When Abby Sears was accepted into the
journalism school at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, she had
hopes of one day working for a public relations firm.
Then she did some work at the Daily Cardinal news desk
and "fell in love with writing and reporting."
A Madison native, Sears covered last year's downtown homicide of UW
student Brittany Zimmermann. Her reporting led to several
appearances on Greta Van Susteren's "On the Record" and a summer
internship at Fox News in New York. And she is committed to the
craft.
"I definitely think journalists are an incredibly important
profession," she said. "It's our job to seek the truth and it's our
job to report the truth. There are so many people pushing so many
different agendas, and journalists are the people who are supposed
to sift through all of that and get down to the meat and potatoes
of it, and give that back to the people. I see it as my duty to
figure out what's going on out there and make people aware of that
-- and do it in an engaging and informative way."
Despite her passion and impressive resume, however, Sears likely
will graduate next month without a job. And she won't be the only
one.
While the economy in general is slumping, the newspaper industry in
particular is tanking. The American
Society of News Editors reports that daily newspapers across
the U.S. shed 5,900 newsroom jobs last year, slashing the number of
employed journalists by 11.3 percent. And in the first couple
months of 2009, the situation appears to be going from bad to worse
-- with newspapers in Denver, Seattle and Ann Arbor, Mich., either
folding altogether or significantly cutting staff and putting their
entire product online.
According to the layoff tracker "paper cuts," more than
8,400 newspaper jobs -- from editors and reporters to advertising
sales reps, pressmen and carriers -- have been lost so far in
2009.
"Some of my students are freaked out by all this," said Sue
Robinson, an assistant professor at UW-Madison's School of Journalism
and Mass Communication. "The fear in their eyes is startling.
And they should be nervous, because it's hard right now."
And yet, young adults continue to flood journalism schools across
the country, with many of these students still dreaming of writing
for a print publication one day. According to an annual enrollment
survey done by the University of Georgia, there were 199,711
undergraduates enrolled nationwide in journalism and mass
communication schools in
2007 -- a jump of 41.6 percent from 1997. Meanwhile, a
recent article on Forbes.com noted that journalism schools at
Columbia University, the University of Maryland and Stanford
University saw significant spikes in applications this past fall --
30 percent, 25 percent and 20 percent, respectively.
"Honestly, and it could be because I'm young or naive or all of the
above, but problems with the newspaper industry don't worry me all
that much," said Emily Bisek, a UW-Madison junior who hopes to
write for a daily newspaper when she graduates. "I know the
industry is changing; it's in flux due to the Internet and new
technologies being used to tell stories. I guess I feel that, at
the very least, as a young graduate entering the workforce in about
a year, that I'm a little bit ahead of the curve as far as being
exposed to the new technologies and being part of a different age
of reporters."
Professor James Baughman, director of UW-Madison's School of
Journalism and Mass Communication, said the flow of applications to
his school has remained strong. Over the past three academic years,
nearly 1,400 people have applied to enter the school, with 55
percent being turned away due to space limitations.
And like their colleagues from across the nation, those within
UW-Madison's J-school are trying to tailor a successful curriculum
which meshes many of the new multimedia technologies with the
old-school fundamentals of reporting and writing.
"I am one of those people who firmly believes, who just knows, that
there will always be a place for journalism in a democratic
society," said Katy Culver, a J-school faculty member at
UW-Madison. "I don't know that it will be ink on newsprint arriving
at your door every day. I'm suspicious of that notion. Yet despite
all the crisis in the media industries -- talk of Newsweek maybe
not existing or of 5,000 job cuts in journalism -- I have not
really seen any relaxed interest in the major."
Culver pauses for a moment before adding: "But I imagine there are
a lot of nervous parents out there."
Not long ago, a newspaper reporter covering an
important school board meeting might have been asked to cobble
together a 700-word article for the next day's paper.
That same reporter today could be expected to produce a live blog
from the meeting, upload video or audio from a key exchange during
the event and then write an in-depth follow-up story.
