Hi everyone,
I don't post too often - mostly I just read the board - but I was curious to get some insight on a dilemma I have.
I'm a high school senior and I'll be majoring in Communication (concentrating in multimedia journalism). I'm attending a small liberal arts school, and I've been in touch with the Athletics Communication Director at the school. He would like me to help write media guides, write some content on the sporting events for the athletic website, and work for him. I asked him about writing for the school's paper, and he said he thinks I should write for him first and then see if I am able to balance the two (i.e slowly work into the paper if they let me write a few articles here and there, and then decide if I can do both). However, he seems very keen on the idea that I'll be writing solely for him and not the school's paper.
To be honest, I think the paper would suit me better for the career path I want to follow (on line/print journalism), but I also want to be involved in writing about the athletics. In my opinion (this will sound arrogant), I have the potential to be a strong writer (I've also become strong at networking, and my ambition has paid off well in terms of having the opportunities to cover D1 football games). The downside for me is that my school does not have a paper - I attend a small high school and we don't have a set "newspaper" class. I feel like I really need to focus on fundamentals - one of my problems being the use of apostrophes, and small, but significant details.
So after getting off topic, I guess what I'm asking is:
Should I take the job with the media relations guy - or should I write for the paper, which will help me with fundamentals?
I hope I wrote this post in the correct place - if not, feel free to move it to the right forum so I can get responses there.
Thanks everyone for reading this long post and your help!
I don't post too often - mostly I just read the board - but I was curious to get some insight on a dilemma I have.
I'm a high school senior and I'll be majoring in Communication (concentrating in multimedia journalism). I'm attending a small liberal arts school, and I've been in touch with the Athletics Communication Director at the school. He would like me to help write media guides, write some content on the sporting events for the athletic website, and work for him. I asked him about writing for the school's paper, and he said he thinks I should write for him first and then see if I am able to balance the two (i.e slowly work into the paper if they let me write a few articles here and there, and then decide if I can do both). However, he seems very keen on the idea that I'll be writing solely for him and not the school's paper.
To be honest, I think the paper would suit me better for the career path I want to follow (on line/print journalism), but I also want to be involved in writing about the athletics. In my opinion (this will sound arrogant), I have the potential to be a strong writer (I've also become strong at networking, and my ambition has paid off well in terms of having the opportunities to cover D1 football games). The downside for me is that my school does not have a paper - I attend a small high school and we don't have a set "newspaper" class. I feel like I really need to focus on fundamentals - one of my problems being the use of apostrophes, and small, but significant details.
So after getting off topic, I guess what I'm asking is:
Should I take the job with the media relations guy - or should I write for the paper, which will help me with fundamentals?
I hope I wrote this post in the correct place - if not, feel free to move it to the right forum so I can get responses there.
Thanks everyone for reading this long post and your help!