August 4, 2009
USC ANNENBERG SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
Journalism 306 CORE Section 21091
Broadcast News Production
Fall 2013 – Tuesdays 4:00pm – 6:40pm – ASC 329 R: 11/10/2013
Jeff Wald
(213) 440-5555 Cell
jeffrey.wald@usc.edu
Office hours: Upon request, depending on my schedule.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
This course will put together all that you have learned about writing and reporting and turning that knowledge into solid story telling through solid production techniques. You will have plenty of room to express your individual style as long as you follow the basic rules you will learn during this semester. The following will be the techniques to follow:
• Clear conversational writing
• Well composed, compelling video
• Best pictures
• Best sound bites
• Best natural sound
• Good pacing
COURSE DESCRIPTION
The objective by the end of the semester is that Broadcast News Production students will be able to research, pitch, write, report, shoot and edit professional television/web packages with graphics and special effects if appropriate. This class will emphasize reporting the context crucial to more complex stories. By this time, students should have mastered professional interviewing skills to elicit interesting sound bites and shoot interviews in a visually compelling manner. We will also critique your performance in front of the camera utilizing “standups” and voiceover techniques. Students should also have mastered the skills necessary to shoot creative sequences rather than “wallpaper” video. Editing skills on the Avid software should match basic professional standards in a creative and technical manner.
All students, whether interested in reporting, anchoring or producing should have a clear understanding and appreciation of the major role that production plays in reporting video news. Class and homework exercises should emulate or exceed real-world situations to prepare students for the final upper division classes of reporting and/or producing.
RECOMMENDED OPTIONAL TEXTBOOKS
ISBN: 13: 978-0-07-352609-6
Title: Broadcast News Handbook, 4th Edition
Authors: C.A. Tuggle, Forest Carr, Suzanne Huffman
Publisher: MCGraw Hill
ISBN: 13: 978-0030791765
Title: Broadcast News, Third Edition
Author: Mitchell Stephens
Publisher: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich
ISBN: 0205262589
Title: Creative Interviewing
Author: Ken Metzler
Publisher: Allyn and Bacon
ISBN: 0967843200
Title: Power Producer
Author: Dow Smith
Publisher: Radio-Television News Directors Association
COURSE OUTCOMES
1. Following current events and being able to find a local angle to a national or international story.
2. Pitching, researching, writing, reporting, shooting, editing stories under tight deadline pressure.
3. Advanced photojournalism: Students should have a high appreciation for the power of pictures in video news. They should have the ability to distinguish the most memorable and compelling video to help tell the story. Students should also be able to personalize a story with a least one central character.
4. Researching stories: Students should be able to go beyond the basic information provided by their instructors, editors or interviewees. They should be able to write a story “pitch” proposal based on the information they discover. A thin or incomplete Story Idea Form will affect your project grade.
5. Reporter standups: Students should be able to produce meaningful standups that advance or bridge their stories from one element to the next both journalistically and visually.
6. Producing News Broadcasts: We recognize that most producing opportunities, aside from on-air reporting, are in producing entire news broadcasts. Annenberg broadcast majors should be able to understand the challenges of putting together a television news/webcast for a mass audience in Los Angeles. This means that students should be able to start thinking in terms of news judgment, setting realistic time allotments, orderly presentation of ideas, pacing, style and several other areas of production necessary for a journalistically sound and creatively compelling newscast.
7. Producing specialty segments, such as sports and weather: How these segments are changing as people get information from other sources such as the Internet, ESPN, The Weather Channel, Blackberrys, iPhones, text messages, etc.
8. Live reports: Students should be able to report and/or introduce a story live at the scene and interact with an anchor. This skill is critical for a television news journalist.
9. Graphics: Students should be knowledgeable in the types of graphics available and be able to incorporate them into complex stories to aid understanding.
10. Ratings and Research: Familiarity with ratings and sampling techniques. What ratings can tell a producer and what they cannot.
Students will complete two reporter packages for homework assignments by midterm. Maximum length: 1:30 to 1:45. No package (except for the final) should exceed 1:45 without the consent of the instructor in advance.
Students will complete two additional packages the second half of the semester, last of which will be a multi-faceted or complex issue, as a final exam. This final project could run up to 2 or minutes or longer, if approved in advance by the instructor.
