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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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Clough in the thick of it at Lincoln City

Posted by Dave Lee on 16 February 2008 at 17:55
Tags: Lincoln University, Student Journalism, Television

I’m not going to use this blog to promote my friends, but I thought I’d make an exception to share this account from Dan Clough about how he found himself in the middle of one of the biggest stories of the year here in sleepy Lincoln:

[T]he call comes through from the Lincolshire Echo. Their footage hasn’t worked, can they have mine? After agreeing it with my tutor John Cafferkey and the club itself I get to work on putting the entire conference into a working format with usable sound quality for the Echo’s website. It’s done, late, but done. I take it to the Echo, sports editor John Pakey is delighted until ten minutes later when he rings to explain the sound isn’t working on the DVD! Damn it!

If that’s not hands on experience, I’m not sure what is!

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Dreamweaver does not make an online journalist

Posted by Dave Lee on 14 February 2008 at 08:01
Tags: Courses, Lincoln University, Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism

When studying to be a print journalist, students will definitely spend considerable amounts of time in printhouses, learning to operate machinery that puts the ink to paper. After extensive training, we then must prepare to build our own printing presses.

I’m kidding. We’re not taught like that. All we, as print journalists, need to know about the printing presses is that they exist and they work. It would be a waste of time to think otherwise.

So why don’t we take the same approach to learning online journalism?

If you’re an online journalism student and find yourself aimlessly clicking away at Dreamweaver and wondering “What’s the point?”, you’re not alone. There are hundreds of us.

It’s an issue that has caused great concern for Amy Gahran, writing over on Poynter Online about the pointlessness of such an education:

“Dreamweaver is a decent Web design and development tool,” she writes. “However, it’s not very relevant to journalism, because it does not include a robust content management system!

“A working knowledge of real Content Management System (CMS) technology and how it integrates with the internet is what gives a journalist’s career legs these days,” she continues. “Requiring journalism students to use Dreamweaver is about as useful as requiring them to learn calligraphy. It makes your content looks really pretty — and it generally won’t be worth a damn on a real journo job or project.”

I really couldn’t agree more. I myself have written about this on my own blog many moons ago, as I was astonished to find I was “studying” online journalism using software that was out of date before I’d even started my A-Levels.

Gahran mentions in her post that it isn’t just the fact that most courses use outdated versions of Dreamweaver. It’s more the fact that using Dreamweaver — or any other web design software, let’s not forget — promotes a certain mindset when it comes to publishing online.

A Dreamweaver site, unless very professionally executed, is so very static… so very Web 1.0. Web 1.0 just doesn’t cut it anymore.

Think of your favourite websites. Which do you visit most frequently? The one that changes every day, or the one that changes every minute? The new web — Web 2.0 — is all about live information. When you log onto the BBC’s homepage, you know that what you’re reading is the most up-to-date news possible. That’s how online works.

Poke your nose into any newsroom across the country and see what they’re doing with the web. Are local reporters sat in front of their computers wrestling with HTML table alignments? No! They’re writing news stories, whisking them off to the web-bods who then place them neatly into a pre-designed CMS. Who designs the CMS? Why, web designers of course…!

That’s not to say we don’t need to know how some of it works, but simply learning Dreamweaver doesn’t bring us any closer to that goal. What’s the use in studying a program that nobody uses? Teach a few basic tags like bold, italic and underline, and then get onto the important stuff: Journalism.

Online journalism courses should ask questions like: What’s different about an online audience to a print audience? What can we do with online that would couldn’t do with print? How can we make this news story as accessible to our audience as possible?

It’s the decisions that arise from quesitons like these which make online journalism the most fascinating medium in today’s media. But, instead, many students are finding themselves making decisions over whether to implement a 1997-esque scrolling marquee.

HTML, PHP, MySQL and all those other complicated acronyms are to the online world what ink is to the print world. As long as we know it’s there, then that’s good enough. It’s time for less coding, and more reporting.

14 comments

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Monday Links: Why every j-student should read Flat Earth News

Posted by Dave Lee on 11 February 2008 at 11:00
Tags: Lincoln University, Student Journalism

Every Monday I’ll be posting a selection of interesting links related to what we do. If you think I’ve missed anything, feel free to add some in the comments!

[INDEPENDENT] Hard truths for the trade in ‘Flat Earth News’

Amazon are winging my copy to my house as I type (or at least I hope they are). ‘Flat Earth News’ has really got people talking. The author, Nick Davies, delivers a stinging criticism of the modern media, arguing that the pillars of good journalism — accuracy, research, morals — are eroding away. Get it bought! Or, if you’re a bit hard up for coins, you can read extracts from the book in this week’s Press Gazette.

[ANGRYJOURNALIST.COM] I find out shit half an hour after everyone else does — without fail.

