
‘A
J-School Year’ provides insight into journalism school
life
In
these days of journalistic turmoil, what is it like to spend a
year in
a modern American journalism school preparing to
be the next generation to enter the nation’s newsrooms?
What can we expect from this new crop of journalists, and what
should students considering a career in the news business know
about what to expect in “j-school”?
More than two-dozen
students at the University of South Carolina School of Journalism
and Mass Communications are trying to
provide some answers through a new Web log project, “A
J-School Year,” at http://jschoolyear.blogspot.com.
Their observations
about class, about balancing school with work and life’s other necessities, and about the state
of journalism in general are often pointed. One woman writes
about her frustration at not being able to take journalism
courses as a freshman. Another suggests that to reach the new
generation of readers, it might be necessary for journalists
to write with their personal opinions clearly showing. You’ll
get an inside look at what really goes on in “senior
semester” – the capstone courses in which
students work in the school’s broadcast and print newsrooms to
produce a daily cable newscast and a weekly newspaper and Web
site.
And, of course,
there are the ever-present gripes about parking.
“These students
are providing insights valuable not only to those thinking
of a journalism career, but to industry professionals
who need to know what their next generation of employees
values,” says
instructor Doug Fisher, who co-founded the project
with associate professor Ernest Wiggins.
One of the “bloggers” checks in from Washington,
where she is covering the nation’s capital as part of
a media and politics internship. Others are struggling just
to hold down jobs and study for classes. Wiggins and Fisher
purposely have recruited a wide range of students, from freshmen
to seniors already out in the job market, and across the school’s
sequences: print, electronic, public relations, advertising
and visual communications.
“A
J-School Year” began when a recruiter called Fisher,
a former AP news editor and the school’s
primary editing instructor, wondering why more
minority students did not go
into editing careers. “What better way
than letting students tell us themselves through
this new and sometimes disputed
form of journalism, the Web log,” Fisher
says.
He and Wiggins, a former
reporter and editor for The (Columbia) State and Record
newspapers, expanded the concept to allow students to provide their
insight on a broad range of issues.
Students and professionals
alike are encouraged to visit the Web log, not only to read, but
also to leave comments on the postings. Visit http://jschoolyear.blogspot.com.
On the Web:
- Common
Sense Journalism - A monthly column by journalism instructor
Doug Fisher, published by press associations in 10 states.
The column appears in the associations' bulletins, which
are read by journalism educators and professionals, including
many top editors and newspaper executives.
- Cyberhemia - A collection of student essays written by
students in Professor Wiggins Jour 540
Magazine Article
Writing Class.
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