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===Options -- and tools ===
===Options -- and tools ===


<big>Can we reboot Rockwell's America in a digital age? Do we want to? Join us Sept. 11-13 to consider the <b>options</b> -- and <b>tools.</b></big>
Can we reboot Rockwell's America in a digital age? Do we want to? Join us Sept. 11-13 to consider the <b>options</b> -- and <b>tools.</b>


"Rebooting Rockwell's America," will pause for three days to consider the roots of American community, freedom, democracy -- and the journalism which protects each. We'll consider how a generation of virtual pamphleteers -- in  cafes, schools, clubs and meeting rooms -- may be helping point us to common ground in physical places. And now there is the promise that these places will be digitally united across a world that grows smaller, faster, more diverse and more precious by the year.
"Rebooting Rockwell's America," will pause for three days to consider the roots of American community, freedom, democracy -- and the journalism which protects each. We'll consider how a generation of virtual pamphleteers -- in  cafes, schools, clubs and meeting rooms -- may be helping point us to common ground in physical places. And now there is the promise that these places will be digitally united across a world that grows smaller, faster, more diverse and more precious by the year.

Revision as of 02:26, 20 April 2009

Journalism That Matters
D.W. Reynolds Journalism Institute
Media Giraffe Project

Rebooting Rockwell's America:

A PUBLIC SYMPOSIUM / September 11-13, 2009 / Stockbridge, Massachusetts

News, values, cafes and the new pamphleteers --
Sustaining democracy through civic engagement

New roles for journalism -- and the net -- in fostering participatory democracy and community


The America of Norman Rockwell's mid-20th-century illustrations was rich with simple truths and sometimes hard choices. In that world, we respected authority, and the flag. We were asked to embrace justice, equality and tolerance. The country editor personified the Four Freedoms at the grassroots.

Eighteenth-century English and Colonial America coffee houses served as headquarters for shipping news and havens for gatherings of patriots. They were crucibles for democracy, a shared space for uninhibited debate and discussion of issues and events. Could 21st-century "Newscafes" -- well connected and served by a circuit-riding journalists help bring journalism back to community? READ MORE

On Sept. 11, 2001, it was as if the last vestiges of Rockwell's stoic, insular, yet generous nation had been torn asunder, and a new, darker period of fear engaged. A buy-now-pay later ethic has brought some of our most valued journalism institutions to the brink. Now even the country editor works with bits and bytes alongside type and ink. Yet innovation abounds on the Internet, and we find new ways to connect and circulate. If Facebook, MySpace, YouTube and Twitter have taught us anything, it's that we may hunger for the constancy of community more than ever.

Options -- and tools

Can we reboot Rockwell's America in a digital age? Do we want to? Join us Sept. 11-13 to consider the options -- and tools.

"Rebooting Rockwell's America," will pause for three days to consider the roots of American community, freedom, democracy -- and the journalism which protects each. We'll consider how a generation of virtual pamphleteers -- in cafes, schools, clubs and meeting rooms -- may be helping point us to common ground in physical places. And now there is the promise that these places will be digitally united across a world that grows smaller, faster, more diverse and more precious by the year.

WHERE WE'LL GATHER -- OUR SPONSORS -- THE SCHEDULE

Rockwell Museum
Rockwell Museum

"Rebooting Rockwell's America," is a initiative of the Norman Rockwell Museum, and most of the sessions and breakouts will be hosted at the 00,000-square-foot museum in Stockbridge, Mass., the heart of the Berkshires, one of America's premiere cultural destinations. Four co-convenors are at the forefront of studying America's new news and community ecologies. They are the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism, the Media Giraffe Project at the University of Massachusetts and the Journalism that Matters collaborative and the Center for Sustainable Journalism at Kennesaw State University.

We'll convene Friday, Sept. 11, at 3 p.m., run through dinner and an evening program. Saturday will be filled with discussions, breakouts and work sessions. After an evening of entertainment on Saturday night, we'll collect convene on Sunday morning to collect thoughts and confirm actions, adjourning by noon.

THE PROGRAM: TALKS, BREAKOUTS, IDEA SESSIONS

PROGRAM POSTED AFTER JULY 1


Historians, authors, scholars, journalists, technologists, volunteer and citizen jouranalists and new local media entrepreneurs will seed our talks and conversations. We'll work toward some fresh insights on the capacity of the social-media technologies to create and nurture real communities . . . to sustain the values and purposes of journalism in service of democracy. Our goal is to tap the wisdom of each participant, to trade examples of journalism that matters and journalism that works. Among topics we'll consider:

Considering the options

  • "Rethinking The Journalists Creed" -- In 1914, Walter Williams, the founder of the Missouri School of Journalism -- the nation's oldest -- wrote "The Creed" . . . a lofty, Rockwell-like expression of high principles for a craft which he passionately believed must be a profession. Almost a century later, anyone with a Internet connection has an audience, and may assert the role of journalist. What elements of trust are still required and how do we find them?
  • "What's the news that's needed?" -- Last year, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation empaneled a commission to study the information needs of communities in a democracy. What did the panel discover, and how are those needs going to be met? What is the role of citizens and of what remains of news organizations?
  • "How can you trust the news?" -- We have relied upon journalists, and the news organizations which publish and air their stories, to vet our news, and to give it an imprimateur of truth, independence and integrity. If the advertising and subscription revenues are decoupled from the support of journalism, who will vet the news?

Considering the tools

Starting with a reception, dinner and evening program on Friday, Sept. 11,