| Application Deadline: | 15 March | ||
| Tuition Fee: | ≈ € 200 - ≈ € 1,512 (non-EEA) | ||
| Location: | Aarhus / Denmark / View location on map ▾ Hide location on map ▴ | ||
| Duration: | 26 days | Start Date: | July |
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| Education Variants: |
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| Credits (ECTS): | 10 | ||
| Languages: | English | ||
What will be the future of journalism? How will journalists engage the public? How will news organizations make money? For the first time in nearly a century, answers to these questions are unclear. We know enough, however, to know that the answers will be found online. Journalism, like all of mass media, is in the midst of a fitful transition to an online world.
In this world, journalism is not the principal gatekeeper to public information. In this world, people are users as well as consumers of information. What will, can (and should) journalism be in this world? And how will answers to these questions be shaped by national contexts? This course engages these questions against the background of a broader history and comparative analysis of journalism.
A major focus in these discussions will be on the advent of networks, social networks and networked journalism. Course offered by Department of Aesthetics and Communication.
Level - Master
Date 30 July - 24 August
Henrik Bødker, Aarhus University
AU Summer University will take place on campus in the architecturally renowned yellow-brick buildings in the beautiful university park.
At the venue you will have access to a helpdesk and service centre. You find our Main Help Desk in the International Centre and the opening hours are 08.30-15.00 from Monday to Friday.
The International Centre is the central hub for all international and PhD activities at Aarhus University, and in the same building you find Dale's Café. Here you can buy sandwiches, coffee, snacks, and beers. With its informal lounge area this is the ideal place to relax and hang out with your fellow Summer University students.
After this course students will
* be able to recognize and summarize the major strands of thinking on networks, social networks and networked journalism.
* be able to contextualize this conversation within the broader history of journalism.
* be able to apply your new-found knowledge to a critical assessment of recent innovations in journalism.
* be able to talk intelligently about the immediate and mid-term future of journalism.
What will be the future of journalism? How will journalists engage the public? How will news organizations make money? For the first time in nearly a century, answers to these questions are unclear. We know enough, however, to know that the answers will be found online. Journalism, like all of mass media, is in the midst of a fitful transition to an online world. In this world, journalism is not the principal gatekeeper to public information. In this world, people are users as well as consumers of information. What will, can (and should) journalism be in this world?
And how will answers to these questions be shaped by national contexts? This class engages these questions against the background of a broader history and comparative analysis of journalism. A major focus in these discussions will be on the advent of networks, social networks and networked journalism.
You are normally required to take an English Proficiency Test.
Most European Universities recognise the IELTS test.
Take testStudents coming as Free-movers/non-Partner students (EU and non-EU students who do not have a bilateral partnership agreement with Aarhus University) applying for AU Summer University courses must apply by using the online form attached to each individual course. Afterwards you must hand in the required documentation for your university studies. Please remark that all freemovers are obliged to pay participation fees where as tuition fees only apply to freemovers from countries outside the EU/EEA/Switzerland.
Requirements:
1. You are expected to have the same requirements that apply to regular students. Freemovers therefore need to provide documentation for their subject levels in applicable subjects. Mathemathics if applying for courses offered by the School of Business and Social Science. Mathematics, chemistry, and physics if applying for courses offered by Faculty of Science and Technology.
2. If you are applying for admission to AU Summer University courses at Master level, you must hold a relevant Bachelor's degree (Or as a minimum 180 ECTS in your study programme)
3. An English test as you are expected to have a high level of English proficiency
English language requirements - 'English B' and 'English A'
English language requirements for applicants with a non-Danish/Nordic entry qualification.
According to the Danish Ministry of Science's Order no. 181 on Admission to Danish Universities, and the Danish Ministry of Education’s Order no. 239 on Admission to Higher Education in Denmark (The Admission Order), all applicants must, as a minimum, document English language qualifications comparable to an "English B level" in the Danish upper secondary school (Gymnasium). A few courses require 'English A', which is one level higher than 'English B'.
English language qualifications can be documented as follows:
TOEFL:
English B – Test results of at least 560 (paper-based) or 83 (internet-based test)
English A – Test result of at least 600 (paper-based) or 100 (internet-based test)
IELTS:
English B – Test results with a minimum score of 6.5 points
English A – Test results with a minimum score of 7.0 points
Cambridge/Oxford:
English B – Certificate in Advanced English (CAE)
English A – Certificate of Proficiency (CPE)
CEFR validated English language course:
English B – C1 level
English A – C2 level
”Native speakers” with an English taught qualifying exam (including applicants from USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Great Britain). Applicants from all other countries (including African and Asian countries, where the exam has been taught in English) must submit a test.
Danish/Nordisk entrance examination
With an English level the Danish Agency for International Education considers comparable to a Danish B/A level in English.
| Minimal degree required: | Bachelor's degree |
| Minimal amount of work experience | Not specified |
You can contact General Enquiries to ask a question about New Landscapes of Journalism — Innovations, Failures and Prospects at Aarhus University.
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