Feeds:
Posts
Comments

NCTJ Accreditation

I went to the University of Lincoln for my Journalism degree, however it is not NCTJ accredited. At the time we thought it would gain accreditation during our time there, however this was not the case and now 3 years later a group of us are leaving without it.

How important do you think accreditation is for a journalist? Would you employ a newly qualified journalist who was not accredited?

I have applied for jobs as a trainee journalist which request applicants hold the NCTJ accreditation. I have still applied for them as I feel, despite not having shorthand (and we will get on to that later) I am a good journalist and I have the necessary skills to do the job well, even better than some accredited journalists I am sure. I have not heard back from most of them.

I am mostly applying for jobs as a features writer or food writer as this is where my passion for writing lies, but why should I be stopped from doing news journalism, which I enjoy, just because of 4 letters missing from my degree? Surely a 3 year degree, 1 maxed out credit card, 1 blown overdraft and a huge student loan to pay off shows my enthusiasm and dedicated towards the profession.

I have heard of students lying on their CV’s that they are accredited just so they can get in the front door, but surely this is just encouraging unethical journalists? Apprentice winner Lee McQueen lied on his CV and look where that got him…. Oh wait probably not a good example.

I have read McNae’s Essential Law for Journalists; I have sat exams on law and public administration as well as human rights. But does that matter?

Shorthand

I have not taken any shorthand lessons as at my university they were charged as an extra on top of the tuition fees and held in the evenings, when I was working for minimal wage in order to pay my rent.

There is always a big debate on whether or not journalists need shorthand anymore, some say there is a great need for it if you are covering court stories and recording devices are not allowed to be used. However what about other journalists who don’t cover court? Sure you could be half way through an interview when your recorder packs up, so carry 2. Have extra batteries and always check it is working before you leave the house.

I do intend on learning shorthand, but I will be teaching myself using the Teeline course. Surely though if this is such an essential it should be a genuine unit in all journalism courses, not an after thought?

Work Experience

I undertook 2 weeks work experience at News International back in 2000, I think it was. I also started and edited a magazine whilst at university. However I have never had the financial stability to be able to say “Ok I won’t have a summer job, instead I will go and do unpaid work experience in London for a few weeks” I would have loved to have done some work experience at newspapers and magazines, but like a lot of my friends found myself unable to afford to do so.

Should work experience be a built in part of the course, where you are given prior notice that in February 2009 you will have 2 weeks off university to do solely work experience? I know someone will claim “you do get notice, it’s called the Easter holidays” but this is time I know I can work and earn money. Time during semester dedicated to work experience, I would have used to get experience… and because I knew it was coming, I could have saved from the previous job enough to afford travel and such.

So does a lack of official work experience make a good journalist any less employable now? Like dozens of recently graduated journalists, I fear it does.

I am really interested to hear what others think about this and whether or not accreditation, shorthand and work experience are as necessary as some think.
Some interesting links:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2001/sep/03/mondaymediasection.choosingadegree

http://srh.typepad.com/blog/2007/09/nctj-justifies-.html

I have thought about it “long and hard” and decided I will be supporting Italy in Euro2008. Why? Well I could claim it is because of certain player which takes my fancy or the talent of the team… but it is because of the food. Sounds sad I know, but it is a great way of deciding a team to support.

Their fixtures are shown below:

9/6/2008 – v Netherlands @ 20:45
13/6/2008 – v Romania @ 18:00
17/6/2008 – v France @ 20:45

So in true (fake) Italian style I have even learnt the words to their national anthem:

“Italian Brothers,
Italy has awakened,
She has wreathed her head
With the helmet of Scipio.
Where is Victory?
She bows her head to you,
You, whom God created
As the slave of Rome.
Let us band together,
We are ready to die,
(repeat)
Italy has called us.
(repeat previous four lines)
(repeat entire song)”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6heDoifNnk don’t Italians know how to party!

 

Who are you supporting? Do you ever care now that England won’t be playing? Let me know.

Journalist Ellie Levenson has recently launched a very interesting piece of campaigning journalism regarding access to emergency contraception. The website is well worth a look as is the petition. I agree with Ellie that women should be able to have more control over things such as emergency contraception after all it is our bodies. I have a heard a few good debates on this topic so am intrigued what some of you think, so have a read and let me know.

