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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'Journalism is needed most' amid anti-press rhetoric, professors say
Subhead:
As press freedoms face challenges, educators remind student journalists to stand firm and continue their work
Author:
Chatwan Mongkol on Substack
Mar 17, 2025
As President Donald Trumps anti-media rhetoric turns into action, educators are reminding student journalists that this is when journalism is needed most.
SNIP
Scott Brinston, a journalism professor at Hofstra University, worries high school students who love English, journalism and writing might be dissuaded from the profession, thinking, Whats the point? That, he said, is his biggest fear.
Of course, the point is thats the moment when youre digging in and saying this is the time where I have to fight harder as a journalist, as an investigator, as a writer, Brinston said.
In his advanced reporting class, Brinston divided it into two parts: Covering government meetings and investigative reporting. The focus remains on challenging authority by asking tough questions.
END OF EXCERPTS
MY comment: Of course, Columbia University has advised its student-journalists to practice caution when writing about Gaza, Ukraine and other topics that could land them in the crosshairs of ICE or the so-called Department of Justice.
I teach journalism and advise the student news site at a private university in Maryland. My students have very little interest in rocking the boat, despite my encouragement to do just that. Of course, we don't have a journalism school, major or department, so virtually none of my students have an interest in pursuing journalism other than working in PR or social media for an athletic department of professional sports franchise.

GreatGazoo
(4,152 posts)the younger the audience the more receptive they were to documentaries. One young couple told me they watch docs almost every night before sleeping.
Documentaries have never been a priority for Americans in the way they are elsewhere. I think the change is driven by phones -- every kid now grows up shooting their life and events around them in first-person news gathering mode. They are very used to primary source information and that is a shift from the old dynamic of broadcast news and legacy newspapers.
To me this is a great time for those who crave information and debate. We have moved from the one-to-many media of the 1930-1990s era to a many-to-many dynamic that crowd sources both information gathering and fact checking.
jayschool2013
(2,590 posts)And I have produced two documentaries with student crews: one on First Amendment issues in Colorado (aired on Rocky Mountain PBS) and another about immigration featuring former Denver Mayor Guillermo Vidal, a Cuban exile who came to the U.S. as a young boy.
The problem with documentaries is the post-production work needed and the time it takes to make a full-length film (the two I note above are around 43 minutes, both for RMPBS and film festival considerations). We started production of the first in Fall 2015, but it wasn't ready for distribution for 10 months. The second was started in 2016 and we finished in time for the 2017-20-18 film festival circuit.
Quick production requires massive budgets or incredibly dedicated and skilled professionals.
snowybirdie
(6,218 posts)My Senior in HS granddaughter is attending a top journalism school in the fall. Her family is democratic and progressive! We need more young people like her.
jayschool2013
(2,590 posts)There are some bastions of hope out there, mostly at large public universities with full-fledged journalism schools, some in red states, some in blue.
I've taught at three other universities that have large prominent journalism schools, and led an investigative project that contributed fact-checks, documentaries and other long-form work that landed in the Denver Post, Rocky Mountain PBS and other Colorado media.
CONGRATS to your granddaughter! I hope she makes a difference.