NEWSPAPER PRACTICE
- 223 candidates;
- 150 passed - 67 per cent
The examiners' report:
The examiners were encouraged by the overall performance of candidates in this NCE
newspaper practice paper. There were a good number of excellent individual answers on
many papers and a few outstanding candidates who achieved very good marks on all three
questions they attempted.
That said, the majority of passes seemed to involve a good law question followed by
adequate newspaper practice answers. It is understandable given the weight of marks that
candidates will devote a lot of effort to the law question, but to do themselves justice they
must demonstrate to examiners their abilities as reporters as well as their knowledge of the
law.
Part A - Law
Question 1
This is a classic situation confronted by reporters up and down the country every day – a
police press conference. In such a conference material may be released which is both
libellous and a contempt threat. Candidates were expected to identify these threats and the
defences they might have against them.
Yet again, and despite warnings in previous examiners’ reports, some candidates were
confused on the law here and claimed qualified privilege as a defence against contempt – it
is not. The only protection a publisher has in this situation is the assurance given by the then
Attorney General in 1980 that newspapers would not be prosecuted for this sort of article,
and the fact that since that time no one has been prosecuted for such coverage.
Candidates were also expected to recognise that the information in the conference itself was
defensible, but the tip-off from the detective was not.
There was an added issue of spent convictions.
The task faced therefore was to sift the information available to decide what was safely
publishable and what should be treated with caution. The candidates who scored highest
were those who were able to do this and show the examiners clearly what they would and
would not use, and why.
Question 2
The issue in this question relied upon candidates recognising that the press conference held
by the organisers of the demonstration was covered by qualified privilege.
However, material from the demonstration itself, including messages on the placards, was
not covered by any such defence.
Candidates who fared well on this question demonstrated a clear knowledge of the defence
of qualified privilege and the conditions placed on publishers wishing to claim it.
Some candidates reached the conclusion that little if anything could be published at all. It
would be a very unusual situation whereby the examiners for newspaper practice would set a
question where a correct answer would be to publish nothing at all. Usually candidates are
expected to make decisions as to what can be published and what cannot and to explain the
reasons for that decision.
Part B – Newspaper Practice
Broadly, candidates did well in these questions when they showed examiners that, if
confronted with such a scenario in the newsroom, they would have the resources to produce
good useable copy for their publication.
This section simply requires candidates to write a list of who they would contact, why they
would contact them and, importantly, what they would ask them.
This final point is worth remembering for those re-sitting the NCE or taking it for the first time.
The questions that would be asked of contacts are crucial to explaining to the examiners
what sort of coverage the candidate would produce.
Furthermore, in some scenarios candidates forgot to point out that they would seek to
contact the subject of the story for confirmation that it was true.
For some candidates time management becomes an issue in this section of the paper,
having devoted too much time to the law question, and some answers were very brief.
Examiners credited these answers where they could, but it is difficult to award a full range of
marks to answers where the candidate simply has not had time to flesh out their list of
contacts and their ideas for tackling the scenario.
In general, the candidates who did best were, it is believed by the examiners, those who in
their daily work in their newsrooms perform such tasks – being given a lead by their
newsdesk and being asked to produce a useable story by use of contacts and other
resources.
Conclusion
As stated previously, this newspaper practice exam produced some excellent work and the
examiners congratulate those who passed. For those re-sitting or sitting the NCE for the first
time, it is hoped the above remarks will be of some guidance.
Click for more on the:
News Report;
News Interview;
Logbook.
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Do you have a story about the regional press? Ring 0116 227 3122/3121, or e-mail patrick.astill@and.co.uk