Bridging the gap: professional journalists and journalism educators should join forces to strengthen both of their domains.
Hamilton, John Maxwell ; Izard, Ralph
Professional journalists and journalism educators should join forces
to strengthen both of their domains.
THE NEWSPAPER EDITOR TELEphoned the director of his journalism
school, the one he attended 25 years before and remembered with such
fondness. He had decided he should step down as vice president of the
school's alumni advisory board.
"I don't identify with the school anymore," he
explained. "You're hiring all those Ph.Ds. Hell, an editor
like me wouldn't even qualify for a job on the faculty. Let's
face it. You're not really a J-school anymore. You're mass
communications. All I really care about is journalism. Sorry, but I
don't think I can be of much help."
To those who know their journalism history, this estrangement is
not entirely new. It goes back to just after the Civil War, when the
nation's first journalism program was being tested at
Virginia's Washington College (now Washington & Lee). One
professor lamented "the torrent of ridicule being poured on us by
some of the papers in the country."
But some things are different these days. Professionals and
academics alike are dealing with rapid changes in communications, both
technologically and entrepreneurially. Both are desperately trying to
cope with the fact that new forms of information delivery are being
invented even as they boast of yesterday's accomplishments.
Complaints are flying on both sides.
This is a pity. More than ever, we need each other to develop
effective approaches to the journalism of the future. Some tension is
both natural and even healthy. But if we don't work together to use
that tension constructively, we'll both suffer in the long run.
And, ultimately, the losers will be the public, who will find the
quality of journalism diminished.
Not long ago, one of us told a group of broadcasters how our
curriculum was being improved by giving students a framework for
bringing the best practices to a rapidly changing news industry. After
hearing this spiel, a radio station owner piped up, "I don't
care about that. All I care about is whether your graduates can use a
tape recorder."
Few would take such a narrow view of journalism education. But the
remark hints at the perspectives that have perennially divided
journalists and journalism professors. deliberately existed largely on
the margin of university life. Now--for their own good and for the good
of the communication industries they serve--they can move toward the
center where they can be leaders of what author Peter Drucker calls the
post-industrial society.
This should be welcomed by the news and information industries. But
it isn't because those in the industries are equally distracted.
There are many reasons for these distractions. More than ever, news
executives believe they are forced to view new technology as a way of
reducing operating costs and providing more glitz in presentation. Too
many show less enthusiasm for using technology to improve the quality of
news content.
The public is not as dependent as it once was on daily journalism;
people can log on to their computers to chat with colleagues or to get
up-to-date information. Business executives get specialized news reports
by fax or computer.
This is not to say there are no positive signs of constructive
collaboration between journalism education programs and journalists.
Look at the number of schools endowed by--and named after--local media
families. Both of our schools fall into that category, and the results
have been crucial to the quality of our programs.
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The former, with largely middle-class tastes and deep skepticism of
elites, are suspicious of ivory-tower professors. Frontline news
supervisors in particular are anxious about whether recent graduates
have mastered basic skills needed on the job.
Typically, professors have what some would consider a theoretical
frame of mind. They must be interested in why journalistic norms and
practices exist. Many think about developing critical thinking skills
and tackling overarching questions.
In the Information Age, university media programs can branch into
many more areas beyond, for instance, the traditional newspaper. The
trend toward renaming "journalism" schools "mass
communication" reflects this fact.
This is not necessarily bad. In the past, J-schools were viewed
inside and perhaps even outside the academy as glorified vocational
programs. They
The Committee on Alliances, an arm of the national journalism and
mass communication educational organizations, has worked for several
years to stimulate cooperation between professionals and professors. A
recent survey showed many excellent examples of local cooperation,
clearly the place to begin.
The Media Studies Center in New York and other endeavors funded and
guided by the Freedom Forum have brought both sides together. The
American Press Institute and the Poynter Institute for Media Studies
welcome journalism educators to their programs. Other philanthropic
organizations built on media money, notably the Knight Foundation and
Scripps Howard Foundation, have invested heavily in journalism
education.
But other signs are bad.
LSU's Media Leaders Forum this year asked news executives if
they felt their ties with journalism educators were stronger, weaker or
never relevant to begin with. "Stronger" finished a weak
third. The same attitude surfaced when U.S. News & World Report
sought input from media professionals for a recent survey on journalism
graduate programs. So few bothered to respond that the editors could not
report a scientifically valid poll result.
Disturbingly, some formerly strong partnerships between the
profession and the academy are being dismantled:
* The Newspaper Association of America, made up of working
publishers, looked at its foundation in 1994 and wondered if it was
worth keeping. After reevaluation, and partly for financial reasons, it
decided to retain the foundation but focus it on what it perceived as
urgent needs, such as programs to cultivate readers. No longer would it
work, as it had since the early 1970s, as part of the Cooperative
Committee on Newspaper Education with the Association for Education in
Journalism and Mass Communication. Other traditional links with
J-schools would diminish, except when the foundation might commission an
academic to look at, for example, readership issues.
