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Dreamweaver does not make an online journalist

Posted by Dave Lee on 14 February 2008 at 08:01
Tags: Courses, Lincoln University, Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism

When studying to be a print journalist, students will definitely spend considerable amounts of time in printhouses, learning to operate machinery that puts the ink to paper. After extensive training, we then must prepare to build our own printing presses.

I’m kidding. We’re not taught like that. All we, as print journalists, need to know about the printing presses is that they exist and they work. It would be a waste of time to think otherwise.

So why don’t we take the same approach to learning online journalism?

If you’re an online journalism student and find yourself aimlessly clicking away at Dreamweaver and wondering “What’s the point?”, you’re not alone. There are hundreds of us.

It’s an issue that has caused great concern for Amy Gahran, writing over on Poynter Online about the pointlessness of such an education:

“Dreamweaver is a decent Web design and development tool,” she writes. “However, it’s not very relevant to journalism, because it does not include a robust content management system!

“A working knowledge of real Content Management System (CMS) technology and how it integrates with the internet is what gives a journalist’s career legs these days,” she continues. “Requiring journalism students to use Dreamweaver is about as useful as requiring them to learn calligraphy. It makes your content looks really pretty — and it generally won’t be worth a damn on a real journo job or project.”

I really couldn’t agree more. I myself have written about this on my own blog many moons ago, as I was astonished to find I was “studying” online journalism using software that was out of date before I’d even started my A-Levels.

Gahran mentions in her post that it isn’t just the fact that most courses use outdated versions of Dreamweaver. It’s more the fact that using Dreamweaver — or any other web design software, let’s not forget — promotes a certain mindset when it comes to publishing online.

A Dreamweaver site, unless very professionally executed, is so very static… so very Web 1.0. Web 1.0 just doesn’t cut it anymore.

Think of your favourite websites. Which do you visit most frequently? The one that changes every day, or the one that changes every minute? The new web — Web 2.0 — is all about live information. When you log onto the BBC’s homepage, you know that what you’re reading is the most up-to-date news possible. That’s how online works.

Poke your nose into any newsroom across the country and see what they’re doing with the web. Are local reporters sat in front of their computers wrestling with HTML table alignments? No! They’re writing news stories, whisking them off to the web-bods who then place them neatly into a pre-designed CMS. Who designs the CMS? Why, web designers of course…!

That’s not to say we don’t need to know how some of it works, but simply learning Dreamweaver doesn’t bring us any closer to that goal. What’s the use in studying a program that nobody uses? Teach a few basic tags like bold, italic and underline, and then get onto the important stuff: Journalism.

Online journalism courses should ask questions like: What’s different about an online audience to a print audience? What can we do with online that would couldn’t do with print? How can we make this news story as accessible to our audience as possible?

It’s the decisions that arise from quesitons like these which make online journalism the most fascinating medium in today’s media. But, instead, many students are finding themselves making decisions over whether to implement a 1997-esque scrolling marquee.

HTML, PHP, MySQL and all those other complicated acronyms are to the online world what ink is to the print world. As long as we know it’s there, then that’s good enough. It’s time for less coding, and more reporting.

Tags: Courses, Lincoln University, Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism

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  1. Andy Dickinson |  15 February 2008 at 15:30

    Some fair points here. But I don’t think your ink stained print house analogy quite holds up.

    The better ‘old print’ analogy here is it’s more like learning Quark or in-design.

    Now, I think I would get short shrift from most people if I was to advocate that we should ditch quark and in-design training for journo’s because there was some ‘cms’ that does it all for us. I could ask Should I stop teaching photoshop because I know I can use Soap or GD in a CMS to resize and crop images?

    And given the amount of complaining that people do about the limitations of CMS’s, it seems pretty surprising to suddenly imbue them with some miraculous ability to devolve technology from journalism.

    To drop Dreamweaver on the basis that a cms can do it doesn’t follow. All you would be doing is swapping the teaching of ‘out of date’ software with the teaching of a CMS that most likely bears no consistent resemblance to one they would use in industry.

    Just to say. I’m not defending Dreamweaver (or attacking it) it is what it is – a tool. Just like a CMS is a tool.

    But I feel a ‘carnival of journalism’ blog post coming on about this so I won’t rant too much.

