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Journalism at
Washington and Lee
Mission Statement
As the nation’s only accredited journalism and
mass communications program in a highly competitive liberal arts
university, we remain committed to our first and highest mission: to
educate, to broaden minds, to inculcate habits of honor, careful
analysis, reasoned discourse and excellent writing in an increasingly diverse and
pluralistic culture.
As a department with professional constituencies
and an obligation to prepare citizens to participate in a democratic
society we seek to fulfill our mission by helping students develop
abilities to think critically, to communicate clearly, to understand
the ethical dimensions of the decisions they make, and to fully
recognize the central role of news media in a free society.
Our professional responsibility remains that
which was enunciated when scholarships for printers were first
announced under Robert E. Lee’s presidency 140 years ago: educating
students and professionals so that they can perform the crucial
function of informing the community.
Because the journalism profession rightfully
expects our graduates to become competent professionals, the
department is committed to teaching students the skills and
familiarizing them with the tools that are the standards of the
industry. We remain committed to keeping abreast of those skills and
tools as the information revolution continues.
The department must fulfill these multiple
responsibilities within its commitment to a liberal arts education and
the curricular limits established by the Accrediting Council on
Education in Journalism and Mass Communications.
An Introduction
The Department of Journalism and Mass Communications is among the
largest programs at Washington and Lee. The department faculty believe journalism is the ideal liberal arts major, combining a deep
grounding in the liberal arts and sciences with solid experience in
research, analysis and clear communication. Its majors have an
excellent reputation throughout the news industry, in the law and in
advertising and public relations.
New Facilities for a Digital World
Since the total renovation of the department's building, Reid Hall, was completed
in fall 2002, students and faculty have worked in an environment
perfectly designed for the convergence that is sweeping the
professional media world.
The W&L journalism program had been among the first in the
nation to fully computerize all reporting and editing classes, and now
it is among the first to create totally digital classroom and
laboratory systems.
The journalism curriculum itself undergoes continual adjustments,
as the department faculty respond to changes in the profession. A few
years ago, the department's print and broadcast sequences were
separate. Today, students in the two sequences plan news coverage
together, and regularly work together in the labs on stories for print, electronic media
and the Internet. Their work appears on The Rockbridge Report's
television newscast and converged web site,
http://rockbridgereport.wlu.edu/
A Focus on Fundamentals
It is important to remember that, as dramatic as they are, these technological changes
are not the focus of our program. The most distinguishing aspect of Washington and Lee's journalism
program is its focus on fundamentals, on the concepts and concerns
that remain constant regardless of how information is transmitted.
Students begin their journalism education by learning the roles
that an independent press plays in a free society and by confronting
the ethical component that exists in virtually every professional
decision that journalists make. With this grounding, journalism
students are prepared to make good news judgments.
This underlying principle - not training, but education to serve
society - led to the creation of "press scholarships" at
Washington and Lee some 140 years ago.
Shortly after the end of the Civil War, while Robert E. Lee was
president of struggling Washington College, the modern concept of
journalism education was conceived under his leadership. To help
rebuild a shattered South, the college developed several new programs;
among them were agricultural chemistry, business and journalism. It is
not clear how many young men, if any, actually received the
scholarships that Washington College widely advertised, but it is
certain that the program lasted only a few years.
Journalism education came permanently to Washington and Lee in the
1920s, when support from the Southern Newspaper Publishers Association helped to establish the program.
Fifteen years later, the W&L journalism department became one of
the founders of the Accrediting
Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, and
it has remained an accredited program ever since. Its most recent
reaccreditation was in May 2007.
In fact, it is the only accredited journalism program at a highly
competitive, nationally ranked liberal arts college.
The Liberal Arts Tradition
Because journalism at Washington and Lee is deeply imbued with the
spirit of a broad, comprehensive education, it is an ideal liberal
arts major. To make sure that journalism majors will be well grounded
in the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences, they may take
only about one fourth of their courses in journalism.
Today, when we are constantly reminded that we live in the
Information Age, it is important to understand how the mass media
influence societies. It is perhaps even more crucial for young people
beginning their careers in the Information Age to be able researchers
and clear writers.
A number of journalism majors come to the department solely to develop
these competencies, and have no inclination to become journalists. In
fact, more than one third plan a career in law or some other
non-journalism field.
A Professional Perspective
Combined with this grounding in the liberal arts is a highly
professional perspective.
While some communications programs focus on popular culture and
communications theory, the W&L journalism department emphasizes
the professional competencies of information gathering, analysis and
writing.
The department's demanding professional courses are taught by
faculty who have substantial experience in the newsroom and regularly
return to it, and they are active members of professional
organizations. One is a multiple Pulitzer Prize-winner.
