Monday, September 28, 2009

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Always Ally


Student journalist examines motivations

I’m sitting at the computer about to pull out every last strand of hair out of my head. It’s my first time doing an entire layout; I have no idea what I’m doing. Slowly but surely I’m going insane because of all the pressure I’m putting on myself. Then the ultimate question pops into my head: why am I still doing journalism when it can be the most stressful thing ever?
Finding the answer to this question takes a lot of thought. I have to start from the beginning by asking why I joined journalism in the first place. That reason was because I loved to write. I wrote poetry as a kid and even attempted a book, but that failed miserably. Once I hit high school I decided to do something different. My mom thought I would enjoy journalism so I signed up for the intro class. After journalism one, I knew I had to try newspaper because of the giddy feeling inside my stomach when my article first showed up in the paper.
Sophomore year was my first on staff. The people in my class made it so much more exciting than I could ever imagine. That year I absolutely loved class. Junior year was a little different. With our advisor gone for three months and all of the eccentric reporters having graduated, the fun in journalism began to slip away. This is when I had to decide whether or not to do it next year.
No one knew about the fight I had inside my head. I wasn’t really sure whether or not it would be worth the massive amounts of stress for my final year of high school. It took me a while to figure out what I was going to do, but I finally came to a conclusion; I have to do it again next year.
I realized that I thrive on interviewing students throughout the school. I love the feeling in the gut of my stomach when I’m nervous to go interview a person whom I have never met or seen in my entire life.
I get really excited when the delivery guy wheels in the huge stacks of newspapers. I smell the freshness of the ink on the papers and see the colors of the front-page pop out and I get shivers up my spine.
The aspect I love the most about newspaper is writing my columns. Most people don’t believe what I write is what I think. That’s not true. I don’t get to voice my actual opinion all that much, and to be able to do that with out someone interrupting me is truly exhilarating. Without being able to voice my opinion this way I would explode.
So it’s safe to say that without journalism, I would burst into millions of pieces.

Workshop teaches cooperation

Dexter Ott walks into a large museum full of eager children, who swarm the many activities awaiting them. Today, they can be a doctor, an astronaut, a farmer, or truck driver. They invent marvelous stories and go on many adventures. The scene is frantic, with parents running to chase their young ones, and employees impatiently waiting on their adolescent campers. Among the chaos, Dexter sees a story, his instinct helping to guide him in the quest. He recently discovered this inner journalist, a discovery he made at journalism camp.
The NHSPA journalism workshop took place on the UNL city campus this year, a four-day event with a diverse list of tracks for the high school students. Each day was filled with classroom time, hard work, and a little amount of sleep. The daily routine affected the campers with a grueling agenda to mold the reporters, photographers, writers, and editors into more successful journalists.
Dexter attended band camp in the past, but skipped it this year, journalism camp was happening at the same time, a new challenge for him.
“It’s [writing class] pointing out a lot of tiny things in my writing that I would never even think of fixing in there,” Dexter said. “And by fixing those I make the story a lot better and it’s really helped my writing overall.”
It gave a chance for Dexter to enter a new world of interviews, articles, and deadlines. Dexter worked with his peers from schools across the state of Nebraska on a level playing field. Journalistic writing class provided a chance to join together with more experienced journalists, instead of competing against them.
Editors, photographers, and writers were grouped and given the task of creating a story together, something Dexter was not accustomed to. It supplied him with a real world experience that he would some day face in the professional world. The converging of different styles of journalism for a main goal, to tell a story and find the perfect angle in which to tell it. As new media continues to develop, the cooperation of different journalistic techniques becomes necessary to tell a story in full detail, to get the best in-depth coverage.
“It’s actually been pretty cool getting to work with them,” Dexter said. “Like the photographers have been really great and they have been, of course, doing their jobs. The editor has been such a great guy like he’s gotten interviews set up; just an amazing help.”
This year, NHSPA introduced a new convergence to three different schools in hope that they could test the idea. This challenged them to strive for a merge of broadcast, writing, and photography in order to join a more modern era of journalism. To report the stories more efficiently. Dexter was not a part of this large convergence, but sees the importance of it for the future.
“Like, for a lot of papers you don’t have one specific job you have to do more things to and you also get to learn more too.” Dexter said. “It will also help you build more relationships with other people you’re working with.”

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