    You are right when you say it’s about the context that it’s used in. I’m teaching Dreamweaver this year but in a very directed, singular and minimal way. Will I teach it next year? No. But that’s not because it’s out of date – that’s a blinkered view – but because I can use a cms. Will that restrict what the students do? I think yes.

    The limit of the CMS will define the limit of their exploration, but it’s the right thing to do in this case. Will I still use dreamweaver in other areas of journalism teaching? Yes.

  2. Why teach journalism stud&hellip |  15 February 2008 at 16:37

    […] Over on Press Gazette’s Student Journalism Blog, Dave Lee has revived a very interesting discussion about whether journalism students should be taught to build websites in Dreamweaver. […]

  3. How important is Twitter &hellip |  15 February 2008 at 18:09

    […] Andy Dickinson adds his thoughts in the comments, which you can read here. […]

  4. Dave Lee / jBlog » &hellip |  15 February 2008 at 20:41

    […] Andy Dickinson adds his thoughts in the comments, which you can read here. […]

  5. Teaching Online Journalis&hellip |  16 February 2008 at 3:08

    […] Lee wastes no words on how a little Dreamweaver might be a good thing: Poke your nose into any newsroom across the […]

  6. pluto-online editor’&hellip |  16 February 2008 at 18:21

    […]  Dreamweaver does not make a journalism student […]

  7. contentious.com - links f&hellip |  17 February 2008 at 16:25

    […] Dreamweaver does not make an online journalist | Student Journalism Blog | Press Gazette “Print journalism students will definitely spend considerable amounts of time learning to operate machinery that puts ink to paper. After extensive training, we then prepare to build our own printing presses. I’m kidding. We’re not taught like that.” (tags: journalism education tools mindset tidbits+fodder) […]

  8. links for 2008-02-18 &laq&hellip |  18 February 2008 at 2:20

    […] Dreamweaver does not make an online journalist - Student Journalism Blog - Press Gazette “All we, as print journalists, need to know about the printing presses is that they exist and they work. It would be a waste of time to think otherwise. So why don’t we take the same approach to learning online journalism?” (tags: internet newspapers journalism training tools cms dreamweaver) […]

  9. Medieblogger » Vær&hellip |  18 February 2008 at 11:09

    […] kører en interessant debat om, hvorvidt man skal bruge Dreamweaver i undervisningen af journalister (Mindy McAdams har også blogget om […]

  10. Bryan Murley |  18 February 2008 at 21:12

    I hate teaching dreamweaver, because it only shows a student how to use the software, not how to understand the underlying HTML/CSS. I teach students to code by hand. If they want to learn dreamweaver, they are welcome to learn that later, and deal with all the extraneous code that it generates.

    One example where this sort of knowledge is useful is in “tweaking” CMS templates. It’s difficult to understand how to change a style for a font if you don’t understand how CSS works. But I can edit CSS without dreamweaver.

    In that sense, it’s unlike Photoshop or InDesign.

  11. digital-rebel » Journali&hellip |  18 February 2008 at 23:11

    […] Lee, writing on the Press Gazette’s Student Journalism blog, doesn’t really see the point of Dreamweaver being taught in journalism colleges, and I have to say I agree with […]

  12. Do online journalists nee&hellip |  18 March 2008 at 19:17

    […] My argument is all for it, but then again I enjoy being a geek when it comes to learning to use technical software. When it comes to Photoshop, it is essential for every online journalist to be able to at least crop an image for use on the web. The debate with Dreamweaver I fear will be much more diverse (See this post at the Student Journalism Blog at the Press Gazette). […]

  13. Anvar |  4 April 2008 at 9:52

    Well, it makes sense to learn Dreamweaver, HTML, CSS, PHP if you are planning to run your own project. For example, I want to have one, but do not have financial resources to order a website to professional programmers. And I am learning now PHP and I am using Dreamweaver for HTML, CSS and PHP programming. It is really fun for me!

  14. Who’s using Dreamwe&hellip |  25 April 2008 at 9:39

    […] in summary, web designers aren’t using Dreamweaver. Web journalists aren’t using Dreamweaver. Indeed it seems nobody in the industry is using it. Which begs the question, why do so many […]

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