* The Society of Professional Journalists, founded in 1909 by
students on the campus of Depauw University in Greencastle, Indiana, has
served as a significant link between the profession and students--but
that may be changing. At national SPJ meetings, many professional
members complain loudly about the presence of students and student
programming at convention sessions. And the society's Mark of
Excellence student competition, designed initially to encourage and
reward outstanding student work, has been turned into a fundraising
activity with the initiation of entry fees that, in some cases,
discourage student participation.
* The Radio-Television News Directors Association has shown less
interest in doing anything special for journalism educators. Not long
ago, it decided to do away with the special reduced membership rate for
journalism educators. David Bartlett, RTNDA president, explains that
joint working groups at the national level simply haven't worked
well. "We both kind of didn't show up," he says.
* Newspaper Research Journal, a publication of the AEJMC's
Newspaper Division published at the Scripps School, is devoted to
providing reports of practical research written in understandable
language. Even though 20 of the journal's 76 manuscript reviewers
are professionals (and most of the academics have professional
backgrounds), the publication is virtually ignored by many executives
who, at the same time, say they are desperate for meaningful research to
"rude development of their industry.
Anyone who doubts the magnitude of these concerns can read a
Freedom Forum study released this summer. Conducted by Betty Medsger,
former chair of the Department of Journalism at San Francisco State
University, the report was based on a poll of 1,041 print and broadcast
journalists, 446 journalism educators and 500 newsroom recruiters and
supervisors.
She identified four trends in journalism education that were
labeled as disturbing: emphasis on faculty members with academic rather
than journalistic experience; elimination of journalism as a stand-alone
major; increased emphasis on communication theory at the expense of
basic reporting and writing skills; and a fear of an accreditation
process that inhibits discussion of crucial issues in journalism
education.
While it is easy to understand the frustration on both sides,
frustration is not a reason for either to turn its back. On the
contrary, it is a sign of the need to be mutually supportive at this
crucial time when practitioners and professors need each other more than
ever.
Broader journalism--and mass communication--programs will have
resources to help the profession learn more about how to travel new
thoroughfares. They can turn out graduates who understand the new
technology. They can provide special training for midcareer journalists
who feel they are behind the technology curve.
Professors can think about content as well as packaging news and
information in new ways, about which of the old practices should be
maintained and which should be discarded. It's true that
professionals can do these things, too, but it's a matter of
available time and opportunity. Journalism faculty do not have the same
daily pressures as practitioners, and in the classroom they are forced
to develop analysis and explanation of those practices that
professionals use almost by instinct.
In times like these it's too easy for practitioners, fighting
for their lives, to worry more about the bottom line than the higher
calling and old verities of news. The profession needs all the new ideas
the academy can provide.
The importance of universities to economic and social development
is well understood. And if journalism schools don't play a lead
role on campus in media development and teaching the best journalistic
practices, who will?
If journalists have much to gain, so too do educators stand to
benefit from a strong relationship. Technological change has opened
exciting new intellectual channels to be studied, but communications
resides comfortably--and securely--as a professional program. In fact,
this arrangement arguably is as essential to journalism education's
survival as having a strong base in the university. While mass
communication programs must satisfy academic standards, they are all the
stronger when they stress teaching that produces students well-prepared
for the industry as well as research that makes a difference. Being
relevant at a time when universities are under great financial stress is
a virtue that can't be ignored.
This is a prime example of the significant contributions a caring
industry can make to education. Unfortunately, the shift to analysis of
information will be pushed too far by some educators seeking on-campus
respectability. The shift could result in journalism education being
diluted unless there is considerable outside and inside pressure to
ensure that the integrity of core journalism skills and values is
maintained.
This could be facilitated by professionals who join journalism
faculties. But these new academics themselves have additional
responsibilities. Among Medsger's recommendations is one that
reduces the dichotomy between professionals and academics. She stresses
that professionals who move into the classroom must broaden their
perspectives by recognizing that "in their most enlightened forms,
research and teaching nourish each other." Teaching is not simply a
matter of telling war stories; rather, it involves linking professional
background with broader perspectives and sharing the result in the
classroom and through publication.
It's not likely that the tensions between the journalist and
journalism educators will abate soon. Change is coming too fast; anxiety
levels are too high. But both sides must be reconciled to the
traditional uneasiness that has characterized the relationship
historically. They must keep talking. This is the wrong time to slam the
door and go our separate ways.
John Maxwell Hamilton is dean of the Manship School of Mass
Communication at Louisiana State University. Ralph Izard is director of
the E. W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University.