Early August is when I usually begin planning for the basic news reporting course I've taught for more than 20 years to University of Minnesota journalism students.
What's different this summer is the backdrop: harsh, attacking noise from our U.S. president's resurgent campaign branding journalists the "enemy of the people." The vitriol has gotten particularly sharp recently, with angry crowds at Trump rallies shouting obscenities at reporters for merely showing up to do their jobs.
The spectacle bothers one former student, who recently posted a photo of a CNN reporter's ambushed stand-up at a rally showing a man wearing a "F*** the Media" T-shirt, his face twisted in hate. My student posted: "What if your profession were being targeted in this way by scary/angry/violent people?"
As I prepare for the fall semester, I wonder about my incoming students. How will this bedlam shape their views when they show up for my "boot-camp" news writing course, which gives them their first real experience with the hard work of journalism? Will it frighten them? Embolden them? Confuse them?
For me, it raises the question of what I should be teaching them. Covering a speech is difficult enough, requiring students to not just listen to the speaker but also to understand the context of the event, figure out what's important, seek balanced views, verify assertions, accurately report quotes.
Do I need to add "steel yourself to nasty crowd insults" to the list of skills? Maybe.
The truth is that none of the summer's unpleasant sideshow is changing the fundamentals of my syllabus. I will still put these newbies through the paces of what they need to know to be reporters: how to write ledes (journalism lingo for the beginning of an article), how to attribute, how to get to the point in a story, how to interview, how to write news clearly on deadline.
I will still demand they get stuff right, that they care about every inaccuracy and that they understand the critical importance of verifying when a claim is a fact — or not.