This could really take off. Post your angriness to AngryJournalist.com and share your grumps about the industry with the world.

[MINDY MCADAMS] How to shoot video interviews

Mindy is the journalism tutor we all wish we had. If you haven’t ever read her blog, take a trawl through her archives; there is some really great stuff. In this particular, she gives a quick crash course on how to shoot video interviews. The best thing about these tips is that they are extremely easy to remember.

If you’re reading this at 11am today… why not tune your browsers to www.sirenfm.com, where I’ll be co-presenting The Week in News with my friend and coursemate Dan Clough.

1 comment

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Five things student editors should do with Facebook in 2008

Posted by Dave Lee on 8 February 2008 at 13:52
Tags: Lincoln University, Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism, The Linc, facebook

We all know that Facebook is a terrific tool – has it ever been any easier to keep in touch with friends? I don’t think so. Last week I had a 21st birthday party that was organised using Facebook’s event application, and it really couldn’t have been simpler.

The question is, what else can we do with it? How, as student journalists, can we use this rapidly expanding medium to our advantage?

Here’s where I think we should all start. Please, feel free to add your own in the comments section.

Five things student editors should do with Facebook in 2008

  1. Use a group to force change. Take a look at this: The Linc Campaign for a 24-hour Library. 700 members strong, and our University is really taking note. That group was set up in the minutes, and yet, has had more effect than anything else we’ve done – including printing a big poster in our last issue. A Facebook group means people can support your cause by just clicking “Join”. It’s quick, easy and ultimately very impressive when you pull it off.
  2. Establish a Facebook presence for your publication. This is a bit trickier than the group, as there are a few different ways you can approach this. Facebook have just added the ability for anyone to make a page for a business or group, and you can invite people to become ‘fans’ of your newspaper. Think of it as a group on steroids – it allows you to list events, add videos and host your own message board. Perfect for a student newspaper.
  3. Reach people you don’t meet in your day-to-day studies. It’s easy to assume you cover all the big issues on your campus. You don’t. Somewhere, hidden away, is a huge wealth of stories that will blow your readers away. Trawl through your university’s network homepage and see what people are talking about on the message board. See if any interesting/strange societies are doing anything that will interest your readers. Perhaps take a look at the marketplace listings, you never know what you might find there.
  4. Connect with the sports teams. Provided you have a good Athletic Union, it’s fairly easy to keep on top of all the sporting events taking place. But take a look at sport coverage in the ‘real’ press and you’ll find it’s very personality-based. Big characters exist in sport at every level, and Facebook opens to the door to all the team banter that would normally be reserved solely for the coach on the way to somewhere like Loughborough. It was through a Rugby player’s Facebook profile that we found a disgusting yet brilliant picture of a players dislocated hip. It was very eye-catching… until you realised what it was and swiftly looked at something else.
  5. See what the ‘competition’ is doing. As I’ve written in the past, it’s never been easier for student editors to see what everyone is up to. See what other newspapers are doing on Facebook, and if you like what you see, pinch it! The possibilities really are endless.

Any other suggestions? If you’re feeling super-adventurous you could attempt to make an application specifically for your publication, although that’s for the real tech-heads only at the moment.

10 comments

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Dealing with a student death

Posted by Dave Lee on 30 January 2008 at 09:20
Tags: Lincoln University, Student Journalism, The Linc

Here at the University of Lincoln, our student newspaper, the Linc, is a baby. We’ve only printed seven issues, and so every edition that comes out brings a new fresh problem for the team to overcome.

This month we heard some tragic news. Three students lost their lives during the Christmas break. Of course, we had to cover it. It was just a question of how.

The only decision we were sure about is that we had to cover it. We would lose any integrity we had if we let this news go unreported. Bad news happens. What we weren’t sure of was how to go about presenting our coverage. We had to be careful.

How a student newspaper reports a death has to be different to the way a local paper would. You know that people who knew the student will be reading. Do you report mere facts (the time, the place, essential details) and risk coming across as wooden? Or do you delve into the life of the student, and risk being accused of intruding on a family’s grief?

Get your coverage wrong and you could find your newspaper on the end of some very angry, emotional students. Yet, get it right, and you’ll have produced a moving newspaper, paying a worthy tribute to the students.

Unfortunately, that line between tribute and insult can be crossed very easily. You can – and should – adhere to the PCC Code, and not be afraid to use it to defend your actions. But at the back of your mind should be the acknowledgement that you have a duty to treat the news as respectfully as possible.

For our coverage, we lead with a front page picture and the headline of ‘Tragic’. It has, as expected, caused distress – but just because it’s a realisation that these students are sadly no longer with us.

I’m interested to hear any stories from student editors out there about how to deal with difficult issues like a death on campus.

1 comment

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