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Posts Tagged ‘Journalism’

Journalism is Changing

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

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I went to Journalism school many years ago. But I didn’t pursue a career in journalism. I chose public relations instead. PR allows me to combine my interests in business and communications. And I’ve always enjoyed working with the media.

But journalism is changing. Daily papers are failing. Audiences are shrinking. As the industry struggles to accommodate changes in technology and readership, the norms for reporting seem to be changing too. Bias is creeping into reporting. And in too many instances, it’s jumped right in, taking a front row seat in the news department instead of being relegated to the opinion pages.

Inflammatory adjectives now appear in reporting on a regular basis. And information that would completely change the tone and nature of an article are too often omitted. A sin of omission is still a sin, isn’t it?

Drama and controversy sells newspapers and viewership. The media is a business and it’s struggling. I can’t say with any certainty that this shift in journalistic standards and practices is a direct effort to retain earnings, but it gives one pause.

I love working with the media. It’s why I chose to work in PR. But I long for the days when journalistic standards were as stringent as they were in my days at Howell Hall in Chapel Hill.

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The great J-School debate

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Forbes.com recently ran a story titled “Journalism Bust, J-School Boom” that expressed the not-so-shocking revelation that newspaper jobs are decreasing. The article also commented on the more surprising fact that journalism school applicants are increasing at tremendous rates. As a recent graduate of the UNC Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication, it is startling to think that I, along with thousands of other intelligent college students, flocked to a school to learn about a profession that would ultimately lead us to unemployment. While it may appear that Generation Y isn’t particularly intuitive when choosing a career path, I would like to believe that maybe we just know something that the rest of you don’t. We have watched as our parents canceled newspaper subscriptions and turned to the computer, we have participated in social media boom and we are well aware that technology is altering the way we do things each and every day. We realize that journalism as we know it is changing and we want to be a part of what is to come. Articles like this make it seem that wannabe journalists will be stuck flipping burgers post-graduation, but it doesn’t take into account that journalists these days aren’t necessarily sitting in a newsroom. The problem isn’t that there won’t be jobs or there will be too many unemployed J-school grads. The problem is that journalism schools aren’t keeping up.

Apparently, while the rest of America is changing their news consumption habits, prestigious J-schools are still preaching the how-to’s of writing the perfect print article. Instead of ignoring the huge overhaul of traditional journalism, J-schools need to step up their curriculums to keep their students aware of and prepared for the multitude of changes.

Because I’ve “been there, done that” so to speak, I’d like to offer my opinion of a few things I should have learned in J-school, but didn’t:

1.    How to use Twitter, Flickr, Facebook, LinkedIn, StumbleUpon, FriendFeed, etc… and the list goes on and on.
2.    How to make your headline click-worthy in an RSS feed.
3.    The journalistic value of a blog.
4.    What is a social media news release?
5.    How social media makes a better journalist.
6.    What is HARO and how do sources like this make me a better journalist?
7.    How to increase SEO for articles. (Or even what SEO stood for.)
8.    Emerging job opportunities for a journalism major. (Writing for a newspaper or working for a news station not included.)

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