Continuing ed for journalists: training for a changed workforce

While reporters often write about workforce training and development in beats they cover, journalists have simply been left out in the cold when it comes to dealing with seismic shifts in their own workplace.

As part of a couple of media companies over the years who have ditched newsroom training completely, I’ve had to do much of the work on educating myself for the wired world on my own (for good and bad, I suppose).

At the recent BarCamp NewsInnovation-Portland, I heard from a range of folks who asked for basic information on new media — the kinds of things they hear about ever day and feel like they should know, but don’t know where to go or who to ask.

In light of this, I’m proposing a series of training sessions in a few locations for working journalists, citizen journalists and other media types.

I just read today about an effort at a couple of Belgian publications to teach social media. I think their list of must-knows is right on:

  • RSS
  • Bookmarking (and link journalism)
  • Photo and video sharing
  • Social networks: Facebook, LinkedIn, Digg

They’ve also planned a series of multimedia workshops for audio, video, and animations, and considered a discussion on striking out on your own.

My idea is to focus more on concepts of social media — why these things are important and game-changing; how to include them in your daily workflow; why journalism isn’t newspapers — than on specific platforms and show how twitter and facebook and digg and flickr are parts of the same whole rather than individual phenomena. I think that’s more important moving forward than platform-specific training.

If enough people are interested, I can start putting these together. I was thinking of charging a small fee to cover costs and maybe of taking the show on the road to capture as many people as possible.

I can imagine linking up with professional organizations (SPJ, anyone?) who really should be at the forefront of helping members prepare for changed professional landscape.

Anyone have any thoughts on this? Advice?

What tools? Wrong question.

Got an e-mail this morning from the “online-news” listserve from Poynter, pointing to a new post talking about tools:

Ask an experienced carpenter about the differences between a table saw and a jigsaw and you are sure to hear a detailed explanation about when to choose one over the other. Same thing if you ask a plumber about a fixed or adjustable wrench. Or a surgeon about a scalpel or a gamma knife. Or a journalist about the differences between Dreamweaver and a content management system? Well, maybe not.

Here’s how I responded:

As a graduate student (returning after working as a daily reporter), I made sure to take an independent study in basic Web classes offered to undergrads. I did this because I knew I wanted to get back into the business after school and realized that without such training, I’d be left behind. Faculty must start recognizing this and reflecting it in coursework.

The biggest problem I’ve seen in J-schools is that advertising and journalism are taught side-by-side. I know, I sound like a grizzled editing prof, but hear me out: many students come out of school with the idea that news gathering and press releases are somehow related or–worse–of equal importance.

Regardless of whether students go on to be “journalists” in the daily-paper sense of the word, J-school grads need to be prepared to navigate the dynamic Web and help steer their bosses there as well.

Sure, there are a pile of enthusiasts who blog and do some reporting and some Web design. That’s the story of the Web. But trained journalists must start leading the charge toward information management: “life organizing” for readers.
Regardless of the technology used, there are two keys as I see it:

  1. HTML and CSS are as important to journalists today as the ubiquitous AP stylebook and hand-coding should be taught with basic news skills. Basic understanding of databases (how to build and use them) is also vital. (On this note, I’m still looking for good material to teach myself this skill…hint.)
  2. I’ve had to strip most of what I learned back to old-school reporting techniques (as I understand them) like shoe-leather and meeting people–building networks. This is just lost in the j-school canon, I fear, in favor of well-intentioned, but high-minded orations on how journalism has slipped down the tubes. Bull.

Students more than ever need to learn how to create and manage vast networks of people. This is where blogging can be a great tool and more organizations must start using its two-way functionality instead of thinking in old “mass comm” ways.
Thoughts?