Litcius/Paper detail

The Challenge of Teaching Mobile Journalism through MOOCs: A Case Study

Laura Cervi, Josè Manuel Pérez Tornero, Santiago Tejedor

2020Sustainability40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Smartphones have become a key social tool: They have changed the way people consume, receive and produce information, providing potentially anyone with the opportunity to create and share content through a variety of platforms. The use of smartphones for gathering, producing, editing and disseminating news gave birth to a new journalistic practice, mobile journalism. Incorporating mobile journalism is, thus, the current challenge for journalism educators. Our article aims at discovering whether new models of education, such as massive online courses, can help mobile journalism training. The research focuses on the first pilot project of a massive open online courses (MOOC) on mobile journalism, the Y-NEX MOOC. By assessing structure, functioning and participants’ opinion, the objective is to discover if MOOCs prove to be useful tools in mobile journalism training. Results show that this model of distance open learning can be helpful for mobile journalism training, providing some recommendations for improvement.

Topics & Concepts

JournalismVariety (cybernetics)Technical JournalismDisseminationMobile deviceComputer scienceMultimediaWorld Wide WebPublic relationsInternet privacyPolitical scienceSociologyMedia studiesTelecommunicationsArtificial intelligenceOnline Learning and AnalyticsE-Learning and Knowledge ManagementDigital literacy in education