Tag Archives: students

Resources for Grad Students

25 Aug
kid to do list, list, Be happy and go home

Ah, for the days when our to-do lists were so simple. From Carissa Rogers on Flickr.

I originally posted this on the course site for my Introduction to Graduate Studies in Mass Communication class, but thought I’d cross-post here as many who visit this site are likely interested in some of these resources as well. These are all books, software, and tools I discussed with my students on the first night of class. If you have other resources I should add, let me know in the comments!

Grad School and Academic Life

To-Do and Project Management

Time Management

Reference Management

Writing Tools

Higher Education News and Job Listings

Academic Job Search Resources

Miscellaneous

Will Young People Pay for News?

20 Jan

My students won’t pay for the New York Times.

When it implements its metered system in 2011, the New York Times is probably going to lose some of its most needed readers – young people who are slowly building an appetite for news.

I hope I’m wrong, and if I am, maybe some of my students or other young people will comment here and set me straight. But I think that today’s youth are so accustomed to free content, news and otherwise, that it will be difficult to change their ways and begin asking them to pay for news.

Photo by Flickr user striatic.

My students are not interested in paying for news, or for the entertainment they value: music or movies or TV shows. They’re used to getting all of these for free, either legally from sites like Hulu or through less ethical channels. I’ve asked them semester after semester about these issues, and they just aren’t willing to pay for any of it. They have always read news for free online, and asking them to pay is going to be a difficult demand.

It seems to me that a good starting point for getting young people to pay for news is to work with formats they have always paid for. For example, my students with iPhones are used to paying for apps. They don’t pay much for them, of course, but they do shell out a few dollars here and there. This is a media format that has always cost them money – not a new imposition of charges that will be seen as exactly that, an imposition and an “unfair” change in news organizations’ policies.

Working on young audiences first through these more familiar paid formats might be one strategy to open their minds to the need to pay for news. For example, The Guardian‘s iPhone app is $3.99, and may at some point involve further subscription fees. The McSweeney’s app is $5.99 and requires later renewals to keep new content coming. And yet the New York Times app is free. This seems like a missed opportunity to begin getting young people to pay for news access.

Photo by Flickr user LoveSystems.

I’m not personally opposed to the NYT‘s metering policy; I read the site extensively every day and will certainly end up paying for their content. I believe that if we want good journalism in the future, we have to put our money where it counts. I don’t think news organizations are obligated to provide their product for free, and I’d rather pay a reasonable amount for news than have it become solely reliant on advertising revenue and thereby even more subject to advertisers’ whims.

However, I’ve been socialized into believing that because I grew up in a family where newspapers showed up on the breakfast table daily, because I was required to engage with news throughout my education, and (especially) because I went on to graduate school in journalism and now teach it. I know that not everyone shares these values.

Therefore, I’d argue that beginning to ask younger generations to pay for online news – or at least the current generation of young people that is going to be most startled by this transition – needs to be accompanied by education about the value of journalism to our society. These young people, I fear, will be doubly skeptical of journalism: first because of the general public doubts about the value of the news media, and second because of what they may perceive as a “demand” for their money in return for online news.

Overcoming these doubts will require a great effort of education and positive public outreach on the part of the news organizations that hope to sell news to all their potential customers, young and old.

Teaching Personal Branding

13 Nov
profiles

Nice, but what's behind the profiles? Image by M. Keefe on Flickr.

Journalism and media students – and, in fact, all soon-to-be college graduates – are faced with a depressing job market and intense competition for the positions that are available. It might seem obligatory for faculty to do everything possible to help their students succeed professionally when they leave the university. But I am concerned about the growing emphasis on personal branding as a means of achieving that success and its consequences for students’ personal and intellectual growth.

Personal branding is increasingly touted as a way to conceptualize your everyday work, to delimit the projects you undertake, and to market yourself as a producer of unique projects that reflect your distinctive mindset and skill set.

This strategy is often mentioned these days as a way for journalists – and students hoping to enter the media professions – to distinguish themselves from their competitors for jobs and freelance assignments in an insecure and limited market.

I’m planning to discuss this concept with students in my media classes next semester. I know many other journalism and media professors are doing the same: encouraging students to envision themselves as experts in a particular area that they both like and see as marketable; to pursue more knowledge in that area; and then to market themselves as unique resources on that topic through blogging, for example. I’m struggling a bit, though, with the ethical ramifications of doing that.

Dan Schawbel, who runs a personal branding blog and wrote a book on it, has this advice for college students:

College student: A college student is interested in either getting an internship, starting a business or getting a corporate job upon graduation. They have to compete on experience and network extremely hard in order to get a job. They need to position themselves as superior relative to their peers. This means, becoming a leader in college organizations, meeting as many people as you can, forming a personal branding toolkit and starting when you’re a freshman are critical to your success.

So, according to Schawbel, this personal branding process begins with someone who is about 18 and who is probably still figuring out what major to pursue, not to mention what to do with his or her life. (Schawbel actually says high school students should have been working on personal branding already, especially for college applications.)

game

Teaching more than the rules of the game...what's the game for and about, anyway? Image by Intersection Consulting on Flickr.

I had the luxury of entering the university as an undergraduate with a semester and a half of Advanced Placement credit. I worked part-time off campus, but still had the opportunity to take more courses for fun in a broad variety of areas than many of my peers did. I took Italian. I took fencing. I took geology. I did a minor in Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Useful? Not so much. But really fun, and personally enriching.

Had someone I respected – e.g., a faculty member – strongly encouraged me to narrow down my self-concept and pursuit of knowledge, and told me I was unlikely to get a job in my desired profession otherwise, I don’t know if I’d have felt as willing to experiment with a variety of courses and ideas. Already, students at our university are having to whittle their coursework down to the bare minimum due to budget cuts, tuition increases and restricted course offerings. Is it fair for me to suggest that they confine their intellectual pursuits even further?

Clearly, there needs to be a balance between preparing students for the job market (what’s left of it, anyway) and encouraging them to think of themselves as more than employees or producers of stuff. They need to realize they are also thoughtful individuals with intellectual contributions to make as well. Simply forming students into products with distinctive brands – yet more commodities to be bought and sold – diminishes the act of teaching and the nature of the university as a place that values critical insight and deep thinking.

Although we all want students to graduate and embark on personally and professionally satisfying careers, can we address the challenge of “marketing yourself” in a way that retains the intellectual substance and personal satisfaction that are found through experiencing all the university has to offer? Particularly, students still need courses and assignments that cause them to think critically about the professions they hope to enter so that they aren’t simply becoming marketable automatons who produce whatever is most in demand at the moment, without regard for their work’s greater ramifications.

I think that for me, this balance will take the form of continuing to teach a critical perspective on media and journalism, inherent to all my courses, and also assigning tasks specific to helping students understand how they will attempt to position themselves personally in the media professions. These tasks would involve sincere reflection on the nature of the work they want to do and its fit with their beliefs, motivations, and desires. They need to be sure they actually fully understand their work and the consequences of their “brand,” and that they aren’t entering a profession or marketing themselves in a way that is in fact contrary to their personal beliefs. Such projects might intervene in students’ push for professional achievement so that they become thoughtful, ethical professionals who will ultimately be proud of their life’s work and will have made a contribution to their communities and society at large.

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