How Newhouse Can Become Relevant Again

This post is in part a response to Lauren Rabaino’s post on how to change the Cal Poly journalism program in part an answer to the #collegejourn call for posts on how to improve college journalism education.Published February 16, 2009

Related topics

Uncategorized, , , , , , , , , , View Comments

Last updated Tue, 17 Feb 2009 02:25:15 +0000

Written by

Photography introduced me to the 'new media' evolution. I currently do community management at Meraki in San Francisco, but this blog is about journalism, some UX design, and the occasional rant. more →

| joey@byjoeybaker.com

Sharing

 This post is in part a response to Lauren Rabaino’s post on how to change the Cal Poly journalism program in part an answer to the #collegejourn call for posts on how to improve college journalism education. Lauren’s analysis of the way to overhaul the her journalism program seems to go down the right path. I would take it just a set or two further though and stop the broadcast concentration. I’m looking at:
  • writing track: teaches reporting as any old print/newspaper prof would typically teach it, but with a strong emphasis on writing for the web. This naturally includes social networking, blogging, and audio production.
  • visual-content track These are are photogs, broadcast people, & designers. Teach a little bit of print design, but go 40-60% with web design. Photogs and video folk ought to know most of what each other does. Photogs may get some studio and photoshop time that the video folk won’t and the video people ought to focus a little more on how to produce BJ style stories.
  • tech track: We need to be teaching/recruiting coders as journalists. Now that we’re on the web, we need people who are capable of running that infrastructure. We ought to be training people in web site design, database management and display, data-mining, website development, etc
I mostly agree with Lauren’s idea of scrapping the print track, as I’ve said, teaching print design is a bit like teaching someone esperanto. It’s not like print design is going to go away, but it is far less important that teaching web design to those in the journalism field.

Video

I’ll go ahead and cautiously agree with Lauren, video should be taught in some form or another to all the majors. I say again: cautiously. Newhouse has a the ‘kid in the candy store’ syndrome when it comes to video. Soundslides are taught in beginning writing and photo classes, video/multimedia has become an integral part of nearly every lesson plan. The thinking is, ‘new media’ involves heavy use of multimedia and video, and therefore every student should be indoctrinated into the ways of ‘new media.’ This thinking is just … flawed. Beginning photo students just don’t need to know how to shoot video … it’s advanced skill that just doesn’t need to be taught to beginning students. Besides, the video that Newhouse emphasizes is short-form, heavily edited video segments that last 1:30. I’m not at all convinced that the ROI is there. Instead, Newhouse ought to focus on the basics of shooting video (composition, lighting, uploading, etc) for those not in the visual track and long form video (10 min) for the visual folk.

Social Media

Every program should heavily emphasis social media. How to leverage it for reporting, maintaining a personal and professional blog, twitter, podcasting, etc…  One nice thing about Newhouse is it is home to a lot of up-to-date, high-end equipment. This  makes the job of learning and reporting much easier, but it’s all for nought if we’re not learning applicable information. An active blog ought to be viewed in the same light as getting an internship – a requirement. 

Old media

Just like the mainstream media industry, journalism academia is run by Baby Boomers and a select few in Generation X. Generally, these folk just don’t ‘get’ social media in the same way that us Generation Y kids do. How can they be expect to teach the value of something that they don’t value? Every class I’ve been in that attempts to even deal with social media leaves me confident that I know more than the professor trying to teach the subject. One possible solution to the problem is to let us students, that actually ‘get,’ social media teach a class. This doesn’t mean just assigning various class sessions to different students and having them do a presentation on one particular social media site. That’s the sort of high school lesson plan that is designed to just lessen the lesson load on teachers. It should entail hiring willing students as a TA. Forcing students to come up with a lesson plan for a topic that they think they already know, and then teach it will not only force them to learn more, but will get a qualified person teaching the students. This is not to imply that all Baby Boomers and Generation Xs don’t understand social media. However, generally speaking, this critical component of any journo’s tool kit ought to be taught by someone who does.