DAILY NEWS AND VIEWINGS
You will be required to watch at least one local and/or national newscast daily. Vary the newscasts each day to gain an appreciation for differing styles and news judgments.
We also urge you to view “CBS Sunday Morning” and “60 Minutes”. CBS Sunday Morning features some of the best produced and most creatively shot news stories on television. 60 Minutes offers lengthy reports that are issue oriented or profiles of famous people.
Also, given this era of opinion journalism, I recommend the “O’Reilly Factor” on the Fox News Channel and “The Rachel Maddow Show” on MSNBC. Also, Comedy Central’s Daily Show with Jon Stewart. These programs round out the traditional news broadcasts by providing stories influenced by the anchors opinions. These programs utilize traditional newsroom personnel to write and produce the various segments.
ETHICS DISCUSSIONS & SPECIAL GUESTS
Special guests from local newsrooms will appear to discuss current ethical issues and share their views on the changing landscape of television news. They will also talk about their experiences as television and web journalists. Students will be encouraged to participate in these discussions. You will be graded on your participation in class and the written logical thoughtfulness of your reports on these sessions.
STORY ASSIGNMENTS
There will be four major produced packages including the final, plus several other assignments listed in the syllabus. All video assignments should be uploaded to YouTube. All audio and video elements – voiceover, sound bites, natural sound and picture descriptions must be shown on the accompanying hard-copy script.
GRADING CRITERIA: ASSIGNMENTS AND VIDEO PACKAGES
A. Basic criteria - You will be graded on clarity, organization, accuracy, fairness/balance, completeness/omissions, grammar, spelling, and ability to meet deadlines. We will distribute a separate checklist showing the exact criteria we will be grading. Written story pitches (proposals) are mandatory and will be factored into the grade average for each project.
Each story will have a letter grade (A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-or F). On some assignments, we may use a point system, but the points will be translated to a letter grade.
1. “A” stories are accurate, clear, comprehensive stories that
are well written and require only minor copy editing (i.e.,
they would air). They are also shot and edited creatively,
are well paced, and include good sound bites and natural
sound that adds flavor, color, or emotion to the story.
2. “B” stories require more than minor editing, and have a few style or spelling errors or one significant error of omission. There may be minor flaws in the composition of some shots or in the editing. Good use of available sound bites.
3. “C” stories need considerable editing or rewriting and/or
have many spelling, style or omission errors. Camera work
and editing techniques are mediocre or unimaginative, but
passable. Sound bites add little or no color – only
information that could be better told in the reporter’s
narration.
4. “D” stories require excessive rewriting and have
Numerous errors, and should not have been submitted. Camera work is unsatisfactory, or fails to show important elements.
5. “F” stories have failed to meet the major criteria of the
assignment, have numerous errors, or both. A story that
has a factual error that is material to the story merits an F.
The following are some other circumstances that would
warrant a grade of F:
• Plagiarizing a script, portions of a script, or information from any source – wire copy, feed packages, another reporter’s package or story script. (See below.)
• Staging video: When the reporter tells or asks someone to do something specific, unless that is revealed or made obvious in the context of the story. (Gray areas will be discussed in class.)
• Using video shot by someone else and presenting it as his or her own work.
• Telling interview subjects what you want them to say.
• Distorting video: shooting video in one location and presenting it as being another location.
• Using the camcorder to intentionally intimidate, provoke or incite a person or a group of people to elicit more “dramatic” video.
• Having someone else shoot your stand-up (portion of story when the reporter is on-camera) or interviews – (but only in those cases when the assignment specifically calls for you to shoot your own stand-up and/or interviews).
• Promising, paying or giving someone something in exchange for doing an interview, either on or off camera.
B. PLAGIARISM/ACADEMIC INTEGRITY POLICY
Plagiarism is defined as taking ideas or content from another and presenting them as one's own. The following is the School of Journalism's policy on academic integrity as published in the University catalogue:
"Since its founding, the USC School of Journalism has maintained a commitment to the highest standards of ethical conduct and academic excellence. Any student found plagiarizing, fabricating, cheating on examinations, and/or purchasing papers or other assignments faces sanctions ranging from an “F” on the assignment to dismissal from the School of Journalism.” All academic integrity violations will be reported to the office of Student Judicial Affairs & Community Standards (SJACS), as per university policy, as well as journalism school administrators and the school’s academic integrity committee.