This changing face of "print" reporting has forced J-schools across
the country to re-evaluate how they approach their teaching. In
this regard, those at UW-Madison feel they are ahead of the curve,
as the university revamped the J-school's curriculum prior to the
start of the 2000-01 school year.
"Platform agnostic" is the term those within the school like to use
when describing this new course of study.
"Journalism education used to be boxy," said Culver, who got her
bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in journalism at
UW-Madison, then joined the faculty in 1999 to design and teach the
J-school's foundation skills course, J202. "Students would follow
the print track or broadcasting track or advertising track or
public relations track, and it was very segmented and separate. It
was dominated by thinking about the platform in which you were
going to be telling the story as opposed to thinking about the
story. So our curriculum now prepares students in a broad-based way
so they can adapt either to a changing media landscape or changing
employer demands or even the changing mind of what one wants to do
in life."
While the J-school was criticized in the past for being heavy on
communication theory and short on faculty with professional
experience in the trade, Culver said the program realized in the
mid-1990s it needed to change its curriculum to meet the changing
times.
"We had researchers who were ahead of the curve in understanding
the web and the changes in what online communications would bring,"
said Culver. "It was, 'Wow, this medium is a game-changer, it's
going to rip apart the way that we do things.' We didn't exactly
know how, but we knew we needed a curriculum that could adapt to
those kinds of changes."
At any one time, there are about 400 undergraduate students in
UW-Madison's J-school, which also features more than 80 graduate
students and the equivalent of 15 full-time faculty. A little more
than half end up focusing on advertising and public relations, with
the rest following a reporting track. All students must take
Culver's six-credit journalism and communications boot camp, which
introduces them to everything from writing and print basics to
multimedia training in audio, video and online production. The idea
is to give students a strong, multifaceted foundation.
During this course, Culver also tries to stress to her students the
importance of thinking about which medium can best be used to
deliver a message. It's a message that appeals to Bisek.
"I really enjoy being able to tell a story that is more of a
package deal -- where you have the print and a video or some sound
slides and a little bit of Twitter," she said. "I think you can
represent certain stories and people better in those ways than you
would be able to with just a printed story in the paper."
Still, the most important journalism skills are critical thinking
and writing, said Culver.
"What we really try to instill in people is that if you are
thinking about questions correctly, that's the hallmark of great
journalism," she said. "Having an HD camera is not the hallmark of
great journalism."
Although UW-Madison's J-school is committed to
changing with the times, the pace at which the newspaper industry
and multimedia technologies are evolving pose significant
challenges. Not only do some of the tenured professors have limited
or no real-world experience with audio, video or photo editing
software, but finding the time, energy and patience to get up to
speed with some of these new technologies can seem daunting.
Robinson requires undergraduate students in her 400-level in-depth
reporting class to supplement a printed piece with interactive web
elements. (For examples, visit journalism.wisc.edu/content/j-school-student-showcase.)
But Baughman, who doesn't even have a cell phone, admits his
400-level course on column and editorial writing is much more
focused on print.
"It's not that I'm indifferent to change," said Baughman. "I could
make that class more current in some ways or I could play
with it a bit more, but I think some classes offer more multimedia
opportunities than others."
The changing media landscape also has placed a new financial burden
on the J-school in the form of video cameras, plus audio, photo and
video editing software. All of the online tools needed to produce a
website can be quite costly.
For a few years, Culver stopped giving video assignments in her
class because the cameras that were purchased broke down after a
couple years, and no funds were immediately available to replace
them. Currently, the J-school's labs are in need of newer computers
which have the right processors to run some of the state-of-the-art
software.
"I think my only major complaint about the J-school is the lack of
resources," said Lara Sokolowski, a UW-Madison senior majoring in
journalism and English literature. "We could certainly use some
more computer labs."
And more time.
