Teaching new dogs old tricks. How the move to 24/7 interactive, integrated multimedia, multi-platform news and feature delivery is not really changing the skills employers demand of graduates


Autoria(s): Hetherington, Susan
Data(s)

01/12/2008

Resumo

The journalism revolution is upon us. In a world where we are constantly being told that everyone can be a publisher and challenges are emerging from bloggers, Twitterers and podcasters, journalism educators are inevitably reassessing what skills we now need to teach to keep our graduates ahead of the game. QUT this year tackled that question head-on as a curriculum review and program restructure resulted in a greater emphasis on online journalism. The author spent a week in the online newsrooms of each of two of the major players – ABC online news and thecouriermail.com to watch, listen and interview some of the key players. This, in addition to interviews with industry leaders from Fairfax and news.com, lead to the conclusion that while there are some new skills involved in new media much of what the industry is demanding is in fact good old fashioned journalism. Themes of good spelling, grammar, accuracy and writing skills and a nose for news recurred when industry players were asked what it was that they would like to see in new graduates. While speed was cited as one of the big attributes needed in online journalism, the conclusion of many of the players was that the skills of a good down-table sub or a journalist working for wire service were not unlike those most used in online newsrooms.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42328/

Publicador

Journalism Education Association of Australia Inc

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42328/1/42328.pdf

http://jea2008.wordpress.com/program/concurrent-session-8-educating-digital-natives/

Hetherington, Susan (2008) Teaching new dogs old tricks. How the move to 24/7 interactive, integrated multimedia, multi-platform news and feature delivery is not really changing the skills employers demand of graduates. In Research, Investigation and Storytelling: Emerging narratives in journalism and journalism studies, Journalism Education Association of Australia Inc, University of Wollongong.

Direitos

Copyright 2008 (please consult the authors).

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; Journalism, Media & Communication

Palavras-Chave #190301 Journalism Studies #journalism #technology #multimedia #graduates
Tipo

Conference Paper