In addition, it is assumed that the work you submit for this course is work you have produced entirely by yourself, and has not been previously produced by you for submission in another course or Learning Lab, without approval of the instructor.
GRADING POLICIES
Undergraduate Degrees: The School of Journalism expects its students to maintain at least a 2.7 (B-) grade point average in all journalism classes. Those who fall below this will receive additional counseling from faculty and advisement staff. Students are required to complete each journalism class with at least a grade of C-. Journalism courses with a grade of D+ or below must be repeated.
Please note that the university's cumulative grade point average will include both grades in its calculations and students must maintain a minimum 2.0 grade point average to graduate from USC.
C. Late Assignments - Core policy is that no late assignments will be accepted, except for verified medical reasons or documented extraordinary circumstances. Meeting deadlines is a journalistic necessity in the real world.
D. Rewriting Stories - You will be allowed to rewrite, reshoot, or re-edit assignments to achieve a higher grade. Such rewrites must be done within a deadline to be determined by the instructor, and the two grades will be averaged. This policy does not apply to Package #4 (final exam).
ACADEMIC ACCOMMODATIONS
Any students requesting academic accommodations based on a disability are required to register with Disability Services and Programs (DSP) each semester. A letter of verification for approved accommodations can be obtained from DSP when adequate documentation is filed. Please be sure the letter is delivered to the professor as early in the semester as possible. DSP is open Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m. The office is located in the Student Union room 301 and their phone number is (213) 740-0776.
INTERNSHIPS
The value of professional internships as part of the overall educational experience of our students has long been recognized by the School of Journalism. Accordingly, while internships are not required for successful completion of this course, any student enrolled in this course who undertakes and completes an approved, non-paid internship during this semester shall earn academic extra credit herein of an amount equal to one percent of the total available semester points for this course.
To receive instructor approval, a student must request an internship letter from the Annenberg Career Development Office and bring it to the instructor to sign by the end of the third week of classes. The student must submit the signed letter to the media organization, along with the evaluation form provided by the Career Development Office. The form should be filled out by the intern supervisor and returned to the instructor at the end of the semester. No credit will be given if an evaluation form is not turned in to the instructor by the last day of class. Note: The internship must be unpaid and can only be applied to one journalism class.
CLASS ATTENDANCE
Students are advised to attend the first class meetings of their journalism classes or the instructors may drop them from their classes. The School of Journalism adheres to the university policy, which states “an instructor may replace any student who without prior consent does not attend...the first class session of the semester for once-a-week classes. It is then the student’s responsibility to withdraw officially from the course through the Registration Department.”
You are expected to be in class every week, or obtain the instructor's approval in advance if you will miss a class – except for verified medical reasons or emergencies. You will be allowed to edit packages in the Annenberg Digital Lab only if you attend the advanced Avid editing workshop Week 2 and complete required work. Students who miss the first class meeting without prior consent may be dropped. Although the syllabi are similar, every core class is different, so you cannot make up a class session by going to another class in the same sequence, except for the Final Cut Pro Workshop.
COURSE GRADES
Ethics Discussions 10%
Package #1 (Multi-shoot preferred) 10%
Package #2 (Coastal Cleanup) 15%
Package #3 (Multi-shoot preferred) 20%
Newscast blocking and explanation 10%
Package #4 (Final Project – Multi-shoot required) 25%
ATVN Learning Lab: 10%
__________
Total: 100%
CLASS SCHEDULE
(Always subject to change)
Week 1 ▬ August 27
Class Topics:
4:00 to 5:00pm
Introductions, review syllabus, what’s expected – what you should be able to do by the end of the semester. What constitutes good production? Photojournalism: Discuss the importance of pictures and sound in news packages and the importance of “people” in television news stories. Going beyond the obvious and required elements for a memorable story.
• Mobile Generated News and The MoGN APP
5:00 to 5:45pm
View and discuss Video: KTLA The First 35-Years.
5:45 to 6:00pm
BREAK
6:00 to 6:20pm
Introduction to Digital Video Cameras that will be checked out to you.
6:20 to 6:40pm
Visit from Annenberg TV News. Requirements and paperwork.