The reporting students use the community as their primary source of
news, and the labs receive feeds from the Associated Press and CNN.
All students in the professional sequences are required to take a
capstone
in-depth reporting course in which they research and produce projects
for broadcast, print and the World Wide Web. Their work involves
interviewing local officials and inspecting official records,
searching on the Internet, researching with such sources as Lexis-Nexis,
performing statistical analysis with spreadsheets and databases, and
producing graphics with the aid of satellite mapping. For a sampling
of these in-depth projects, see
the department's home page under Projects.
The campus publications and WLUR-FM are extracurricular activities
that have no formal relationship with the department. But the many
journalism majors who work on them regularly seek out the department
faculty for advice and comments. Students find that the solid
professional habits and perspectives they develop as reporters and
editors are quite valuable when they compete for internships and jobs.
A Varied Program
To meet the variety of interests among its majors, the journalism
curriculum has professional sequences for students interested in
journalism careers and a communications sequence for students planning
careers outside journalism.
A major trend in the news media today is convergence, the combining
of print, electronic and online news operations in a single operation.
There are several models, and it is not certain which will ultimately
prevail. But we do know that the department's students will be
prepared by training and perspective to be leaders in this evolving
field.
Some journalism programs are responding to this technological
revolution by increasing their focus on the computer applications the
industry is using. That's not true at Washington and Lee, despite
excitement over the renovation of Reid Hall and the department's
excellent facilities.
The focus of all classes is on concepts and principles, not on the
technologies or equipment they are using. Today's latest developments
are destined for tomorrow's scrap heap. But the principles that
journalists should use in making professional judgments do not change.
All students in the professional sequences must have at least one
internship, perhaps the most important criterion for a job in
journalism. That experience and the demanding professional courses
they take mean that journalism majors are well positioned for
excellent jobs upon graduation and rapid advancement.
An Emphasis on Ethics
The University received an endowment from the John S. and James L.
Knight Foundation in 1994 to establish a substantial program in
journalism ethics. Long a major emphasis in the journalism department,
ethics has become a primary focus.
The department curriculum now includes three courses in journalism
ethics, open to all university students, and all journalism majors are
required to take an ethics course. Professionals regularly visit
campus to "do ethics" with the undergraduates.
The Knight Chair holder, who is widely respected in the field of
journalism ethics, frequently participates in professional workshops
and national conventions.
A Program in Business Journalism
The Donald W. Reynolds Foundation gave the University a $1.5 million
endowment in 1999 to create a program
in reporting on business and economics and to establish a chair in
business journalism.
Students in the business journalism sequence take specialized
courses in the department and a substantial number of courses in the
Williams School of Commerce, Economics and Politics.
This highly innovative program responds to an increasing need in
the industry and society for knowledgeable, skilled journalists who
can report clearly and with authority in this vital area. The Reynolds
Chair holder supervised several Pulitzer Prize-winning stories before
she joined the faculty.
An International Perspective
Many journalism students develop an international perspective, an
increasingly valuable orientation. Several have a second major in a
foreign language, and this often includes a term abroad.
The department has three scholarships, the Todd
Smith Memorial Fund, the Edward
Jackson International Reporting Fund, and the Edward M. Korry
Scholarship,
http://journalism.wlu.edu/Scholarships/Korry.html, that provide support for
majors to undertake projects in foreign reporting. Students on those
fellowships have reported from Australia, Germany, India, Kenya, Korea, Latin
America, Russia, Spain and Tibet. Some journalism majors take
internships abroad, sometimes with W&L graduates as their mentors.
The department offers courses in international press systems, and two
of its faculty are Fulbright scholars.
An Outstanding Reputation
Washington and Lee's journalism department is highly regarded both on
campus and in the profession.
The faculty regularly return to the newsroom to maintain their
skills and act as consultants. They advise journalism programs at
universities throughout the world, and they hold positions of
responsibility in academic, professional and accreditation
organizations.
Similarly, journalism students are eagerly sought after for
entry-level positions and are accepted at prestigious law and graduate
schools. Many are double majors, and they are deeply involved in
campus life as newspaper reporters and editors, fraternity and
sorority leaders, dorm counselors and members of service
organizations. W&L's most recent Rhodes Scholar was a journalism
major.
As graduates, they have been highly successful professionally as
journalists and lawyers, in advertising and public relations, and in a
wide variety of other communications-related fields. They are valued
in virtually any field for their ability to gather information and
present it compellingly, with precision and clarity, in any medium.
Their reputations, and their devotion to W&L and the journalism
department, strengthen the competitive position of those who follow
them.
More information
The department's Web
site includes information about the curriculum, scholarships and
faculty. The department head, Prof. Brian Richardson, can be reached
at richardsonb@wlu.edu or 540-458-8430.
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