Best colleges for journalism

<p>My friend wants to major in journalism can you please tell me which are the best schools for this major?</p>

<p>Could you be a little more specific? (IE: your friend's stats, college preferences, etc...)</p>

<p>Her GPA is 3.7 or 3.6, she wants her prospective college to be in eastern states, to be more specific in the New England area. She is international. I don’t know anything about her SAT scores and extracurricular activities. </p>

<p>Thank you</p>

<p>maybe syracuse and northwestern...not exactly new england area but close enough. </p>

<p>oh, and harvard</p>

<p>None of what are regarded as the nation's top journalism programs are in New England (even Harvard doesn't make the cut). If I were your friend, though, I'd give some thought as to what kind of journalism she wants to do, and then earn a relevant bachelor's degree in that area. For example:</p>

<p>Political reporter : political science
Local reporter : sociology, or criminal justice
Environmental reporter : environmental science, biology, chemistry
Sports : business (!)
Business and finance : business
Weather : meteorology
Arts : fine arts, theater, music</p>

<p>During my very brief career in journalism, the best reporters I knew had "real" degrees -- not degrees in journalism. A killer combination would be a BA/BS in a subject area and a masters degree from some place like Columbia in NY, or Univ. Missouri -- Columbia (sorry that both have similar names).</p>

<p>For undergrad journalism, your friend should know that the usual suspects are U Missouri Columbia (probably the #1 ranked undergrad school of journalism in the US since forever), Northwestern, Berkeley, USC, Florida, UNC, IndianaU, Wisconsin. Probably some others, but I'm not in the biz anymore (and haven't been for a LONG time -- and even then it was a teeny-tiny paper).</p>

<p>these were the last USNWR rankings, from back in 1996(!) don't think they ever did another j-school ranking</p>

<p>US News & World Report Rankings (1996)
1. Univ. of Missouri at Columbia
2. Columbia University (N.Y.)
3. Northwestern Univ. (Medill) (Ill.)
4. Univ. of N.C. at Chapel Hill
5. Indiana Univ. at Bloomington
6. University of Florida
7. Ohio University (Scripps)
7. Univ. of Wisconsin at Madison
9. Univ. of California at Berkeley
9. University of Kansas (White)
11. Univ. of Md. at College Park
11. University of Texas at Austin
13. Syracuse U. (Newhouse) (N.Y.)
14. Arizona State Univ. (Cronkite)
15. Univ. of Minn. at Twin Cities</p>

<p>Yeah, that sounds familiar. The only obvious miss (IMO) is the journalism program at the Annenberg School at USC.</p>

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. .

[quote]
As a former journalist and editor who hired reporters, I want to echo something Carolyn wrote deep into her story. You don't have to major in journalism to be a good reporter. In fact, I thought it sometimes was a detriment. I'll explain below.</p>

<p>A journalism minor or part-time work on a campus paper, radio or TV station while majoring in something else such as business, urban planning, government, etc. may provide a much better preparation to be a working journalist. I hired j-school grads who had the story formula down pat, but they had no perspective. They wrote formula stories that lacked depth. Over time I came to prefer people who had work experience in another field but also had a talent for writing. In my experience, they generally were better reporters. </p>

<p>So my advice differs slightly. I think you may be better off finding a school where you can minor in journalism while getting an education in another field that prepares you to know and understand how business, government, politics, etc. actually works. That way you'll know what is real news and not just pablum.

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<p>Thank you!!! I appreciate your help</p>