Homework:
E-mail me a letter about yourself. Tell me anything you would like to help me understand who you are and your particular interests or goals in journalism. You may tell anything you’d like to mention. Write it in an easy, conversational style, and make it interesting. We will be making preliminary judgments about your writing and storytelling abilities from this letter. It will not be graded. Due no later than Tuesday, September 3, 2013, via email: Jeffrey.Wald@usc.edu. And take a short online course provided free from the Poynter. News University:
Also read an ethics statement prepared by the Society of Professional Journalists:
WEEK 2 — SEPTEMBER 3
Editing workshop: Mandatory! We will meet today in the Digital Lab. Room G40 (Garden Level), not in our regular classroom.
Please make sure that your letter has been emailed to me by the beginning of today’s lab session.
Homework Assignments:
Complete editing the package you started in the in-class Apple editing workshop. Deadline is next Tuesday. Students who have not completed editing on the workshop package will not be permitted to edit additional class projects on the Apple computers. Take care to balance audio levels between the reporter narration and ambient sound in the background. Use this for practice. You do not have to turn this in.
Your first package assignment is now scheduled for Saturday, September 21st, 2013. All students will cover the same story, COASTAL CLEANUP DAY.
Every year, on the third Saturday in September, people join together at sites all over California to take part in the State's largest volunteer event, California Coastal Cleanup Day. In 2012, over 65,000 volunteers removed almost 770,000 pounds of trash and recyclables from California's beaches, lakes, and waterways.
Although you may share transportation with other class members, I am looking for each student's own individual take on the story. I encourage you to go beyond just showing the beach activity, as colorful as it may be. Look for interesting individuals you might profile, or certain activities that would make a good story. I am NOT looking for you to just aim your camera at the events unfolding in front of you. A standup is required, use the tripod or hand hold the camera yourself.
The deadline for the completed package is October 1st at 3:40pm! Provide me with the link to your story uploaded to YouTube in an email to my USC address and a printed script to give to me in class. Please don't wait until the last minute to edit your story!
WEEK 3 — SEPTEMBER 10
Class Topics:
Discuss the first shooting assignment and editing basics, e.g., jump cuts, etc. Shooting for the eye and ear, types of camera shots, editing in the camera.
Special Guest:
Jon T. Fischer, Ex-News Director, XETV, Channel 6, San Diego. Former News Director in Minneapolis, Salt Lake City and Palm Desert. Assistant News Director, KTLA and KCOP, Los Angeles. Executive Producer, Assistant News Director, Assignment Editor, Field Producer, Chief News Cameraman, Transmission Technician, Video Editor, Associate Director, KTLA, Los Angeles.
Homework Assignment:
Continue research on Package #1. A reminder, I would like the completed story to be uploaded to YouTube along with a printed hard copy of the script and OTS graphics. The story will be critiqued in class on Tuesday, October 1, 2013.
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 13, 2013 – LAST DAY TO DROP
A CLASS WITHOUT A MARK OF “W”, AND LAST DAYTO CHANGE ENROLLMENT OPTION TO PASS/NO PASS
WEEK 4 — SEPTEMBER 17
Class Topics:
Discuss the importance of pictures and how they relate to words. Discuss and illustrate the use of a compelling opening shot, and how its choice can affect how story is told and perceived. Illustrate and discuss sequences and how they can make a story more interesting. We will also discuss the importance of sound – both natural sound and sound bites. What is the purpose of a sound bite? How long should a sound bite run? How do you decide? Personalizing your story: Try to find a “real person” to help advance your story.
Special Guest: Renee Sams, Award Winning Television and Online Anchor/Reporter, Writer, Producer, Brand Strategist.
Handout: The Seven Points of Storytelling. Reading: Advanced Camera Techniques: Chapter on photojournalism from “Write for the Ear, Shoot for the Eye, Aim for the Heart”. (On Blackboard)
Homework Assignment:
Don’t forget, Coastal Cleanup Package #1 needs to be shot this upcoming weekend on September 21, 2013 and be completed by Tuesday, October 1, 2013!
WEEK 5 — SEPTEMBER 24
Special Guest: Tony Fote, Videographer/Editor, KTLA, Los Angeles. Tony will talk about his background and experience.
Class Topics:
• News Editing Techniques
• Visualization
• Natural Sound
• Concept of a Mini-Movie with a beginning middle and an end.
