Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Missouri excellent for journalism.
I would also consider Wisconsin, Florida, Maryland, Arizona State. Look for schools with strong reputation plus in larger markets/cities where more internships will be available. The more internship opportunities and networking your kid can do while in school, the more opportunities they will have after school.
I came late to journalism - after graduating with a BA in another area - and had to play catch up and compete for jobs with kids five years younger and way more experienced. Any internship no matter how short will help your resume and get you closer to the next opportunity so you want a school that has lots of opportunities to work on college media (paper, radio station etc) and then had connections to local media for internship. Professors are another good link.
Is this the case for financial journalists as well?
Don’t many not do journalism and instead work at an IB before switching over from being burnt out?
Are there statistics from undergrad programs that breakdown their alums by outlet and beat?
Like unc is known for the espn / sports pipeline
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to UNC for journalism and I highly recommend. Excellent overall school, good standard college experience and excellent j-school. Worked for several top news outlets. (I'm now a comms sellout, but that's beside the point...)
What were your beat(s)?
where would you suggest someone who wants to cover foreign affairs/national security go?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ASU, UF, UMD, BU, UGA, UWash, UMich, UNC, CU Boulder.
Agreed except for Boulder and UF
Anonymous wrote:ASU, UF, UMD, BU, UGA, UWash, UMich, UNC, CU Boulder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was a professional journalist for many years. I went to Michigan and wrote for the Michigan Daily. That was more valuable than a ugrad (or grad, for that matter) journalism degree. Couldn't your DC consider something like that? Many of my fellow Daily alum became acclaimed journalists and writers.
This sounds more plausible.
Don’t t20 school grads that write for the college newspaper get first crack at journalism jobs?
Anonymous wrote:Did the weather get to you? My DS is also interested, but the stories he’s heard of the bad winters are giving him pause…
Anonymous wrote:Was a professional journalist for many years. I went to Michigan and wrote for the Michigan Daily. That was more valuable than a ugrad (or grad, for that matter) journalism degree. Couldn't your DC consider something like that? Many of my fellow Daily alum became acclaimed journalists and writers.
Anonymous wrote:Was a professional journalist for many years. I went to Michigan and wrote for the Michigan Daily. That was more valuable than a ugrad (or grad, for that matter) journalism degree. Couldn't your DC consider something like that? Many of my fellow Daily alum became acclaimed journalists and writers.