ABSTRACT

This book considers the role journalism education plays in coping with a changing media landscape. It looks at how journalists can empower themselves in an effort to excel in an evolving environment and considers whether it suffices for them to master ‘pre-millennial’ basic skills or whether brand new competencies need to be incorporated.

Few dramatic qualifications are spared when discussing the changes that have shaken the news environment during the noughties. Digitization has both empowered and tried professional journalists through multimedia news production, media convergence and not least a maturing commercial internet. Moreover, digitization has also influenced, and been influenced by, other societal changes such as global financial tensions, evolving multicultural societies, and emerging democracies in search for a suitable journalistic paradigm. Indeed, the rather technological evolutions emphasized time and again, cannot be detached from a cultural setting. This is why an investigation in required competencies benefits from an explicit socio-cultural and cross-continental perspective. As this book tackles a varied set of ‘news ecosystems’, it is our hope to offer a nuanced view on what indeed seems to be a global fluidity in journalism practice.

Explicit emphasis is put on the role of journalism education as facilitator for, and even innovator in, required journalistic competencies. Time will tell whether or not ‘news ecosystems’ will again stabilize. This volume makes a number of concrete recommendations towards journalism training and discusses a number of case studies across several continents, illustrating how goals are attuned to a changed news environment. As this book links academic paradigms to concrete journalism practice and education, its reading is recommended both for practitioners and educators.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Journalism Practice.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

Cross-continental views on journalistic skills in the digital age

chapter |18 pages

Journalistic Tools of the Trade in Flanders

Is there a fit between journalism education and professional practice?

chapter |18 pages

Beacons of Reliability

European journalism students and professionals on future qualifications for journalists 1

chapter |21 pages

The Global Journalist in the Twenty-First Century

A cross-national study of journalistic competencies

chapter |15 pages

Culture Clash

International media training and the difficult adoption of Western journalism practices among Indonesian radio journalists

chapter |13 pages

Investigative Journalism on Campus

The Australian experience

chapter |19 pages

Beyond Skills Training

Six macro themes in South African journalism education