"There are so many multimedia tools out there today that it's hard
to learn how to use them all," Sokolowski added. "I feel like
sometimes we're just given a brief overview of something, and then
we have to move on."
Some students also wish the J-school offered more in the way of
real-world internships and career advising. Students at Arizona
State's Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass
Communication, for instance, must intern before they can graduate.
There is no such requirement at the UW-Madison J-school.
"I feel like the journalism school as a whole taught me how to be a
great writer and a great thinker, and taught me good analytical
skills," said Ashley Spencer, a senior. "But the journalism school
did very little to help graduates find a job. I know other
journalism schools, like at Northwestern, have job fairs. And I'm
like, 'Why don't we have that? We're a great school, too.' "
When Tom Lea was growing up in tiny Colfax, Wis.,
he used to tell his mom that he planned to replace Brett Favre as
quarterback of the Green Bay Packers.
"Once I figured out I wouldn't be able to play sports at that
level, or not even close to that level, I figured, 'Oh well, I can
always cover sports,' " said Lea, a senior in UW's J-school who has
a job covering UW sports for BadgerBlitz.com. "Sports has always
been a joy for me, and it's just something I really, really enjoy.
So even though the newspaper industry is in turmoil, I really feel
like I picked the right major."
Spencer, a native of suburban Chicago, had a different
experience.
Although she came to Madison with hopes of majoring in journalism
and becoming a print reporter, a stint at the Daily Cardinal as an
editor and political reporter turned her off to the "stressful
lifestyle" of being a newspaper reporter.
"Why would I want to be low-paid and really struggle to find a
job?" posed Spencer, who still writes feature columns for the Daily
Cardinal, one of two independent campus newspapers. "I feel like
journalists are completely undervalued and work very hard for very
little pay. And with the added stress of the profession and the
economic situation, I just decided that this isn't where I wanted
to go with my life."
Spencer, who double-tracked in journalism/reporting and strategic
communications, now is hoping to land a job in public relations,
advertising or magazine writing. She is still looking for a job, as
is Amanda Hoffstrom, a UW-Madison senior who will graduate in about
a month. Hoffstrom is seeking a reporting position.
"In a way, this is a very exciting time because we can be the ones
who can reinvent this industry," said Hoffstrom. A former staffer
at the Daily Cardinal who now is an editor for UWire, a student journalist site,
Hoffstrom recently started blogging about her job search at
UWireHelpWanted.com.
"Even though newspapers are on the decline doesn't mean journalism
is dead," added Sokolowski. "We just have to figure out what way
this new technology is taking the field, and we'll be fine."
Robinson agreed that it's not all gloom and doom. "We're seeing
layoffs and some newspapers dying off, but we're also seeing other
exciting things that people aren't talking about -- like all of
these nonprofit investigative journalism centers that are starting,
and all these professional-amateur collaborations with citizen
journalists and professional organizations," she said. "And even a
lot of the newspapers that are 'dying' are really still alive;
they're just online. It's just a matter of appreciating where the
industry is right now and figuring out what the needs are, and
we're trying to direct students in those ways."
Culver noted that Willard Bleyer -- who is credited with starting
journalism education at UW-Madison in 1905 -- once said that the
"future of our democracy depends on the character of our
newspapers." She said the statement holds true today with one
tweak.
"I would say that the future of our democracy depends on the
character of our journalism. It's not tied to a medium. It's tied
to the practice of going out and seeking information, skeptically
challenging institutions and maintaining accountability. That's the
nature of journalism."
These projects represent some of the work being produced by our beginning and advanced journalism students, both undergraduates and graduates. To view a comprehensive publication of student work, please visit our magazine, Curb. For more information about these projects or our School, please contact our office at 608-262-3690.
By Kim Ukura
MA ‘10
Native American dancers and storytellers Art and Maral Shegonee performed for the Overture Center's Kids in the Rotunda program and answered the question "Why do you dance?"