 

“Basically, at the moment if a woman wants emergency contraception she must get it herself at the time of needing it. Although in 2006 the Royal Pharmaceutical Society issued a statement saying that it is not against the advanced supply of emergency contraception in principle, in many instances women are being refused advance provision by pharmacists.

This means that a woman can’t buy it in advance from pharmacies to keep in the bathroom cabinet in case a condom splits. Nor can someone else buy it for her unless they can convince the pharmacist that it is an exceptional situation such as a person being housebound. Being stuck at work or at home looking after children is not usually deemed a good enough reason. Mums cannot buy it for daughters. A woman’s partner cannot buy it for her. Nor can her friend.

Many people including some pharmacists argue that this is because emergency contraception should not be used other than in an emergency and that they need to ask certain questions of women before they can take it. This suggests women are incapable of self-diagnosing – something we actually do every time we take a painkiller which, taken wrongly, could also harm us.” Ellie Levenson

http://www.womenarenotstupid.co.uk/ - The Campaign Website

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/morningafterpill/ - The Petition

I am now on Twitter, feel free to follow me if you like!

http://twitter.com/emmawilliams

For my dissertation I decided on the title “Suicide to Sidewalk: A critical analysis of whether suicide is ethically portrayed within the British media” and have been researching the topic in great detail over the past few months. When I started looking in to the reporting of suicide, the main areas I was going to focus on were the reports surrounding David Kelly’s death, reports of young people and the 9/11 “falling man” photograph… however then came Bridgend.

The suicides which have taken place in Bridgend, Wales have provided some classic examples of how to and how not to report suicide. Following one of the victim’s mothers speech on the media’s influence which she claimed led to his death, the media has been finding itself under scrutiny. So of course, I dropped a lot of the research I was conducting and went about researching the Bridgend suicides which now form the main part of my dissertation.

As part of my dissertation I am surveying journalists, the public, mental health workers, professionals… anybody who reads a newspaper really and asking them how ethically they think newspapers report suicide. I have also asked what words people think are acceptable/unacceptable to use when reporting suicide, the main reason the alleged connotations behind using “committed suicide” in a report.

The link to the survey is http://www.eSurveysPro.com/Survey.aspx?id=bbe536df-06ed-45f8-8d93-d392e32b9229 if you could spare a few minutes and answer the questions that would be brilliant.

If anyone is able to help me with my research then please do get in touch at williams.emmajane@gmail.com

Will keep you up to date with how the write up is coming.

My second favourite book of all time has recently been made in to a film. The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory is a truly brilliant book which gives a fascinating insight in to the Tudor way of life. Full of corruption, deceit, sex and scandal it is a complete page turner which I just could not put down.

So when I found out they were making it in to a film I didn’t know whether to be excited or worried. I am a big fan of the Dan Brown books especially The Da Vinci Code, however after watching the film and leaving disappointed I swore to never watch another film remake of a favourite book of mine.

But… I am going to give cinema one last chance. With 2 Americans and an Australian as the leads in a movie set in England, I am hoping their accents will have been sorted. Having watched the trailer, it seems Nat Portman who is playing Anne suits the role amazingly as does Eric Bana as Henry. I am however completely failing to see how Scarlett Johansson works as the sweet, innocent Mary – we will see though hey!

The Other Boleyn Girl is out on 7 March 08 so I will post my review of the film sometime next week.

For those of you who are interested, here is the trailer http://imdb.com/title/tt0467200/trailers-me701036451

GuardianMedia has today reported that Bauer Consumer Media will be axing First and New Woman Magazine. The article claims around 49 journalists risk losing their jobs due to the closures, which begs the question did anyone see this coming?

New Woman’s circulation figures have fallen by 45.3% since 2006, so it is obvious the re-branding in to NW 2 years ago did not provide the miracle the magazine needed. My sympathies go out to anyone who is losing their job due to these closures and I hope the decline of readership is not something which affects all women’s magazines.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/feb/08/emap.pressandpublishing?gusrc=rss&feed=media


On http://www.nwdaily.co.uk New Woman magazine’s website, it states that:

“NW Magazine was recently, voted the PPA Magazine of the Year. And deservedly so, as NW magazine is one of the biggest, brightest, best-selling women’s magazine’s currently to be found on your newsagents shelves.”

