ACCM
13800 Biola Ave.
La Mirada, CA 90639

News & Events

 After annual conference, new tricks up their sleeves

October 30, 2007 - 

ACCM constituents from all over the country crossed paths at the Intersection of Faith and Media 2007 conference. Were you there?

Held in conjunction with the College Media Advisers' national convention, the annual meeting included presentations by Dr. Mike Longinow, Executive Director, as well as an awards ceremony for last year's Media Contest winners.

Enthusiasm for the future ran high, and so did fresh ideas - including the restructuring of our annual Media Contest. The 2008 contest will include entry categories with a more specifically Christian focus, including investigative reporting on Christian issues and more. Web media will also be a special new focus as the future of the industry lies in the virtual world. Stay tuned for details coming soon!

 

September 15, 2007 - 

The Association of Christian Collegiate Media is excited to announce the launch of our new domain, ChristianCollegeMedia.org. Here, visitors and members will be able to find all ACCM-related resources, including news and event announcements, all media contest materials, and more. Special members-only, login-required pages will also appear in the coming months.Feel free to explore the site for yourself and let us know what you think via our feedback form.

 

>>News archive
 
Past ACCM press releases

 

From the Adviser's Desk

 

Keeping up: convergence offers new challenges

by Wally Metts, Ph.D., ACCM President


Journalism is not dead.  As Philip Meyer, Knight Chair in Journalism at the University of North Carolina has observed, “Most of the things that I needed to know for my Twentieth Century journalism career I learned in high school, and they are still useful today: Touch typing, writing a simple declarative sentence, respect for scientific method and the Bill of Rights.”

But journalism is changing, and Meyer is trying to keep up.  His 2004 book, The Vanishing Newspaper: Saving Journalism in the Information Age, is a call for, well, keeping up.  He believes that “we need good reporters who can bring appropriate tools to bear on constantly changing situations.” He’s right, of course, even though Christian college communication programs are often still mired in print while the digital age marches right on by.

 If you haven’t seen the video on Amazon.com promoting the new Amazon Kindle you should take a look.  It’s not just the tools for creating that are changing; the means of delivery are changing too.  You can bet your iPhone on that.  With the Kindle you can download books, magazines and newspapers onto a portable print-quality screen wirelessly.

Will one of your students be the first to publish a Pulitzer Prize article that isn’t distributed on a piece of paper? In Ecclesiastes we are told that of making many books there is no end.  But the Preacher wrote that with a quill on a parchment.  The technology changes. Our students have much to learn, and so do we.  

One place to start is with a new book by Mark Brigg, assistant editor for interactive news at the Tacoma News Tribune.  He says he is “a recovering sportswriter who discovered what the Internet could do for journalism in 1998 and has been sharing his enthusiasm with whomever will listen (and some who won’t) ever since.”  

His book, a joint project with J-Lab and the Knight Citizen News Network, is Journalism 2.0:How to Survive and Thrive is available free, and of course it is an ebook.  You can download it here.
  (It’s probably a little elementary for some of your students, but it’s the advisors I’m worried about.)

Another resource is the Center for Innovation in College Media
at Vanderbilt. Conferences, contests, critiques, consulting—they will do just about anything to help, as long as it starts with a C.

Maryn McKenna, a guest columnist for the Poytner Institute, discusses the resistance
to innovation in many newsrooms, particularly among mid-career professionals.  She writes: “Here's the opportunity that's being missed: The central issue for writers isn't where the story is, local or national; it's how rich the story is, and how deep they are allowed to go.“

Media convergence allows our students to go deeper.   It would be a shame if the fear that kept them from doing so was ours.






 

 

 

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ACCM
13800 Biola Ave.
La Mirada, CA 90639