By Susannah Brooks
MA '09
Are you ready for the Farmers' Market? With the outdoor market season just around the corner, learn how one vendor gets ready and get some tips from market manager Larry Johnson. More
By Joe Travato
Class of 2010
The Pabst Brewery in Milwaukee has symbolized both Milwaukee’s prosperity and, more recently, its decline. New life is now being breathed into the abandoned facility, and may once again become the iconic symbol of Milwaukee’s rebirth. More
By Emily Bisek
Class of 2010
As flood waters spill over Highway V and approach Dale and Debbie Breggeman’s door step, they and Town of Vienna begin searching for solutions. Cooperation from many parties proves to be the best tactic, as seen in the flood prone communities of Darlington and Gays Mills, where relocation and remodeling are among the tactics that helped residents overcome rising water. More
By Abby Sears
Class of 2009
It’s been one year since UW-Madison junior Brittany Zimmermann was brutally murdered in her off-campus apartment. While her killer remains at large, the police continue to search for answers into who killed the 21-year old and why. Her ill-fated call to 911 and the questionable security ofher apartment are still stirring controversy in Dane County courtrooms. The homicide brought public safety to the forefront of Madison issues, resulting inimprovements at the Dane County 911 Center and sparking a continued vigilance in campus safety at UW-Madison. More
By Jigyasa Jyotika
MA Student
This project represents an eclectic assortment of digital multimedia, photography and abstract art at UW-Madison's Porter Butts Gallery by artist Brian DeLevie.
By Clare Milliken, ‘10
When J-School alum Katie Meacham (JBA, ’05) faced a Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosis and life-saving stem-cell transplant last year, she and her family were shocked at the lack of available information about cancer. They never suspected their army of iPhones would help fill the void.
Wanting free and accessible information, Katie and her brother-in-law, Michael Zeinfeld (UW, ’97), joined forces to create TouchOut Cancer, an iPhone application that provides a daily news feed of information related to cancer. Users can “TouchOut Up” if the article is relevant to them, or “TouchOut Down” if it’s not, and their news feed will be customized accordingly.
Partnering with societies, patient groups, hospitals and celebrities, Katie and Michael use innovative new media to help people “think differently” about a widespread, life-altering problem.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Journalism & Mass Communication has long seen its graduates go on to impressive careers in traditional media industries, from managing editor of The New York Times to managing global strategic communication agencies. The advent of new media has expanded the avenues through which both current students and alumni can break into industry. Some, like Katie, use new technology to support a cause or build their brand, while others have made careers of online reporting.
Adam Hinterthuer completed UW’s journalism graduate program in 2007. He began as an English major at Carlton College in Minnesota, later switching to biology. With a knack for writing and a love of science, Adam discovered science journalism and came to UW-Madison after graduation.
Adam began his career during graduate school at EarthWatch Radio, where he researched and wrote radio scripts. Adam eventually broadened his reach to do weekly podcasts and public service announcements for multiple radio stations. He now works as a freelancer, contributing podcasts, called “60-Second Science,” to Scientific American’s Web site. These snippets of scientific research cover everything from the life cycle of a midlife crisis to the calming power of writing. Adam has also written for NPR.org, Wired.com and the environmentalist magazine Plenty. All of his digital work can be shared on Digg, Fark and Facebook, or reviewed on Yahoo! Buzz, Stumble and NewsTrust.
Adam also serves as assistant director for the Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies in Madison, investigating how research interests shape public opinion and how public opinion shapes research interests. In addition to managing the budget, Adam recruits students for the center’s PhD minor program.
Adam is not a staff member at Scientific American, NPR, Plenty or Wired. Rather, he combs news wires for stories that interest him and pitches them to each company. His freelancing career gives him a different outlook on the trend toward new media.
“It’s funny from a freelancer’s perspective,” Hinterthuer said. “I know newspapers are dying, but as a freelancer you don’t feel it as much because you spread yourself out among all different pools.”