Business

In many respects, we might very well be entering the golden age of journalism. We are reaching a larger audience than ever before, have more tools for telling stories, and more data at our disposal to report on. The big problem: how to make money off of it. What we need more than anything else is a business model for our industry that is sustainable. That’s why need students not only to be aware of the problem, but contributing to the brainstorming that will eventually lead to a solution. Coming at it from another tack: It’s increasingly likely that the new paradigm of employed journalists will see many independent freelancers. It’s critical that we train these upcoming journalists on how to manage their own business issues.

Journalism education is … not working

To end on a depressing thought: If you enter a four year college program, and the college is teaching the most up-to-date journalism technology, culture, and thinking, by the time you graduate, the information that you learned freshman year will be 4 years out of date. Seems to me that journalism schools, instead of following industry trends, should be setting the curve. Experimentation, which is the name of the game in the mainstream industry should be reintroduced into the academic setting.

Update Feb 16, 2009 23:15 EST

Minor typos corrected.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1071390009 Lauren Rabaino

    The point you make that should be emphasized over and over again is that journalism schools should set the trends, not follow them. We need to take fresh ideas to the real-world newsrooms instead of catching up once we get there.

    Also, great comment you make about video being “cautiously” integrated into every major.

    On an unrelated note (but kind of related) I'd like to add that video is the future of photography. Richard Koci Hernandez and the SJ Merc crew have used HD video frame grabs in lieu of cameras for years. Equipment like the Canon EOS 5D Mark II and Nikon D90, only further reinforce the relationship photogs will have with video. Point being that at least basic video editing is necessary for all journos (even photogs).

    But again, caution and balance are the key, as you said (sorry for the tangent :)). Great post!

  • http://byjoeybaker.com Joey Baker

    Video = future of photography? Oh hell yes. :)

    Things like strobes and and RAW editing keep still photographs solidly relevant for now, but it will be really sweet when the Red cameras become usable with out an attached HDD array.

    Oh, quickly note: video = future of photography ≠ future of writing.

    Thanks for the inspiration to write this post, and thanks for the comment!

  • http://rabaino.com/lauren/blog/?p=718 interact » Professors: We take the risks, you should too

    [...] media business course. Joey Baker said it best in his recent blog post: “What we need more than anything else is a business model for our industry that is [...]

  • http://twitter.com/joeybaker/statuses/1217221844 joeybaker (Joey Baker)

    New blog post: How Newhouse can become relevant again http://tinyurl.com/at89rp

  • http://twitter.com/jareddiamond/statuses/1217248084 jareddiamond (Jared Diamond)

    RT @joeybaker http://tinyurl.com/at89rp How Newhouse can be relevant again. Well done blog.

  • http://twitter.com/cicmintern/statuses/1217268003 cicmintern (Lauren Rabaino)

    Great post by @joeybaker about revamping traditional journalism education http://is.gd/jLoh

  • http://twitter.com/hidama/statuses/1217291340 hidama (Sarah Wood)

    Great post by @joeybaker about revamping traditional journalism education http://is.gd/jLoh (via @cicmintern )

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Lauren-Rabaino/1071390009 Lauren Rabaino

    The point you make that should be emphasized over and over again is that journalism schools should set the trends, not follow them. We need to take fresh ideas to the real-world newsrooms instead of catching up once we get there.

    Also, great comment you make about video being “cautiously” integrated into every major.

    On an unrelated note (but kind of related) I'd like to add that video is the future of photography. Richard Koci Hernandez and the SJ Merc crew have used HD video frame grabs in lieu of cameras for years. Equipment like the Canon EOS 5D Mark II and Nikon D90, only further reinforce the relationship photogs will have with video. Point being that at least basic video editing is necessary for all journos (even photogs).

    But again, caution and balance are the key, as you said (sorry for the tangent :)). Great post!

  • http://byjoeybaker.com Joey Baker

    Video = future of photography? Oh hell yes. :)

    Things like strobes and and RAW editing keep still photographs solidly relevant for now, but it will be really sweet when the Red cameras become usable with out an attached HDD array.

    Oh, quickly note: video = future of photography ≠ future of writing.

    Thanks for the inspiration to write this post, and thanks for the comment!

  • http://collegejourn.com/?p=32 How j-schools can better prepare students for the real world | CollegeJourn

    [...] Baker (@joeybaker) responds to Lauren in his blog post and outlines exactly what his school, Syracuse University, can do to become relevant again. [...]

blog comments powered by Disqus