Now what sort of bright magazine would, in an article titled “Are you suffering from Boyfriend Envy” (In December issue 07) in a box at the end of the article titled “‘DON’T FANCY YOURS MUCH!’”, include a photograph of troubled actor Owen Wilson with a caption next to it saying “He’d dazzle everybody with his wit, but you could never trust him with your razor blades”

Now to me this is not the sort of thing “the biggest, brightest, best-selling women’s magazine” should be producing. This is irresponsible, naive journalism at the very least.

I have made no secret of that fact I used to be manic depressive, self-harmed and on more than one occasion tried to take my own life. I was diagnosed with depression when I was 15, manic depressive at age 19 and self-harmed for around 2 years, however I am not ashamed of my illness.

According to the 2001 census 1.7% of 16-19 year-olds, and 2.2% of 20-24 year-olds or about 127,000 have suffered from a depressive episode.

Further research conducted as part of the national inquiry in to self-harm called “truth hurts” also found that 1 in 15 young people (aged 11-25) have self-harmed.

A survey conducted in 2002 where 6020 young people were questioned called ‘Deliberate self-harm in adolescents: self report survey in schools in England’ showed that females are more likely to self-harm than males.

So why is a female orientated magazine aimed at young women making light of something as painful and upsetting as self-harm?

A lot of people already find it hard to discuss mental health problems, including self-harm which makes it a “scary” taboo subject. However with the media making sick jokes about these issues, they are surely making the problem worse?

If I put myself in that dark place I found myself when I was self-harming and depressive, then read the comment made by New Woman I immediately feel belittled. It feels as if someone is saying “No-one would want this guy because he has mental health issues” so I think “No-one would want me either because I have the same issue as him…”

This is a very scary place for someone to put themselves in, the last thing a depressed young woman or indeed man needs to hear is that someone in the same frame of mind as them is unwanted, mocked and isolated from society.

I have never felt so alone then when I was self-harming, which may sound selfish as I had amazing support from my friends and family. However what I refer to as my “demons inside” were telling me that those people didn’t care, it was me against everyone else and it was always going to be like that.

Even now when I have had a bad day I will find a little voice in my head saying self-harm will make it that little bit more tolerable, but I can say with all sincerity that it doesn’t. Not for the long term anyway.

The pain and absolute hell I went through made me who I am today, it taught me that it is ok to cry in front of your friends and family, that it is ok to rely on other people and not always be “happy happy”.

So for anyone who has or does self-harm the advice I can give you is to talk to someone. We need as a nation to talk to each other more about problems such as this and not be ashamed of them. People may accuse you of being attention seeking, but they don’t know what is going on inside your head so tell them… Their accusations (in my case anyway) just highlighted their own insecurities and by trying to blame me as being attention seeking they were trying to deal with what they saw happening to me… they were scared too.

I hope this helps someone, but at least it is out there now. I am not going to be taboo about self-harm or mental health as a journalist so why should everyone else?

A few useful links:
http://www.selfharmuk.org/docs/The_truth_about_self_harm.pdf – Truth Hurts
http://www.youngminds.org.uk/ – Young Minds Organisation
http://www.selfharm.org.uk/default.aspa – Young people and Self-Harm
http://www.mind.org.uk/ – Mental Health Charity
http://www.nshn.co.uk/ – The National Self-Harm Network
http://www.samaritans.org/ – The Samaritans

This is an award which an ex-student from the University of Lincoln is advertising, for more information go to http://www.eujournalist-award.eu/your-competition.html

I am going to enter, will let you know what story I end up doing and the outcome.

Emma

Well the Christmas buzz is over and done with for another year, well for journalists another few months as I started getting press releases in August last year for Christmas 07!

I always neglect my blog over the holidays, but seen as Christmas was the last holiday as a student for me this should no longer be a problem.

I am off to York tomorrow as I won a place on the Flying Start programme for female entrepreneurs. I am hoping to develop Pulp Magazine in to something I can continue with and make succesful once I graduate from university.

Anyway had better go to bed now, I will let you know how it goes… wish me luck!

Emma

http://www.flyingstart-ncge.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=152&Itemid=104 (link for more information)

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »