This video explains how to create a staff application or other form in Google forms and then embed the form in your WordPress website.
Tag archive for "scholastic journalism"
This video explains how to create a staff application or other form in Google forms and then embed the form in your WordPress website.
As you know (or might not), my experience is in newspapers and other print and online publications. Yearbooks are a bit of a mystery. I never worked on my high school yearbook staff, but being a reader — and naturally nosy — I stared for hours at the photos and read every bit of the yearbook copy, as awful as it often was. So I’m excited about advising a yearbook staff but am apprehensive about the quality of journalism that goes into many books and the realistic potential of incorporating the web and multimedia tools.
While learning about themes and design at a yearbook workshop in Dallas this weekend (and how to up the journalism quotient), I began thinking of how online journalism concepts could be incorporated into the yearbook. (No worries — I would never advocate getting rid of the physical book. Who knows if the Internet will be around in 100 years?)
User-generated content — Many yearbook staffs are already soliciting photos from students through Facebook. I could see the photos — a form of citizen journalism — displayed on a page devoted to submitted photos or throughout the book with a special tag to indicate it was a reader photo. This would be a great marketing tool and help build buzz around the yearbook. Contests could be held during the year for students to submit their best photos. This could be especially useful for small staffs. (Before the photos made it into the print yearbook, staffers would have to get the larger digital file of the photo from the submitter in person rather than take it off Facebook to preserve the quality of the photo.)
UPDATE: Christine Grazio, a rep with one of the yearbook companies, added polls and quotes to the mix of possible user-generated content. Which makes me wonder — why not have a contest or solicit first-person personal essays from students to be printed in the yearbook?
Website — A yearbook website will be more static than a news website, but it’s a necessary tool for marketing the book and gathering information from teachers, administrators and students about upcoming events and coverage ideas through tools like Google forms. Staffers could post updates on the book throughout the year and even ask students to vote on the theme and cover design to get students more involved and feel more connected to the finished product. A calendar showing which events yearbook staff plan to cover and a schedule of group and individual posed photos would not only show those outside of class how hard staffers try to cover a variety of events, but it would also help teachers, coaches and club leaders determine whether their big events are on staff radar.
Social media — Facebook and Twitter are good marketing tools for the newspaper and yearbook. And they can be useful for finding story ideas and sources. Lots of yearbooks on Twitter. It helps if one staff member has the role of social media editor to plan posts on these sites and create a social media strategy.
These are the three areas I plan to focus on this year. Hopefully my students will be able to come up with others. If you have had success bringing online journalism to the yearbook classroom, please share in the comments section or send me an email.
The stress of waking up before dawn to post news online and worrying about page hits contributes to online journalists leaving the field, according to an article in Sunday’s New York Times.
That might be so, but this phenomenon isn’t exclusive to online journalism. During my days as a “print” reporter, we too faced the stress of being the first to post stories and hoping they’d end up in the “most viewed” section of the website. I’d equate that stress to the adrenaline rush that hits right before deadline — any deadline.
What’s causing journalists to leave the business might have more to do with the 13,500 journalism jobs lost in the past three years. Fewer journalists mean more work for the ones left behind. Or less news. Many news organizations scale back coverage, even as they increase rates, which is a rant for another blog. But for online-only news organizations like Politico or traditional newspapers aiming for a large presence online, the competition is fierce, causing too much stress and then burnout, according to the article:
Physically exhausting assembly-line jobs these are not. But the workloads for many young journalists are heavy enough that signs of strain are evident.
“When my students come back to visit, they carry the exhaustion of a person who’s been working for a decade, not a couple of years,” said Duy Linh Tu, coordinator of the digital media program at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. “I worry about burnout.”
I think the article could have used more reporting, and the premise should be shifted more to journalism in general, but the stress is real, regardless of what’s causing it.
How can this be avoided in the classroom? And what skills do students need to be better prepared for what awaits them?
This is a topic that needs more discussion. I don’t think any teacher wants to prepare his students to enter a sweatshop, so first off is to encourage them to choose a second major, just in case.
• More seriously, getting all students somewhat involved in the running of the website and creating an environment where site management is spread out among several students, with each one having a specific role, can ease some stress. Don’t let all of the work fall on one or two students. Content-management systems are made for easy uploading of information, so all students should be able to post their own content — pending approval of the editor or adviser, of course.