• Purpose and value of stand-ups: Go beyond the simple stand-up and strive for motivated production values. Discuss live stand-up opens and interaction with anchors
• Team coverage and standup closes that “toss” to another reporter.
Homework Assignment:
Complete final writing, shooting and editing of Coastal Cleanup Package #1. Deadline for the YouTube Upload of story with script is next week’s class session, October 1st! All packages will be viewed and critiqued in class next week!
WEEK 6 — OCTOBER 1, 2013
Coastal Cleanup Package #1 is due! Bring to class a hard copy of the complete script and OTS graphic(s) and make sure that your story has been uploaded to YouTube so it will play in class.
Special Guest: Gerald J. Ruben, Multi Award Winning Former Executive Producer at KTLA, KTTV and KCBS-TV (KNXT) Los Angeles.
Class Topics:
View story packages of your first story wrap, Coastal Cleanup Package #1.
Gerry will talk about his long career in television
Homework Assignment:
Come up with an original story idea that will be your 2nd reporter package. Use the “Story idea form” available on Blackboard for this course and bring a hard copy to class for full class discussion. The story should be current, relevant and should be interesting to a general audience. This should be an original idea developed from local sources and should NOT be USC centric. It may be hard news, feature, sports, investigative, etc. As a class we will hear your story pitches next week and they must be approved by me before you begin shooting!
WEEK 7 — OCTOBER 8
4:00PM ─ 4:30PM: View and critique remaining Package #1’s
4:45PM ─ 5:05PM: Video ─ Mike Wallace Retrospective PART 1: Legendary CBS “60-Minutes” Reporter
5:15PM Special Guest: Frank Mottek is the voice of business news in Los Angeles. An award-winning broadcast journalist with more than 25 years of experience, Frank currently anchors the business reports on KNX 1070 NEWSRADIO.
Weekdays at 1pm, he hosts the KNX Business Hour, the number one source for business and consumer news in Southern California. Since joining CBS in Los Angeles in 1992, he served as a spot reporter for KCBS Channel 2 for six years. He was also a reporter and business news anchor on the KTLA Channel 5 News at 10 and the Emmy-Award winning KTLA Morning News for ten years.
Pitch your stories and I will approve them. Package #2 will be due in class on YouTube in three-weeks, on October 29, 2012.
Homework Assignment: Work on Package #2 and Pick up a copy of the Monday, October 14, 2013 Los Angeles Times to bring to the next class on Tuesday, October 15, 2013! Please read it and be familiar with it in time for next week’s session. No other date or edition will be accepted. Bring the print copy of the newspaper with you to class.
WEEK 8 — OCTOBER 15
Class Topics:
Talk about how Television Broadcast Journalism has changed. Multimedia Journalists (MMJs) were only in small markets. Now large markets such as New York and Los Angeles are hiring people that can do it all: Research-Report-Shoot the Video-Producer-Write-and Edit.
Video: Video Journalist packages from San Francisco’s KRON-TV to illustrate how to write, edit and produce your stories for J-306.
Class topics:
Producing a television news broadcast. Discuss what a producer does. What decisions does he or she make, and on what basis are those decisions made?
We will use Monday’s October 14, 2013 Los Angeles Times to block out (paper-produce) a sample newscast in class based on a vote of your story selections and time allotments.
Handout: News Breakdown (Available on Blackboard)
Video: Morning Broadcasts from KTLA & KTTV from Monday, October 14,
2013.
• Compare that morning’s LA Times with the 2 local news programs. How many stories came from the newspaper?
• Ratings and Demographics. How they affect news judgment and news production.
Homework Assignments:
Practice your stand-ups and narration techniques. Utilize higher production values and incorporate more graphics. Don’t forget your CG’
Package #2 due in class on YouTube in two-weeks: October 29, 2012.
WEEK 9 — OCTOBER 22
Special Guest: Kim Devore, Emmy-award winning television producer who has written and directed hundreds of hours of news and entertainment programs for Disney, MGM and Discovery. As a news anchor in major cities including Los Angeles and San Diego, she has covered events in Russia, China, Europe and Japan. Currently, Kim is a Writer for the Travel Channel’s “When Vacations Attack”. She is also a Supervising Story Editor at Sand Masters Painless Productions and at Film Garden Entertainment.
