Thursday, December 6, 2007

Grade Pitch

Based on my performance this semester, I believe I deserve a C for my final grade in advanced reporting.
In my list of goals from the beginning of the semester, I stated that improving my writing in longer, feature-style stories was my main goal for the semester. With my stories on the Mid-Missouri Comics Collective, professional comic book writers in Kansas City and other arts stories, I believe I have stretched and improved my skills. Based on the field I want to enter in journalism — entertainment journalism, particularly at the publication of my former internship Wizard Entertainment — these clips have been extremely helpful in job applications and, after sending them to Wizard to update my resume, I was contacted for a job interview and later offered a job. In that sense, I consider my work at the Missourian a success because it showed Wizard that I had learned from my time there and gave me a chance to demonstrate that I could apply those skills elsewhere.
I believe my class participation during the course of the semester was also a strength for me in this course. I enjoyed the chance to express my opinons and views in a blog and later have some of them reach not only my classmates but faculty members across the Journalism School as well. In all our talks about how we want to improve the Missourian in our community and make it a source for discussion, I ended up using my blog to cause discussion within our journalism community. My e-mail to Tom — which later became a blog post — about the need for a forum on the Missourian’s web site was a topic of discussion in class and in e-mail form among editors and faculty. My post about whether we were really listening to our readers led to a class-long discussion. I think in writing these posts and managing my blog in a thoughtful and provocative way, as well as participating in the discussions in class, I demonstrated the theme of discussion outlined in the syllabus and prompted my classmates to do the same.
However, I am aware that the quantity of my output fell significantly short. I spent a lot of time on my first three stories on the comic book community and did not immediately pick up the pace. That said, once being made acutely aware that this amount of work was not going to cut it, I spent nearly every day after that in the newsroom and pursuing stories with gusto.
I think my improvement since my last stint reporting at the Missourian was substantial, and the goal of honing my skills at writing longer stories was achieved. I have tried my best to recover from low output; I’ve written five stories since Thanksgiving — with more to come — and have been in near-daily contact with my editor. I believe I have earned a C.


(See the below for my final non-grade pitch post)

That's all she wrote (for now)

Well, it's been a fun and thought-provoking ride — hopefully for any reader's out there as well as myself.
This blog actually made me think twice about whether or not an online journal of this nature was really worthwhile. In the end, I think they are.
Not only do blogs have a level of personality that news may never be able to have, but they have a level of discussion as well that most news outlets have yet to achieve. There is something to be said about being able to bare our brain and soul onto a web site and have thier contents be up for discussion for any and all willing to read. With a level of reporting, blogs have become to column of the future without that stuffy newspaper feel. This blogging experience has led me to think that one of the aspects of my new prospective job as Online News Editor for a magazine need be reporter blogs. Examples like th Columbia Tribune really can't be denied their success and after feeling the liberation brought with writing a blog — a blog with relevant content and not just the day's idle thoughts — is an experience that I think can benefit writer's and readers alike.

That's all for now, folks. Please see the above (and last) post for my grade pitch.