Adam is not worried that journalism will be replaced by user-created content, but he is well aware of the changing expectations of his job.
“No matter what, there is still an appreciation for writing,” Hinterthuer said. “I don’t see everyone trading well-researched articles for a blog. But there are a lot more requests for freelancers to put together multimedia galleries—they want video, photo slideshows.”
While Adam and other journalists increasingly use multimedia and digital technology, the strategic communication realm of the industry integrates new media into marketing and advertising campaigns. UW-Madison journalism school is one of a small number of schools to offer new media courses, which both current students and alumni have put to good use.
Melissa Smith graduated last spring from the journalism school, and she could not be more thankful for those new media classes. Melissa is the project coordinator for Channel3000.com, the Web site for WISC-TV Channel 3 news in Madison. She oversees creative development and production of advertisements that run on the Web site.
Acting as coordinator between clients and Channel3000’s design and production teams, Melissa has to understand all stages of marketing communications. She credits this skill to her experience at the journalism school, specifically her work with the National Student Advertising Competition, a semester-long project that now asks specifically for non-traditional, interactive campaigns.
“I did NSAC, and it’s probably the sole reason I got my job,” Smith said, “not only because it had to do with advertising, but because it showed that, as team project manager, I was able to take a project and make it happen.”
This past February, Melissa was able to bring her new media skills to Channel3000 and implement a mobile marketing plan for the Web site. Channel3000 bought the rights to mobile marketing software company Hip Cricket, allowing Channel3000 to offer its advertisers a means to reach target consumers through their cell phones.
Pizza Hut just bought into this new medium, and here’s how it works: A line on Channel3000.com reads “text pizza to 39384.” Melissa oversees the software, and when someone texts “pizza” to the specified number, the message they get back is a coupon for $5 off a large pizza.
“All through my senior year we talked about mobile marketing and the digital age,” Smith said. “Now we’re making it a marketing tool, and I’m in charge of it.”
Channel3000.com has a “mobile” tab on its Web site, where viewers can learn about the new technology and the sponsors that use it.
New media is a rapidly growing medium, and its strategic ability to target the most responsive audiences for a particular message makes this communication much more effective than more traditional means.
Journalism Jumpouts:
Katie Meacham
Graduated: 2005
Work: Account Supervisor at Nike Communications. Kate manages the wines division of the PR firm. Kate is also the co-founder of TouchOut Cancer.
Digital addiction: Gawker, Facebook and The Huffington Post
Links: Download the TouchOut Cancer iTunes application
Adam Hinterthuer
Graduated: 2007
Work: Freelancer. He does podcasts for Scientific American’s Web site. Adam also writes articles for the Scientific American Web site, NPR.org, Wired.com and Plenty.
Digital addiction: Facebook. “I have yet to understand Twitter.”
Links: Life’s U-Shaped Path of Happiness
In Britain, a Farming Past of Golden Moors, Vineyards
Retired Drugs—Failed Blockbusters, Homicidal Tampering, Fatal Oversights
Justine Nagan
Graduated: 2000
Work: Kartemquin Films’ Interim Executive Director and Producer on staff. Justine directed Typeface, a documentary on the convergence of traditional typography and contemporary graphic design in America.
Digital addiction: Facebook
Links: Kartemquin Films Web site
Milking the Rhino trailer
Peter Kafka
Graduated: 1993
Work: Blogger. Peter writes the MediaMemo blog for All Things Digital, part of the Wall Street Journal’s Digital Network.
Digital addiction: Google Reader
Links: Media Memo
Bassey Etim
Graduated: 2008
Work: News Assistant at the New York Times. Bassey moderates user comments on nytimes.com and writes for the Caucus political blog. In addition, he selects and promotes articles for the Web site’s home page. Bassey also edits a music Web site called Air & Sea Battle.