Kim is a Columnist/Staff Writer at The Malibu Times and Malibu Times Magazine. She also worked at KTLA, Los Angeles as a news writer and Producer. She attended USC here at Annenberg.
Class Topics:
• View the three National, Network Broadcasts: The CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley, The NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams and the ABC World News with Diane Sawyer.
• Compare & Discuss why or why not there is such a difference among the three Network newscasts, since they are all vying for the same basic audience.
Homework:
Continue work on Package #2, due in class next week!
WEEK 10 — OCTOBER 29
Package #2 DUE in class TODAY!
Special Guest: Jon T. Fischer, Ex-News Director, XETV, Channel 6, San Diego. Former News Director in Minneapolis, Salt Lake City and Palm Desert. Assistant News Director, KTLA and KCOP, Los Angeles. Executive Producer, Assistant News Director, Assignment Editor, Field Producer, Chief News Cameraman, Transmission Technician, Video Editor, Associate Director, KTLA, Los Angeles. Jon makes a return visit to critique Package #2!
Also, Jana Rowland, Marketing & Brand Manager of MGN Online and Mobile Generated News® will be on-hand to videotape the class participation for MoGN.
Class topics:
Classroom Critiques of Package #2. View, discuss, and evaluate in class.
Homework Assignment:
Come with your Story Idea Form for Package #3. We will give immediate feedback so that you can begin work on the final package #3 immediately. Package #3 due in 3-weeks: November 19, 2013!
WEEK 11 ▬ NOVEMBER 5
Class Topic:
How opinion has become part of the 24-Hour News Cycle of Cable News
• Video: Rachael Maddow Show, MSNBC: 10/30/2013
• Video: The O’Reilly Factor: FOX News: 10/30/2013
WEEK 12 — NOVEMBER 12
Class Topics:
Package #2 Scripts returned with grades
Article from LA Times gifted Sportswriter Bill Plaschke on USC Football “walk on,” Nathan Guertler.
“60 Minutes Video Night!”
• Segment with Bill O’Reilly interview
• 60 Minutes from Sunday 11/10/13
• Don Hewitt Retrospective
Homework:
Complete package #3 for presentation next week in class!
WEEK 13 — NOVEMBER 19
Package #3 due in class TODAY!
Special Guest: Brittney Hopper, Reporter, CBS 2/KCAL 9, Los Angeles. Broadcast Journalism graduate of San Francisco State University. Brittney will tell you about her journey and what makes a credible television news reporter and anchor.
• The psychology of being a good reporter, anchor, and manager in the news business of today.
• Her Career path and how it changed as the business changed.
• Review and Critique Package #3 in class today. Story ideas for Final Package #4 due for approval today!
WEEK 14 — NOVEMBER 26[pic]HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
NO CLASS THIS WEEK!
WEEK 15 — DECEMBER 3
Class Topics:
Video: The 11PM Local newscasts for Monday, December 2, 2013 of all three major network-owned Los Angeles TV stations; KABC-TV, Channel 7, KCBS-TV, Channel 2 and KNBC-TV, Channel 4.
Ratings and Demographics. How they affect news judgment and news production.
Homework Assignment:
Complete editing on your final Package #4 and review the requirements.
NO CLASS: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2013: STUDY DAYS
WEEK 16 ▬ DECEMBER 17: 4:30pm ▬ 6:30pm
Final Package #4 is due today! Bring to class the script of your final story with all cues and OTS graphics/full screens. Story must be uploaded to YouTube with link to me by 4:30pm TODAY!
• View and Critique Package #4 in class
• Discuss the future of Broadcast News
“Wrap” party in class, hosted by instructor!
Important dates for the fall 2013 semester:
Aug. 26 Fall semester classes begin
Aug. 26-30 Late registration and change of program
Sept. 2 Labor Day, university holiday
Sept. 13 Last day to register and add classes
Last day to drop a class without a mark of “W”
Last day to change enrollment option to Pass/No Pass or Audit
Nov. 1 Thesis/Dissertation submission
Nov. 27-30 Thanksgiving recess
Dec. 6 Fall semester classes end
Dec. 7-10 Study days
Dec. 11-18 Final examinations
Dec. 19-Jan. 12 Winter recess
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