JOURNALISM CERTIFICATION PRACTICE QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS (VERIFIED ANSWERS) PLUS
RATIONALES 2026 Q&A | INSTANT DOWNLOAD PDF
Core Domains
Foundations of Journalism Theory and History
News Gathering and Reporting Techniques
Media Law and Regulatory Compliance
Ethics and Professional Standards
Interviewing and Source Management
Editing, Verification, and Fact-Checking
Digital and Multimedia Journalism
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Media
Crisis and Trauma Journalism
Data Journalism and Public Records
Introduction
This examination assesses comprehensive readiness for professional journalism certification. It measures
foundational knowledge, applied reporting skills, legal and ethical judgment, and real-world decision-making
under deadline pressure. The test comprises multiple-choice questions and scenario-based items that mirror
challenges journalists face in newsrooms. Emphasis is placed on verification, sourcing, libel prevention, privacy
considerations, and ethical reasoning. Each question includes a verified correct answer with a clear rationale.
,Successful candidates demonstrate both theoretical understanding and practical application across print,
broadcast, and digital platforms.
SECTION ONE: QUESTIONS 1–100
Question 1
A journalist receives a leaked document containing unverified allegations against a public official. What is the
most ethically sound first step?
A. Publish immediately to inform the public
B. Verify the document’s authenticity and source motivations
C. Anonymize the document and share it with competitors
D. Destroy the document to avoid legal liability
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: Verification is the core ethical duty in journalism. Publishing without verification risks
defamation and misinformation. Destroying evidence is irresponsible, and sharing without verification
compounds potential harm.
Question 2
Which U.S. Supreme Court case established the “actual malice” standard for defamation claims involving public
officials?
,A. Near v. Minnesota
B. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan
C. Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier
D. Branzburg v. Hayes
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) held that public officials must prove actual malice—
knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth—to win defamation suits.
Question 3
A reporter is covering a protest. A police officer orders the reporter to stop filming. What is the generally
accepted legal principle in the U.S.?
A. The reporter must obey immediately or face arrest
B. Filming police in public is a First Amendment right
C. Officers can prohibit filming if they claim national security
D. Only credentialed journalists have filming rights
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: Courts have consistently held that recording police officers performing public duties is
protected by the First Amendment, absent specific safety or obstruction concerns.
Question 4
Which ethical principle requires journalists to minimize harm when reporting on vulnerable populations?
, A. Accountability
B. Transparency
C. Least harmful means
D. Prior restraint
🟢C
🔴 RATIONALE: The Society of Professional Journalists’ Code includes “Minimize Harm,” requiring journalists to
balance public need for information against potential harm to subjects, especially vulnerable individuals.
Question 5
A news outlet publishes a correction. Where should the correction ideally appear?
A. Buried on an inside page
B. Only in the digital edition
C. Same prominence as the original error
D. Only upon reader request
🟢C
🔴 RATIONALE: Ethical standards require corrections to receive prominence comparable to the original mistake
to ensure transparency and accountability.
Question 6
What is the primary purpose of a shield law?
RATIONALES 2026 Q&A | INSTANT DOWNLOAD PDF
Core Domains
Foundations of Journalism Theory and History
News Gathering and Reporting Techniques
Media Law and Regulatory Compliance
Ethics and Professional Standards
Interviewing and Source Management
Editing, Verification, and Fact-Checking
Digital and Multimedia Journalism
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Media
Crisis and Trauma Journalism
Data Journalism and Public Records
Introduction
This examination assesses comprehensive readiness for professional journalism certification. It measures
foundational knowledge, applied reporting skills, legal and ethical judgment, and real-world decision-making
under deadline pressure. The test comprises multiple-choice questions and scenario-based items that mirror
challenges journalists face in newsrooms. Emphasis is placed on verification, sourcing, libel prevention, privacy
considerations, and ethical reasoning. Each question includes a verified correct answer with a clear rationale.
,Successful candidates demonstrate both theoretical understanding and practical application across print,
broadcast, and digital platforms.
SECTION ONE: QUESTIONS 1–100
Question 1
A journalist receives a leaked document containing unverified allegations against a public official. What is the
most ethically sound first step?
A. Publish immediately to inform the public
B. Verify the document’s authenticity and source motivations
C. Anonymize the document and share it with competitors
D. Destroy the document to avoid legal liability
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: Verification is the core ethical duty in journalism. Publishing without verification risks
defamation and misinformation. Destroying evidence is irresponsible, and sharing without verification
compounds potential harm.
Question 2
Which U.S. Supreme Court case established the “actual malice” standard for defamation claims involving public
officials?
,A. Near v. Minnesota
B. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan
C. Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier
D. Branzburg v. Hayes
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) held that public officials must prove actual malice—
knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth—to win defamation suits.
Question 3
A reporter is covering a protest. A police officer orders the reporter to stop filming. What is the generally
accepted legal principle in the U.S.?
A. The reporter must obey immediately or face arrest
B. Filming police in public is a First Amendment right
C. Officers can prohibit filming if they claim national security
D. Only credentialed journalists have filming rights
🟢B
🔴 RATIONALE: Courts have consistently held that recording police officers performing public duties is
protected by the First Amendment, absent specific safety or obstruction concerns.
Question 4
Which ethical principle requires journalists to minimize harm when reporting on vulnerable populations?
, A. Accountability
B. Transparency
C. Least harmful means
D. Prior restraint
🟢C
🔴 RATIONALE: The Society of Professional Journalists’ Code includes “Minimize Harm,” requiring journalists to
balance public need for information against potential harm to subjects, especially vulnerable individuals.
Question 5
A news outlet publishes a correction. Where should the correction ideally appear?
A. Buried on an inside page
B. Only in the digital edition
C. Same prominence as the original error
D. Only upon reader request
🟢C
🔴 RATIONALE: Ethical standards require corrections to receive prominence comparable to the original mistake
to ensure transparency and accountability.
Question 6
What is the primary purpose of a shield law?