on the professors.
Sorry, I wasn't much help.
I have to say that we don't have a particular strategy for teaching about war coverage, probably because we still believe that most of our student journalists are still a job or two away from having that opportunity/challenge.
However, I'm looking forward to reading the rest of a new book by Martin Fletcher, "Breaking News." Fletcher talks a lot about news coverage in war zones and his book might make an excellent supplemental text or one that could support a stand-alone course.
We don't have classes like that SF State. We have Reporting Public Affairs and Media and Politics courses which may touch on those subjects.
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