Thursday, April 30, 2009

Who Will Lead Commuter This Fall?


The end of the LBCC school year is rapidly approaching, as is the reign of the Commuter's editor-in-chief and his staff.

Now's the time for prospective editors to submit their applications to lead the campus newspaper and its online site beginning this summer. LBCC's Student Publications Committee will interview applicants for the editor-in-chief job on the afternoon of Wednesday, May 13.

Other positions are appointed by the new editor-in-chief.

Greg Dewar and the rest of the staff have done a great job diversifying the content of the campus newspaper and building the online Commuter from the ground up.

Applications are available at the Commuter or on the door of Rob Priewe's office, Forum 112. See Priewe (that's me) if you have questions about the jobs and all they entail. You also can call 541-917-4563 for more information.

Ideally, all applications should be submitted by May 8.

-rp-

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Just Blog It! Tips for Blog Writers

Writers Block (6)

This term most of the students in my News Reporting and Photojournalism classes at LBCC are creating their first blog. While some students dive right in, it's hard for others to get a feel for blogging or keep their momentum.

Fortunately, there are a lot of experienced bloggers out there with encouraging words for my young journalists. Here are some of their suggestions for launching and maintaining a good blog.

Craig Stoltz (Web2.Oh...Really?) offers "Five Lessons From a Year of Blogging," including this gem:
A personal blog is as valuable to the writer as the reader. A near-daily obligation to write forces you to learn something new or create an insight about something you already know. Writing a blog lets you educate yourself in public.
I can always count on Mindy McAdams' "Teaching Online Journalism" site for new ways to improve what we do and better connect with readers. When it comes to blogging, her site is a valuable archive of tips and ideas.

These days, she's doing a series titled "Reporter's Guide to Multimedia Proficiency." She began with urging journalists to read blogs and use RSS, then followed up with the reasons why we blog:
Today’s topic might seem mundane to many of you, but I always say that writing a blog with commitment, on some kind of regular schedule, makes you smarter.

The advantage for a journalist who needs to catch up, who needs to learn new skills for a digital and online world, is that having a commitment to a blog drives the blogger to search out new information. It’s kind of like taking a college course for credit instead of auditing the course. If you’re just auditing, when the rest of your life gets busy, you’ll just quit going to the classes. Some people abandon their blogs, of course. But those who make a commitment and stick to it soon find that the blog connects them to new developments and kindred spirits in ways they had not anticipated.

Third, I'm always looking for interesting blogs by young people that my students can use as role models. Shannon Paul works as a social media specialist for a company called PEAK6 Online in Chicago. Once or twice a week she writes about various aspects of her job and subjects such as personal branding and new public relations techniques. The bottom line is that she has fun with her blog, which should be one the top reasons we blog.

-rp-

(Photo credit: "Writers Block (6)" by Jonno Witts, courtesy of Flickr.com)

Monday, April 20, 2009

Pulitzer Puts Spotlight on PolitiFact


Every April we're strongly reminded why journalism matters as Columbia University announces the deserving winners of the Pulitzer Prize.

This year's awards are noteworthy with the inclusion of PolitiFact.com, an online fact-checking news bureau of the St. Petersburg Times. As the story on the winning site notes:
The (Pulitzer) board cited PolitiFact's use of "probing reporters and the power of the World Wide Web to examine more than 750 political claims, separating rhetoric from truth to enlighten voters."

Neil Brown, executive editor of the St. Petersburg Times, which launched PolitiFact in August 2007, said the award was "proof that the Web is not a death sentence for newspapers. In fact, PolitiFact marries the power of old-fashioned shoe-leather journalism with an extraordinarily powerful way to present it."

During the campaign, PolitiFact had a staff of five Times reporters and editors, plus the support of researchers and writers from Congressional Quarterly, a sister company of the Times. PolitiFact re-launched in January to fact-check Congress and the White House, and added the Obameter, a feature that tracks President Barack Obama’s campaign promises.

I couldn't agree more with Neil Brown on the value of journalism. PolitiFact clearly shows there's a future for those who won't be satisfied until the truth is told and the public served.

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Sunday, April 19, 2009

J-Schools Adapt to New Media Reality

Online newswire

These days, journalists must be as knowledgeable about social networking and Web streaming as crafting an effective lede and nut graf.

A story in the New York Times sums up how many journalism colleges are adapting to change, not only teaching students electronic media skills but also entrepreneurship, which they can put to use creating their own jobs in the next era of journalism.

Surprising to many, the article notes, a number of college journalism programs are seeing an increase in enrollment even as media companies are consolidating and laying off reporters, editors and others.

