Sunday, May 16, 2010
Thinking how things tie together...
The four interviews I had with women involved with journalism proved to be very insightful. Though Marti was laid off from her job at the Tribune, she, like Becky, Diane and Heather, is still optimistic about the future of journalism in general. Diane is finding continued success in the small community of Yellow Springs, where the citizens rely on its weekly newspaper for their local news. Becky, like so many others, knows that print media is dying, but forsees a new medium for the delivery of news in the future. Finally, Heather is a positive example of a young person inspired to get into journalism who has stuck with it and found her niche.
I just walked across the stage at Earlham College's graduation a short 8 days ago with just as many questions hanging over my head as anyone else my age. Many friends of my parents and some of my friends ask if I want to go into journalism, but I am still not sure. This is my first experience with publishing anything online; I worked for my high school newspaper and spent most of my college career working for the Earlham Word. Will I go into journalism? Perhaps-- my first goal is to attend library school to get my Masters in Library and Information Science. I am going to continue to follow the saga of print journalism with interest. Who knows how things will change in five or 10 years?
Some useful links
The State of the News Media 2009
The State of the News Media 2010
These two sites offer reports on American journalism from print to radio, are easy to navigate and provide a plethora of information. The current report is the seventh edition of the annual report.
The South Bend Tribune
The website of the South Bend Tribune.
Yellow Springs News
The online edition of the YS News.
Poynter Online
Poynter.org is updated every day with information for journalists and has a career section to help those struggling with their job search.
Ask the Recruiter
Joe Grimm, formerly of the Detroit Free Press, started this blog to help answer some of journalists' toughest career questions. The blog is updated daily and readers are invited to ask Joe questions, as well.
Online portfolio of Amanda Sommers, a Ball State journalism student
Amanda's portfolio is an example of how many employers no longer want hard-copy portfolios-- they want to see your work online as well for ease of access!
Tips for journalism grads
A post on 10,000words.net with 30 tips for recent graduates to learn to market themselves!
American Journalism Review
This is the web site for the American Journalism Review, a magazine published 6 times a year that covers everything from print to online media.
I will try to update this later with more links. Hopefully these will be of interest!
Journalism student plans venture into online world
Heather Fullenkamp, a bubbly 2009 Ball State graduate with a degree in Journalism Graphics, just completed her first year at the University's Journalism Graduate School, where she is studying basic Journalism. While she was an undergraduate at Ball State, she studied "a little of everything" under the Journalism Graphics umbrella, including graphic design, advertising, writing, marketing, web design and multimedia. Unfortunately, when Heather enrolled in the graduate school, she found her choices were much more limited.
"The only options for the Journalism Graduate School are basic Journalism, PR, and Literary Journalism...so I went with basic Journalism with the hopes of taking more graphics-based classes. Which I haven’t yet- but still plan to," she wrote in her email.
Like other young people who may be wary of going into the print journalism world post-graduation, Heather plans on using the skills she has learned to pursue a career in web design. She appreciates what studying journalism has taught her, she said. "I know that the skills I learned because of journalism...the skills to communicate clearly and efficiently, will go with me no matter where I end up."
Heather is certainly aware of the state of print journalism today, but like the other women I have interviewed over the course of this study, she is optimisic about the future of journalism in general. She wrote, "In our electronic world, many print items are being left to the collectors, but the fundamentals of those fields like English or journalism, will remain. It will always be important to know how to convey a message to a large audience."
In the current economic crisis, Heather is lucky-- she has also been able to use her skills to secure a job at WIPB-TV and Indiana Public Radio, where she has been doing web design and occasionall print design for two years. Her advice for recent grads like herself looking for work? Make yourself marketable! "The fundamental writing or print design skills will always be helpful, but it’s also important to step outside the box and familiarize yourself with as many different skills and capabilities as possible," she wrote.
In the changing world of journalism, it is clear that someone interested in the field must be dynamic and able to work with many different aspects of journalism. It may seem daunting, but as younger people Heather has found, it will pay off.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Reporter sees new medium in future

The next interview I conducted was with Becky Emmons, a staff reporter at the South Bend Tribune. She was kind enough to drop by my house on a Sunday afternoon and we had a quick chat.
Becky started working at the South Bend Tribune in January 1972, a month after her graduation from Indiana University with a degree in Journalism and History. She said she was lucky to find a position so quickly at the time. "...Everyone wanted to be a reporter- it was a hot field, [so it was] hard to get a job," she said.
She didn't think she'd stick with it, but found that she liked the job a lot. She worked as assistant editor from 1975 to 1982, then decided to go part-time to spend more time with her four sons. She has remained part-time since, but has still noticed many changes in the atmosphere in the Tribune newsroom over the years, as well as many changes in the paper itself.
"There's not good morale [in the newsroom]," she said, referring to the state of the newsroom after the loss of many staffers due to the buyouts. "There are fewer people on staff now- fewer people doing more work."
Possibly due to this, she mentioned the biggest change she has seen at the paper: the exclusion of a lot of national and international news. "Gradually things have become more local. The front page is no longer what's happening in the world... people want to read local news on the cover." Since many people now get most of their news from the internet or television, the Tribune has really become "a great big hometown paper," Becky said. "But that's something we can do."
Becky said that it's in the past five years that becoming a journalist has faded from the "hot" list of jobs. "It happened very quickly," she said. The way she sees the future, though, is more positive. "[Journalism] has changed so much... there's [always] going to need to be news reporters and news gatherers, but it's going to be a different medium. Print media as we know it... not looking good."
For those who might be iffy about entering the field now, consider this. There will always be a need for people to find and write stories. Becky suggests an aspiring reporter hone up on his or her internet skills in addition to writing skills; with the increasing popularity of blogs and sites like Twitter, there's never been a better time to improve these skills.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Smaller newspapers find footing in struggling industry

"We're so odd and out of the mainstream here," said Diane about the newspaper. "What journalism really is about, especially small-town journalism, [is] curiosity about the world and about people." The decline in print media really has not affected newspapers in small communities like Yellow Springs, where residents depend on the paper to provide them with their local news. There are only nine independent weekly papers in Ohio now, she said, but still has faith in the future of these small papers.
And as far as the future of print? Diane believes there is certainly a positive future ahead. "[There's] lots of opportunity in small communities for newspapers. It's a very meaningful job; you feel like you're doing something important and meaningful to the community."
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Former reporter struggles after layoffs

Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Getting started
I decided to look at this subject from a "people perspective." So far, I have interviewed a woman who lost her job at a city newspaper a year ago and has yet to find a new job. I am also planning on talking to a woman who still has part-time employment at that same paper, and someone who is working at a fairly successful small weekly paper. I hope to publish my findings to this blog, adding photos and hopefully video that I have taken.
I want to look at the effects this perceived decline in print journalism has caused, and what this is doing to the people involved. What is multimedia and online journalism (and "citizen journalism") doing to professional journalists? I hope to explore this through several different voices in this blog.
My next post will be about my interview with Marti Heline, a former reporter for the South Bend Tribune and current freelance writer and editor.
