New Year’s Resolutions Every College Newspaper Should Make

11_07_3-fireworks_webEvery newspaper can fall into a pattern of static publishing and not growing with the times. The faltering economy and pessimistic job opportunities in journalism can level college journalists feeling discouraged and downtrodden. Don’t let it. Start the year 2009 with a new outlook on your college newspaper’s potential and all that you are capable of in the coming year.

1. Upgrade your equipment. Nothing will help motivate your reporters and editors like new video, audio equipment or cameras. Use any extra funds to buy even one new item. Give out awards to those who use it most effectively or creatively.

2. Don’t be afraid to dig deep. A blog started in spring 2008, called The Center for Campus Investigations, offers an in-depth plan for how to bring investigative journalism to your college newspaper. It’s a realistic and engaging plan that you should definitely not ignore. Nothing else you do can bring as much respect to your publication as digging deep into some of your school’s most controversial issues.

3. Promise to listen to your readers. A good editor is just a presumptuous reader. It’s your paper. What do you want to read? What do you want to know? Promise yourself that you will listen to the readers. Get a table in your student center or a place with a lot of traffic and offer people the opportunity to complete reader surveys in exchange for candy or baked goods. When the results come in on what the readers want, LISTEN TO THEM!

4. Don’t just fill space. Too often college newspapers just fill the space needed to put out a paper without stopping to think about whether a story really needs to be covered or whether it meets the standards your paper wants to uphold. Don’t fall into this rut. If an article isn’t good, don’t be afraid to cut it out.

5. Get away from College Publisher. We all know there is nothing better than independence and there is just no way you can with College Publisher. Go to WordPress, Drupal, anything! You’ll be in charge of all your own ads (not to mention the layout and look of the Web site). Confused on how to make the transition work? Get in touch with my friends over at CoPress and have them explain all they can do to help you move to WordPress.

6. …and in the process go Web First. Recently CoPress’s Greg Linch wrote a great blog post on how his college newspaper The Miami Hurricane at the University of Miami was able to transform their newspaper’s work flow to make it easier for them to go Web first. Take a page from their book and try to upgrade your college newspaper’s way of working to meet today’s needs.

7. Maintain an effective relationship with your school’s administration. Try giving the Dean of Students or other influential person on campus a column in your paper. Is there a complex problem occurring on campus? Hold an editorial meeting with key administrators of the project and key players at the paper so that you can ensure that it gets covered properly. You’d be surprised how willing administrators will be on thoroughly explaining some issues that are likely to get covered incorrectly if not dealt with properly.

8. Get out of your ivory tower. Let people know and see what you’re doing. You’re the college newspaper, nothing more and certainly nothing less. If you’re an editor, don’t be afraid to appear on your college’s television station or radio station. Hold an open house where readers can get a tour of the offices and see how you operate. Don’t be afraid to respond to comments on your Web site when readers pose a question on how something was reported!

9. Remember that people like to see their names/faces in print. Want to get readership up? Remember that readers like to see their names in print just as much as reporters do. Have plenty of opportunities to feature students who’s accomplishments might be overlooked. Remember no life (or student) is without a story.

10. Don’t forget to apply for contests. This seems like a no-brainer but I can’t tell you how many college newspapers get in the rut of putting out a paper on a regular basis that they forget they are eligible for some pretty substantial awards and recognitions. Try those given by ACP, National Scholastic Press Association, and the Society of Professional Journalists to name a few.

Top 10 Reasons to Start a Ning for your Newspaper

picture-11The Whit just started it’s own Ning which we will be perfecting and inviting writers to join over winter break. We first came heard of this idea from Daniel Bachhuber of CoPress and it’s something we’re really looking forward to using in the upcoming semester!

1. It’s cooler than a wiki. Let’s face it. Despite it’s cool sounding name, Wiki’s aren’t fun. They get the job done, yes, but they aren’t good at lifting the veil up on who you are and what you actually do. Telling new staffers to go to a wiki to learn about your college newspaper and all that it does is not going to get them enthusiastic about helping you out. Telling a new staffer to go to your snazzy ning, where they can personalize their own page, makes them feel like they are already a member and gets them excited about joining the paper. [Read more...]

Using ISSUU for your College Newspaper

In lieu of creating PDFs for your college newspaper’s Web site, why not use ISSUU, a service which enables you to upload PDFs into a snazzy media viewer. I’ve known about this service for awhile but didn’t realize until tonight that it was free and therefore perfect for college newspapers. ISSUU is a great alternative to PDFs as you are able to gain more traffic (your newspaper will have it’s own profile on ISSUU’s Web site) and gain a better understanding for what your visitors are doing.

Also, it’s much more user-friendly because who REALLY wants to download those big, bulky PDFs onto their desktop?

The only disadvantage with ISSUU is that if you happen to save your publication into seperate PDFs, you are going to have to combine each section into a single PDF in order to upload the entire issue into ISSUU. It’s requires an easy solution, however. Just a simple download.

Check out The Whit’s news section by clicking here!

Why CoPress Matters

I am not a developer. I don’t know PHP, CSS, or any of those countless other scary three letter abbreviations. I’m just someone with a fascination with online journalism, finding new ways to tell stories online and who enjoys sharing them with a larger audience.

When I found out in the summer of 2008 that I would be switching positions to become the Web Editor of my college newspaper The Whit, I knew one thing was certain: a redesign had to take place. The Web site is antiqued and uninteresting.

I knew what other college newspapers were doing for their redesigns: they were following a young, ambitious college student from Temple University in Philadelphia named Sean Blanda. In early 2008, Blanda lead a charge in the college newspaper world. He blogged about how he was working to move his college newspaper, Temple News, to WordPress MU. He wasn’t the first to make this transformation but he was among the first to do it in such a public way. He blogged about the process on his Web site. Over the summer, I re-read some of his posts. He (someone who unarguably knows WordPress and developing Web sites) talked about the struggles he was having in moving his database over to the new server. I got scared.

“If he ran into problems in the midst of his transition, then how difficult will it be for me?” I wondered. [Read more...]

J-Schools Now

Earlier today I had a very interesting telephone conversation with Brian Stelter of the New York Times about the current state of journalism education. He asked me my thoughts on the current state of j-schools and my own person experience being a journalism major at Rowan for an article he’s writing.

The conversation got me thinking about what should be changed in journalism departments to help things move from the older, paper way of thinking to a newer, more Web 2.0 way of thinking and most importantly to teach journalism in a way that speaks to students. (Don’t worry I’m not going to go all Alana Taylor on you!) [Read more...]

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SPLC’s Law of the Student Press updated to fit the times

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The Student Press Law Center has just released a revised edition of their book entitled “Law of the Student Press.” The book, which has just received its first serious revision since 1994 has now been updated to include a chapter solely on online publishing, among countless other things. [Read more...]