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Guy Berger's picture

How to prepare the preparers!

US j-teacher Carol Ames has summarised our syndicate discussions at the WJEC-AMIC conference on how to get journ-education digitalised. Two nice points:

"How do we prepare our students for whichever version of the “new” media they will be expected to use to produce interesting stories or compelling content? And more importantly, how do we first prepare ourselves?"

Guy Berger's picture

Doesn’t digital also change the basics of j-teaching?

Some folk at WJEC-AMIC are focussing on how to prep students for a world of Web 2.0 and Journ 2.0 – but what about Journ-Ed 2.0?

Rosental Alves says students’ cognitive processes are changing, and so should journ-ed. “We should and must change the ways we teach and absorb in classroom, and pay attention to the new languages.” In addition, “E-learning will become a very important component, regardless of distance.” What he could have added is using ICT to harness global potential in learning.

Guy Berger's picture

France teaches j-students to work with Web 2.0

J-students at the Institut Pratique de Journalisme (IPJ) are learning for jobs that don’t yet exist. Addressing WJEC & AMIC, School head Pascal Guenee says this means:

• Replacing old specialisations of radio, print, TV with education in sound, text and image.
• Learning about sound means interviews, recording, editing – for radio, web and podcasts.
• Same applies to images and text.

Guy Berger's picture

Rosental the revolutionary

Rosental Alves, a self-confessed revolutionary, says he will have to act like a machinegun – “Drrr! Drrr!”, he performs.

It’s because he only has 15 mins to present on the impact digital journalism has on j-education. And indeed, he blasts his audience at WJEC - Amic – with high quality insight. But, woe, there’s not enough time to finish the volley. Probably lots of myths still survive.

The man behind the amazing annual online journ symposium at Univ of Texas made these points:

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