Weekend Times


Google Workspace

Business News

News Corp's deal with Google and the Melbourne Business School questioned by journalism academics

  • Written by Andrew Dodd, Director of the Centre for Advancing Journalism, The University of Melbourne
News Corp's deal with Google and the Melbourne Business School questioned by journalism academics

News Corp Australia and Google have announced the creation of the Digital News Academy[1] in partnership with the Melbourne Business School at the University of Melbourne. It will provide digital skills training for News Corp journalists and other media outlets.

Is this a good thing or a bad thing?

The academy won’t provide full degrees, just certificates and a chance to upgrade digital skills in a fast-changing media environment.

Many companies in various industries have partnered with universities to deliver what used to be in-house training programs. Strengthening the links between industry and the academy has been welcomed in many sectors and certainly encouraged by governments for many years.

Why then are we as journalism academics concerned?

There are several reasons. The first and most obvious is the incursion of a high-profile and controversial media company into the higher education sector and the extent to which that is funded by a large disruptive digital search company.

Antagonism towards academia

It is telling that the Digital News Academy will be housed in the University of Melbourne’s private arm, the Melbourne Business School, rather than its Centre for Advancing Journalism within the Arts faculty.

Australia’s largest commercial media company has long criticised university journalism education, and journalism academics, including each of the authors of this article and many of our colleagues. The company even once sent an incognito reporter into a University of Sydney lecture[2] to uncover criticism of News Corp in the classroom[3]. That reporter, Sharri Markson, is now investigations editor at The Australian and a member of “the panel of experts” that will oversee the Digital News Academy.

DNA.

So it comes as no surprise that News Corp has avoided journalism programs.

News Corp Australasia’s executive chairman, Michael Miller, has said part of the academy’s role will be building a stronger Australia by keeping society informed through “strong and fearless news reporting and advocacy”.

Yet partnering with a journalism program would have facilitated that. It might also have helped assuage News Corp critics, some of whom have been active online during the week with reminders about News Corp’s unethical conduct during the hacking scandal and its disregard for scientific evidence in its reporting on climate change.

University journalism courses teach ethics and critical thinking alongside practical skills such as new digital ways of fact checking, gathering information and telling stories. Google Australia already offers free tutorials to journalism programs about smart ways to use its search engine to find and check investigative stories.

University journalism programs also distinguish between training and education; the former is predominantly about skills, the latter places those skills in context and teaches students how to think critically about the industry and environment in which they work.

Read more: More than protection, Australian journalism needs better standards[4]

By placing this course in a business school and not a liberal arts or humanities faculty, the venture gets the kudos of the University of Melbourne’s backing without the challenging academic culture News Corp dislikes.

News Corp and Google are corporate clients, paying the university for these courses, so the capacity for independent criticism of Australia’s most dominant newspaper company is eroded even further.

The Digital News Academy will be within the Melbourne Business School, rather than the University of Melbourne's Centre for Advancing Journalism.
The Digital News Academy will be housed within the Melbourne Business School, rather than the University of Melbourne’s Centre for Advancing Journalism. Shutterstock

What will the Digital News Academy do?

All we know so far about the academic credibility of the Digital News Academy comes from its promotional announcement, in press releases reported[5] in the Media section of The Australian (published by News Corp).

The publicity says the nine-month course will take 750 enrolments from journalists at News Corp Australia, Australian Community Media (the stable of 160 regional publications formerly owned by Fairfax) and smaller media partners.

A “governance committee” will select candidates (who nominate themselves or are put forward by their employers). These students will be expected to use the Google suite of tools as they collaborate online at the Melbourne Business School, to generate, build and sell stories to the course’s “Virtual Academy Newsroom”.

Each year there will be what is being billed as a major journalism conference and a US study tour for a select group of trainees.

There are no public details yet of the academic credentials of the certificate program but the academy has drawn on a “panel of experts”, almost all of whom come from inside News Corp and Google.

Google gains influence

It’s easy to see why Google was motivated to fund a News Corp training academy above and beyond what it is required to do as part of its bid to stop further intervention in its workings by the Australian government under the terms of the News Media Bargaining Code.

But there are some deeper questions about why a company that has such a stranglehold on the new digital economy is involved. By funding the academy Google may be undercutting full university degrees specialising in journalism.

Read more: The news media bargaining code could backfire if small media outlets aren't protected: an economist explains[6]

Relying on Google to make up the shortfall in news organisations’ training budgets is a problem. It allows Google to shape curriculum while appearing to be a champion of the same journalism industry it has been accused of undermining.

As journalism academics we respect the need for specialised training and skills development. But journalism programs should never be captured or constrained from being critical of the industry for which they prepare students. They should continue to embed ethics in their courses. The aim, after all, is to improve journalism, for everybody’s benefit.

As it is often said, news is not just another business[7]. While studying journalism often involves the study of business, business imperatives should not drive the study of journalism itself.

Authors: Andrew Dodd, Director of the Centre for Advancing Journalism, The University of Melbourne

Read more https://theconversation.com/news-corps-deal-with-google-and-the-melbourne-business-school-questioned-by-journalism-academics-176462

The Weekend Times Magazine

This City of Museums is Deserve to be Put on Your Wishlist, Especially if You Are a First-Timer to Australia

Sydney is a multicultural city that has a lot of art in it. You can find street art on the city's outskirts and world-class art galleries. Sydney museum are countless...

How to Simplify Your Retirement Planning with SMSF Setup Online

Managing your retirement savings can feel overwhelming, but for many Australians, creating a self-managed super fund (SMSF) offers greater flexibility and control. What’s even more appealing today is the ability...

Coasting through Australia: 5 things you need to know

No matter where you choose to explore, you can never go wrong with Australia. The best time to spend time on the water in Australia is during the autumn and...

A Fantastic Trip To Melbourne, Australia With Minimal Spending? Here’s How?

Famed for the iconic Melbourne cup horse race, Melbourne, Australia ranks as one of the best travel destinations worldwide. It offers tourists an escape from the hustle and bustle of...

Parrtjima opens in Australia’s Red Centre

Free event in Alice Springs will lift spirits every night until 20 September Parrtjima – A Festival in Light launched last night with an incredible display of lighting installations and interactive...

The Biggest Mistakes People Make When Hiring Lawyers in Sydney

Choosing the right legal help can feel daunting, especially when time is short and the stakes feel high. Many people start by searching for lawyers in Sydney, then rely on...

How to Pay Off Your Mortgage Faster

Paying off the mortgage on your property early can save you significant amounts of money on interest Freeing yourself of the burden of having to keep up with monthly mortgage...

Camplify Research Reveals 2020 is the Year of the Local Road Trip

Camplify has today released a research report highlighting that 2020 is no doubt the year of the local road trip. With COVID-19 restricting international travel, Australians have hit the roads...

Diamonds & Why They Are The Popular Choice For Any Occasion Here In Australia

Diamonds have been an incredibly popular gem for many years now and they continue to be so even now in 2024. It seems like the perfect jewel to choose for...