Professor Bill Allen from the University of Missouri is exploring the potential merits of using the unmanned aerial vehicles for various journalistic purposes.
"Our vision is to help lead the journalism profession responsibly and innovatively into a new frontier of public service news coverage using this new technology," Allen said.
"We think drones, if used right, have potential to help journalists perform their news-gathering and watchdog duties in our democracy," he said.
Students, in the class, operate drones or "J-bots" as they describe them, that weigh only a few pounds each, as tools to help with reporting.
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The "J-bots" which are about the size of a basketball and each has foot-long legs, small motors with propellers and is equipped with a high-quality lightweight GoPro camera.
Students have so far used the camera-equipped drones to report an array of stories about prairie conservation, a hot environmental topic in the Midwest, the report said.
"I think the kinds of stories that could really be augmented with this technology really focus on environmental stories," he said.
Critics already have raised issues of privacy and whether journalists might use similar craft to score in-demand celebrity photos by flying the machines over houses of the rich and famous.