The attraction? Many young people continue to view journalism as an enterprising career in which they can share their ideas and tell stories through various media to make a difference in their communities. This growth trend includes the number of students taking journalism classes at LBCC as well as Oregon State University.

Meanwhile, journalism faculty are challenged to keep up with students who often are ahead of their instructors in using social networking and other technology. As the article notes:
“New media” doesn’t mean transplanting old media to a new medium; it requires a new vocabulary, a new relationship with the audience — a massive social network that now talks back — and, sometimes, a new set of expectations about objectivity and timeliness.

At stake is a generation of reporters, and the continued role of journalists as the eyes, ears and questioners for the public.

The changes are forcing colleges and universities to rethink what a journalism education should look like.
The days are past when journalism programs can be content to turn out new reporters, editors and photographers, notes Times media reporter Brian Stelter. The new media demands "all-platform journalists" adept at not only gathering information and crafting compelling stories, but also shooting and editing audio and video pieces.

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(Photo credit: "Online newswire" by noodlepie, courtesy of Flickr.com)

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Jarvis to Newspapers: You Blew It!

Jeff Jarvis

New media advocate and journalism professor Jeff Jarvis has three words for the newspaper industry: You blew it.

In one of the better rants laying out the ineptitude of the industry to adapt in the new millennium, Jarvis comments on the state of newspapers in this BuzzMachine missive in connection with the Newspaper Association of America meeting in San Diego last week:
You’ve had 20 years since the start of the web, 15 years since the creation of the commercial browser and craigslist, a decade since the birth of blogs and Google to understand the changes in the media economy and the new behaviors of the next generation of - as you call them, Mr. Murdoch - net natives. You’ve had all that time to reinvent your products, services, and organizations for this new world, to take advantage of new opportunities and efficiencies, to retrain not only your staff but your readers and advertisers, to use the power of your megaphones while you still had it to build what would come next. But you didn’t.

You blew it.

Jarvis, author of the book "What Would Google Do?" and a professor at City University of New York, chronicles all the opportunities missed by the newspaper industry, which was too busy protecting its own turf, ignoring customers and resisting change while Google and others recognized the digital revolution and ate their lunch.

Jarvis has little sympathy for newspaper publishers who have only themselves to blame for their industry's demise. He concludes:
So now, for many of you, there isn’t time. It’s simply too late. The best thing some of you can do is get out of the way and make room for the next generation of net natives who understand this new economy and society and care about news and will reinvent it, building what comes after you from the ground up. There’s huge opportunity there, for them.
Take that!

-rp-

(Photo credit: "Jeff Jarvis" by eirikso, courtesy of Flickr.com)

Thursday, April 9, 2009

The Twouble with Twitter



Today in Media & Society we explored social networking. Students agreed that Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace can be great tools for staying in touch with friends, planning activities, publicizing events and making business and professional contacts.

Of course, they have their downsides as well, especially the incredible "time suck" that "just keeping in touch" can become. As part of our discussion, we enjoyed this parody of Twitter users on Current-SuperNews.

We got off to a happy start with "The Twitter Song" and the older ones among us, myself included, took heart that we are the fastest-growing demographic on Facebook. Yea for us!

-rp-

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

The Right Way to Do a Slide Show



In the continuing quest to do photojournalism well...

Check out this simple, yet effective tutorial on slide shows and storyboarding. You'll find the original on SlideShare, courtesy of Vadim Isakof, who has several well-done "how-to" slide shows at the site.

Mindy McAdams supplies some additional do's and don'ts in a post on her Teaching Online Journalism site.

-rp-

Photo Critique: Oregon Country Fair

Tara in my photojournalism class knows the person who shot this photo, and constructed this way-cool structure at the Oregon Country Fair last summer. The photo is by Michael Holden. What I like best about this is ... the spectacular color of the sky and the framing of this image. This is a fine example of what I would like my students to blog about in their weekly "photojournalism critique."

Photo credit: "The Pole Star at Sunset" by Michael Holden, courtesy of Filckr.com.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Seattle Times Publisher Speaks at OSU

Frank Blethen, publisher of the Seattle Times, will deliver the annual Tom McCall Lecture Thursday, April 2, in OSU's LaSells Stewart Center, Southwest 26th Street and Western Boulevard in Corvallis. The talk begins at 7:30 p.m.

The topic of his talk is "Reclaiming America's Independent Press and Saving Democracy." With the newspaper industry reeling, it should be interesting to get Blethen's perspective on newspapers and the media in the new millennium.

(Photo credit: Lillian Love, LBCC)


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