• Encourage students to unplug occasionally, even in an “online” journalism classroom.
• I’m hoping others have better ideas, but in the meantime, I’d like to encourage students to be leaders and even entrepreneurs in this new world of journalism, so they can eventually create their own work environments where it’s understood that quality journalism takes time and manpower.
Because the best journalism cannot be done as the Times article describes, “shackled to their computers, where they try to eke out a fresh thought or be first to report even the smallest nugget of news — anything that will impress Google algorithms and draw readers their way.”
Good ol’ shoe-leather reporting still gets hits. And with iPhones, it’s easier than ever before to leave the newsroom and report from the field.
UPDATE: Online news outlets have responded to the Times article. Here’s a good one.
Cramming everything students need to know about new media into a few days of training is tough. There’s so much to choose from. So many programs to learn. So many cool web projects to create.
Here’s a tentative plan for a new media training I’ll be doing in Austin in August for TAJE and ILPC. I’d love feedback on topics I should include or leave out. These are lessons I also plan to cover in the first couple of months of school as my students at Dripping Springs High School get their website up and running.
These should be used as a guide for any web projects and the site as a whole. I have students come up with ideas for how they will address these areas after analyzing scholastic and professional news sites.
This is where I fit in the importance of finding a balance of content-aggregation and content-creation.
This is where I get kind of philosophical. Incorporating online journalism into a scholastic journalism program (or a professional newsroom for that matter) is more than just adding a website and putting the print stuff online. I don’t like to gloss over the massive change required to give students the most realistic experience. The web must come first. Print must now give readers a different experience: longer stories written in a narrative structure and fewer stories that give weeks-old news in inverted pyramid form. The web and print must be equal, which includes the amount of pull the staff for both publications have over content.
We don’t all need to be writing code, but we can’t rely on the techie in the corner to do everything. Knowing how websites work is an important tool for everyone to have, and knowledge is of course power. Giving up that kind of power isn’t good for journalism — or a scholastic journalism program in the long run as kids with that knowledge graduate.
First you have to decide between a static versus dynamic site. Once you go with a dynamic site, you pick a content-management system. There are also a couple of choices for programs that don’t want to set it up, which are great options for the first couple of years to get the hang of posting to the web. You’ll pay in flexibility or cost though.
WordPress is the most widely used and the easiest to work with without knowing too much code, so I would go with this one. But no matter which one you choose, going the route of a content-management system (the dynamic site) is the best choice because students should be familiar with the concept and have experience uploading to the web. Which brings us to…
Usability, accessibility and good old-fashioned design come into play here.
It’s different, as are headlines. I also like to cover blogging in this portion.
Copyright, quick editing and creating photo galleries and stories.
Oh-so-important for teens. Anyone out there creating iPhone and iPad apps?
Issuu.com is the big one.
Staffers can’t be everywhere. Make use of students who are — and their photos.
An important part of multimedia is planning. Make sure you do this and you’ll never see a video package that makes you wonder if all this fancy stuff is taking away from the actual journalism.
These are the big three. People ask what programs students should know. Audacity is a free, easy-to-learn audio editing program. I like Soundslides, which was developed by a journalist for meshing audio with photos in a super-easy format. For video, iMovie is just as good for students who don’t have the time or interest to take a more-intensive video training to learn Adobe Premiere or Final Cut Pro.
From map mashups to multimedia tools like vuvox.com and dipity.com, there’s no shortage of free tools out there to create cool multimedia projects.
This is a biggie. I’ve yet to see two programs organized exactly the same way for print, broadcast or convergence. Here’s how I plan to set up staff, and here’s how other schools do it.
Social media is a becoming a large part of marketing a site and newsgathering, which increases the need for social media ethics policies.
Gotta have a plan. Who will post what when? Who manages the Twitter feed? What is breaking news? How will you handle posting breaking news to the site? What topics would work with a live chat? Where are we? Is this real life? Why are we doing all of this?
Oh yeah, because it’s important for students to learn these skills, and for the future of journalism.
© 2010 Journalism Classroom Notebook