Digital addiction: Online political sites. Politico.com, The Atlantic
Links: Blogging in a Post-Campaign World
Charlie Berens
Graduated: Graduating spring 2009
Work: Host of the Millennial News Brief Series, a weekly series on CNN’s iReport. Charlie is a member of Project Youthanize, a non-partisan organization started at UW-Madison that uses multimedia to raise youth awareness about political and social issues.
Digital addiction: Twitter
Links: Project Youthanize Web site
The Badger Report
Over the course of a semester, students in J419: Electronic News for the Web and Broadcast research, write, videotape and edit news packages to produce a weekly, live newscast. In addition, students produce a companion Web site containing the individual packages, links and other content.
Strat Comm Jumpouts:
Melissa Smith
Graduated: 2008
Work: Project Coordinator for Channel3000.com. Melissa implements web campaigns for local and national clients, and creates multimedia solutions for local clients. She also helps with the new mobile marketing technology that her company offers clients, which allows Channel 3's advertisers to target cell phone users with text message coupons and promotions.
Digital addiction: her iPhone
Links: Channel3000.com
Katie Harbath
Graduated: 2003
Work: Digital Director at public affairs firm DCI Group. Katie helps corporations use social networking sites
and blogs to bolster their brands and educate the public on issues that matter to them.
Digital addiction: Twitter
Links: Katie’s blog
Nicole Frame
Graduated: 2008
Work: Media Planner for Starcom Worldwide. Nicole designs media plans for kid-oriented Kellogg’s products, instructing Kellogg’s on the most effective ad placements for the coming year.
Digital addiction: Facebook
Megan Roepke
Graduated: Graduating spring 2009
Work: Media Director for the spring 2009 National Student Advertising Competition. As an Account Service intern at Lindsay, Stone & Briggs, Megan aids the company in information architecture and Web site development.
Digital addiction: AdAge.com trade publications, New York Times Advertising RSS feed and businessman Seth Godin’s blog.
Links: Check out one of Megan’s favorite blogs
Jeremy Whitt
Graduated: December 1999
Work: Vice President, Associate Media Director—Interactive for Cramer-Krasselt. Jeremy directs interactive media strategy for the company’s Milwaukee, Phoenix and New York offices. His team identifies and implements the appropriate media strategy for their clients.
Digital addiction: his iPhone. “Much to the chagrin of my wife.”
New York Times investigative reporter Walt Bogdanich will be in the 11 a.m. Friday, April 24 Walt Bogdanich, a three-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize, is an
journalism school this Friday to discuss his work. Walt will cover "An
investigative reporter's guide to winning over reluctant sources" and
take any questions about his work or the meaning and future of
investigative journalism.
2195 Vilas Hall
assistant editor for investigations at The New York Times, where he has
worked since 2001. Previously, he produced investigative reports for
"60 Minutes" on CBS and ABC News. Bogdanich has also reported for The
Wall Street Journal in New York and Washington. He received his first
Pulitzer in 1988 for stories in The Journal that documented
substandard testing by medical laboratories. At The Times, he received
a second Pulitzer in 1995 for explaining how railroad companies
avoided responsibility for fatal accidents. His third Pulitzer was
awardedin 2008 for articles in The Times that traced the shipment of toxic
pharmaceutical ingredients manufactured in China. He has a degree in
political science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a
master's degree in journalism from Ohio State University.
Patricia Wright, the recently retired vice president of external affairs for BP America and a University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate, will deliver the 2009 Robert Taylor Lecture in Public Relations on Monday, April 20.
Wright, who workedfor more than three decades for Amoco Corp., then BP America, will speak on “Public Relations 2009: A Changing Profession in a Changing World” at 4 p.m. inthe Nafziger Conference room on the fifth floor of Vilas Hall, 821 University Ave.
The lecture,hosted by the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, is free and open to the public.
Taylor, a longtime journalism professor, former chief public relations officer for the university and a one-time university vice president, died in 2002 at age 86. Taylor's widow, Judith, provided funding for the regular event.
###
--Dennis Chaptman, dchaptman@wisc.edu