Lecture Digital Journalism and Content Creation

  • Teaching

    Details

    Faculty Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences
    Domain Communication and Media Research
    Code UE-EKM.01538
    Languages English
    Type of lesson Lecture
    Level Master
    Semester SS-2027

    Schedules and rooms

    Summary schedule Wednesday 15:15 - 17:00, Hebdomadaire (Spring semester)

    Teaching

    Teachers
    • Rohrbach Tobias
    Assistants
    • Kukles Yulia
    Description

    This course examines how digital journalism and broader forms of online content creation shape today’s communication environments. Students explore the shifting boundaries between journalistic and non journalistic production logics, tracing how professional newsrooms, influencers, activists, creators, and platform-native media actors develop content, cultivate audiences, and sustain themselves economically. Through contemporary empirical research and real world examples, the course investigates emerging business and monetization models, evolving content formats, and the technological infrastructures that enable or constrain creative work. Throughout, students engage with theoretical perspectives that help them critically assess the power dynamics, ethical tensions, and societal implications of digital content ecosystems. By the end of the course, participants will be equipped to analyze and interpret the rapidly changing landscape of digital media production with nuance and critical insight.

    Training objectives
    • Identify and compare journalistic and non journalistic logics of digital content production across platforms and actor types.
    • Analyze how business models, monetization strategies, and platform incentives shape content creation practices.
    • Evaluate the technological opportunities and constraints that influence digital storytelling, distribution, and audience engagement.
    • Critically interpret contemporary empirical research on digital journalism, creator cultures, and platformized media environments.
    • Assess the ethical, political, and societal implications of digital content production, including issues of visibility, credibility, and power.
    • Apply theoretical frameworks to develop informed, critical perspectives on the role of digital media in social impact communication.
    Available seats 40
    Softskills Yes
    Off field No
    BeNeFri Yes
    Mobility Yes
    UniPop No
  • Dates and rooms
    Date Hour Type of lesson Place
    24.02.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    03.03.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    10.03.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    17.03.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    24.03.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    07.04.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    14.04.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    21.04.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    28.04.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    05.05.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    12.05.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    19.05.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    26.05.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
    02.06.2027 15:15 - 17:00 Cours
  • Assessments methods

    Oral exam

    Assessments methods By rating
    Descriptions of Exams

    15 minutes

    Only as a retake exam

    Continuous evaluation and oral exam

    Assessments methods By rating
    Descriptions of Exams

    Students will hand in graded work during the semester (50%) and be asked to critically discuss an example of digital content creation at a 15 min final oral exam (50%).

    Course with continuous evaluation: withdrawing or unenrolling from the course will no longer be possible after the registration period (see the session calendar on the Faculty website).

  • Assignment
    Valid for the following curricula:
    Ma - Digital Media & Communication for Social Impact - 90 ECTS
    Version: 2026-SA_V01
    Courses - 66 ECTS > Core Topic - 18 ECTS