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Journalism Education in Moldova. Angela Sirbu, IJC Vitalie Dogaru, IJC/CSAJ Nelly Turcan, MSU Prague, 5 April, 2009. Moldova: journlaism education opportunities. 2 main types University degree education Professionalization programes. 1. University degree education.
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Journalism Education in Moldova Angela Sirbu, IJC Vitalie Dogaru, IJC/CSAJ Nelly Turcan, MSU Prague, 5 April, 2009
Moldova: journlaism education opportunities 2 main types • University degree education • Professionalization programes
1. University degree education • 6 state & private faculties, including one in Tiraspol • long-term – up to 5 years • officialy recognized diplomas • free of change & paid • the oldest - department of journalism and sciences of communication, Moldova State University (DJSC/MSU)
Case study 1 Department of Journalism an Communication Sciences, Moldova State University DJCS (MSU)
DJCS (MSU) 1 1966 - Faculty of Philology (Journalism Department ) 1980 - Faculty of Journalism 1993 - Faculty of Journalism and Communication Sciences 4 specialties: Journalism, Public communication Publishing, Library, archive and information assistance.
DJCS (MSU) 2 2005/2006 - new model of university training (Bologna Process) Three-degree cycle (Bachelor-Master-PhD) Bachelor- 3 year programme (180 ECTS) - full time studies Master- 2 year programme (120 ECTS) - full time studies Doctorate - 3 year programme (full time), 4 year programme (part time)
DJCS (MSU) 3 Major Challenges Has increased practical training – 60% of academic hours Theoretical courses - 40% of hours Internships–17 weeks (510 hours) The number of optional modules has increased - up to 40% of Bachelor curriculum
DJCS (MSU) 4 Major Challenges Four directions of specialization: political journalism economical journalism social journalism cultural journalism Journalism Bachelor's degree is designed to give students the skills needed for careers in journalism, broadcasting, reporting, writing and editing
DJCS (MSU) 5 Major Challenges Final examinations (two exams – theoretical and practical and Bachelor thesis ) Second exam – “Professional skills in journalism” newspaper (team work) editorial mission (individual) – to provide interview, news, reportage Degree: Bachelor (Licentiate) in Communication Sciences
DJCS (MSU) 6 2009/2010 – new programmers for Master degree: Academic Master Programme: Mediology Professional Master Programmes: Media Institution Management International Journalism Analytical Journalism Degree: Masterin Communication Sciences
2. Professionalization • short-term (from few days to 1 year) • who – ngos (Independent Journalism Center, API, APEL, Acces-Info, Center for Young Journalist...) • initiative comes from both the groups and the international organizations • several (2-4) training cources every month • no officialy recognized diplomas • usualy free of charge (exception CSAJ – 1 year program)
Case study 2 Chisinau School of Advanced Journalism (CSAJ) • since 2006 • 1 year program • for graduates • up to 20 students/year
CSAJ 1 Selection based on: • CV • application form • letter of motivation • 3 journalistic works • 2 letters of recommendation • copy of diploma of undergraduate studies (the final year students submit a certificate) • copy of the national identity card • selection finalize with a written test and an interview
CSAJ 2 – applicants/students*political studies, sociology, management, pedagogy, economics, psychology, law etc.
CSAJ 3 – Courses (the goal)by local and foreign experts • Introduction to journalism • News & reporting • Editing • Media law • Photojournalism • Visual journalism • Ethics & diversity • On-line journalism & Computer assisted reporting (CAR) • Media & editorial management • Radio & TV journalism • Economic journalism • Political journalism • Social & Community journalism • Investigative journalism • Newsroom & internships
CSAJ 4 – results: 35 graduates in 2 years27 employed in the media
Need in training1http://ijc.md/Publicatii/Media_Needs_Assessment.pdf
Need in training 2http://ijc.md/Publicatii/Media_Needs_Assessment.pdf
What journalists want 1http://ijc.md/Publicatii/Media_Needs_Assessment.pdf
What journalists want 2http://ijc.md/Publicatii/Media_Needs_Assessment.pdf • online journalism • photo journalism • management • advertising • design • radio journalism • TV journalism
Moldova: challengeshttp://ijc.md/Publicatii/Media_Needs_Assessment.pdf LOW PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS: • little practical relevance of university education; • insufficient “on-the-job” training, especially in “beat” reporting; • inadequate media management skills; • poor legal culture; • ignorance about professional ethics and failure to respect its principles.
MEDIA TRAINING INSTITUTIONS – recommendationshttp://ijc.md/Publicatii/Media_Needs_Assessment.pdf • closer cooperation between universities and news outlets to reduce the gap between “real-life journalism” and “ivory-tower academia” • university curricula - more practical, hands-on classes, and university radio and TV stations, newspapers… • both academic institutions and mid-career training - more specialty courses (economic and social-issues reporting, investigative journalism, etc) • make media-law courses more efficient • closer cooperation between practicing lawyers, news outlets and academic circles • refresher courses for media-law instructors necessary • courses on media ethics – by both academic and mid-career training institutions; ethics part of other courses (based on relevant case studies)
Proposals Research (regional) • interests/goals/needs of journalism training organizations in each country - do they match? what the benefits of cooperation would be? • best practices of collaboration between different media organizations (faculties & ngos)