9 responses to “High school confidential: journalism's changing, but jobs are still out there”

  1. Bruce Byfield

    “Ended up writing for a website?”

    You make that sound like second-best. Believe me, often it’s not.

    I am a freelancer whose income comes almost entirely from on-line sales, and I see no disadvantages to it.

    At a professional site, you can not only sell a story for more than you can to a magazine or a newspaper, but for an audience three or four times larger than for a print sale.

  2. Walter L. Johnson II

    This post is just another example of how quickly times are changing. While opportunities for the so-called “old media”–i.e., magazines and daily newspapers–other opportunities are slowly, but surely emerging. It’s just that aspiring journalists just have to work harder to find those opportunities, the so-called “diamonds in the rough”.

  3. Barack Obama » High school confidential: journalism’s changing, but jobs are still out there

    [...] [...]

  4. Is there money to be made in freelancing? | Girl On The Write Freelance

    [...] The con: I had the unhappy job of informing [students] career options for journalism graduates today aren’t anything they”re likely to see on TV. With newspapers and magazines laying off staff by the thousands and people getting more of their news online, the industry is changing completely. [...]

  5. Chas J. Hartman

    I tell my students all the time that jobs in journalism will always exist. It’s more of a matter of how the news will be conveyed to the public as we move further away from print. If anything, it’s exciting that we all have more opportunities to write, publish and communicate than ever before thanks to the Internet.

  6. Rachel Jay

    As a Junior in high school currently, with apirations in breaking into the journalism field, I found this very supportive. I have had planty tell me that the field will die and my dream with it sooner than later, but still cannot see any other field that would suit as a career for me. My question is this:

    An individual informed me that my best luck in getting a job woud be to get my degree in Multimedia Communications. Another informed me that I should minor in something other than journalism and go on to get a degree in a particular area of journalism.
    What would be most beneficial to me when it comes to college and schooling if I want to break into the journalism field??????

    Thank you again to Michelle Rafter and others whose ideas and thoughts have instilled a higher degree of confidence in my future!!!

  7. Michelle Rafter

    OK, maybe that was a bad word choice on my part – I also write for more online pubs than print magazines these days and they’re a major source of my income too. But I don’t think the average high-school age aspiring journalist sees Websites as a legitimate job opportunity. I’m sure that will quickly change.

    Michelle R.

  8. Michelle Rafter

    Agree 100 percent.

    Michelle R.

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