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How to run an investigation at your student newspaper

Posted by Ricki Dewsbury on 17 March 2008 at 15:39
Tags: Pluto, Student Journalism, uclan

A darkly dressed reporter hiding in alleyways was once my mental image of investigative journalism. They would discreetly take notes before slipping off alone into the night.

But things were different when I went undercover for Pluto, the University of Central Lancashire student newspaper, to expose a student who was selling plagiarised essays. The editor of Pluto, Ed Walker, was telling university directors and the students’ union president what was happening every day.

Without their support, we risked being expelled. (more…)

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BBC to embed video in news stories

Posted by Dave Lee on 14 March 2008 at 18:26
Tags: Online, Student Journalism

In the coming weeks, the BBC will be embedding its video in news articles [via Journalism.co.uk].

No biggy, you’d be forgiven for thinking, but it will increase the viewing of online video by buckets.

And what the BBC does, everyone else will soon follow. Some have already started. Although I’d argue having a separate section for video — TelegraphTV — serves to keep the divisions between print and multimedia intact. Online news video is a different kettle of fish to the normal television news packages. For starters, a TV news package will have a nice voice over, pieces to camera and context-building footage. Online video doesn’t need this. Video clips serve to extend the understanding of the written article.

An example: this extraordinary piece from the New York Times.

Read the piece and then watch the video. Could any degree of quality writing really convey how incredible that stunt was? The man’s a death-defying maniac — but an even bigger maniac when you watch the video.

From a technical standpoint, embedded video on the BBC will bring multimedia to people who were previously terrified of messages that demanded they download Realplayer. Now, instead, they just have to click play. Lovely stuff.

In a nutshell: Online video is something we all need to get used to. Online journalists will not need to morph into television reporters, but we will need to learn how to piece news stories together using text, images and video in equal measure.

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From mobile to front page: Journo student makes a splash

Posted by Dave Lee on 12 March 2008 at 13:57
Tags: Courses, Lincoln University, Newspapers, Student Journalism

The key to making a name for yourself in local newspapers? Find some naked men!

It’s a tactic that has worked wonders for journalism student Robyn Brooke, whose quick-thinking has landed her a front page splash on the Lincolnshire Echo.

“I was in my room when I heard lots of people running and shouting outside, I looked out the window and saw a naked guy running with horse manure in his hands,” she said.

“I grabbed my phone, shouted for my friends and dashed outside – I was still in my slippers.”

The men in question formed part of the University of Lincoln Rugby Union team.

“I knew they had been dared to do it because their friends were watching with us and laughing at them. After about 10 -15 minutes a big police car came and they were taken away,” recalls Robyn.

After all the excitement had calmed down, Robyn started to plan what she could do with her snaps.

“I didn’t think the Echo would be interested at first, I was just taking pictures for the fun of it and to laugh about it with my friends. It was a pretty funny anecdote. But back in my house I suddenly thought: ‘Why not just see if the Echo would want them?’”

“I was so nervous, having to say to the Echo that I had naked photos!”

The pictures appeared on newsstands all over the county the very next day.


One of the pictures Robyn Brooke took with her mobile

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Monday Links: Sub zero?

Posted by Dave Lee on 10 March 2008 at 14:07
Tags: Student Journalism

A couple of good’uns for you this week!

[MEDIA GUARDIAN] The fine line between victory and defeat

Ah, Yvonne Ridley. Well-loved by Lincoln students for failing to show for guest lectures twice (had to get that in there, sorry), Yvonne has recently won her messy court case with al-Jazeera. In this piece for the Media Guardian, she tells us of her battle to win the dosh.

[ROY GREENSLADE] Subs? Do we really them any longer?

Cheeky typo-ed title from Roy, with a serious point. Do we need sub-editors? I’d argue yes: As a journalist I tend to miss out mistakes. Indeed, look hard enough and you’ll find a load on this very page. But in this online world, is there the time for subs? Archant doesn’t think so — it’s getting rid of 20 subs in favour of designers.

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Free Financial Times subscription for students

Posted by Dave Lee on 7 March 2008 at 23:17
Tags: Student Journalism

Straight to the point: Get over to Facebook and make use of the Financial Times’ free student subscription offer.

In a bid to attract younger readers, the FT.com deal will grant students in the UK a package worth £98.99 a year.

And it’s well worth doing. Sure, the FT might not be the newspaper you pick up in the morning for a quick read – it’s a bit heavy for that – but its usefulness as a research tool can not be disputed.

Indeed, the very fact the FT manages to keep a subscription service going shows how valuable its content is. Most other online newspapers have been forced to abandon the subscription model for several reasons, one of which was that nobody in the universe was prepared to pay £1 to read Janet Street-Porter’s column in the Independent.

On another note, I wonder if this method of student-only offers will become commonplace. It seems using Facebook to verify a person is a student is a fairly watertight way to go about reaching the right audiences.

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Step-by-step investigative journalism

Posted by Dave Lee on 7 March 2008 at 22:52
Tags: Newspapers, Student Journalism

I’ve just found this wonderful resource via the Student Newspaper Survival Blog.

It’s long been argued that investigative journalism is dying out fairly rapidly, but with the Center for Campus Investigations blog, Marcy Burstiner hopes to ignite some fresh new blood into the genre.

Marcy’s tips range from the inception of an investigative team right up to the glorious front page splash.

Well worth checking out if you want your student newspaper to go that extra mile in serving your campus.

1 comment

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YouTube Live will revolutionise student journalism

Posted by Dave Lee on 5 March 2008 at 09:25
Tags: Courses, Online, Student Journalism, Television

We haven’t touched much on student television journalism on this blog yet, and for good reason.

There isn’t any. Or rather, there isn’t any we can watch and enjoy. Plenty of j-schools have TV modules – some even have dedicated TV courses – but the public enjoyment of this work is often restricted to the campus it is created on.

Which is all well and good, but it puts student broadcast journalists at a distinct disadvantage over their print counterparts. Aspiring TV journalists are not google-friendly. You’d never stumble across a brilliant piece-to-camera by accident. No, you would need to consciously go and download it.

And even if you got to that point, what university has the resources to be hosting all this multimedia? Not to mention the fact that many of the ‘men upstairs’ in British universities quiver in their leather chairs at the very thought of letting student journalists run riot under the university’s good name.

Is that all about to change? Yes! It certainly is! Woo hoo! Hip hip hooray! And so on. With this single announcement, student TV journalism has taken a whole new meaning.

Why? Because soon, this year, we’ll be able to broadcast LIVE using YouTube. To an audience of… millions?

Well let’s not get ahead of ourselves. To go from broadcasting to your classmates and your tutor to speaking to, for example, the local community, is pretty exciting.

Those of us who are lucky enough to have a radio station on-campus will know how much you raise your game when it’s likely to be heard by someone who isn’t just your mate. Knowing your content is up for both legal and critical scrutiny is always healthy as well, as your skills will subconsciously become stronger and the real stresses of journalism will emerge. As will the adrenaline rush, of course.

It’s time, then, for TV tutors out there to ask themselves: “How can we incorporate this?”

Exact details of YouTube’s plans are not clear, but it’s fairly likely that users will be able to embed the live video into their own site, much like the way we do with normal clips now.

If convergence is the way forward – which, let’s face it, it is – then how better to teach multimedia journalism than to create a website that is rammed full of text, images, audio, multimedia and now, gloriously, live television. Every j-school has the resources to do all of this, which means every j-school should do it, no excuses.

When it comes to inspiring great, high quality work, you really can’t get much better than this.

3 comments

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Psst! Take a look at this week’s THE

Posted by Dave Lee on 3 March 2008 at 13:11
Tags: Newspapers, Student Journalism

I haven’t seen it for myself yet, but rumour has it that this week’s Times Higher Education has a comprehensive list of the bonuses being handed out to university Vice-Chancellors in the UK.

A potentially juicy story there for you all!

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Monday Links: Drudge dread

Posted by Dave Lee on 3 March 2008 at 09:00
Tags: Student Journalism

Good morning everyone…

[EVERYONE, EVERYWHERE!] Matt Drudge brings news of Harry in Afghanistan to the masses

Technically, despite what you may have heard, Matt Drudge didn’t actually break the story about Harry fighting the Taleban. Instead, it was an Aussie women’s magazine that broke it way back in January. But it wasn’t until the world’s most infamous posted the news that we all sat up and took notice, breaking an agreed silence between the UK press.

A complete news embargo is very rare these days. This blog post from the BBC gives more background information on the whole affair. If you think Drudge should have kept his blogging mouth shut, you can join a Facebook group demanding an apology. There are thousands of posts about this, so I won’t link to them here. But the issue is a real divider — and I’d be interested to hear what you all think. Was Drudge right to end the media blackout?

[STUDENT NEWSPAPER SURVIVAL BLOG] Googlize your student newspaper

Good search-engine tweaking and your student newspaper could gain a whole new, captive audience.

[THE MUSE] Do you trust us?

Do people trust the media? How about the student media? A reporter from ‘The Muse’, the student newspaper for Memorial University, California, made up a fake story with the intention of seeing how many people would believe him. An interesting read!

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Ways to tackle student apathy

Posted by Dave Lee on 29 February 2008 at 09:36
Tags: Student Journalism

Student apathy has, for as long as any of us can remember, been the plague facing campus politics.

It’s election season at universities up and down the country. At the University of Lincoln, Our campus is cluttered with banners reading messages like “Don’t be a tool, vote Sam Yule!” and similar. All the candidates are, obviously, hoping for a high turnout.

Which isn’t surprising: interest in our elections is historically low. In fact, in our last by-election, turnout was less than one per cent. In other words, friends of candidates.

We’re not alone.

Just in the last fortnight, York student Sarah Foster expressed her concern with this opinion piece in Nouse. Another piece found in Cardiff’s Gair Rhydd hails the “largest turn out in Cardiff history”: a whopping 17 per cent. Not bad, but certainly not good.

This piece from Wessex Scene was written way back in 2003, but it still rings true today. How many students vote on the basis of getting a free bag of sweets? Or, even more shamefully, how many vote for just the most attractive candidate?

An other, more recent article from Wessex Scene suggests the problem has not gone away.

I’d like to open this post up to suggestions. How can a student publication tackle apathy amongst its readers?

4 comments

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