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Part of the process of education is to begin to give people the confidence to move beyond that, but the reality is few people have that confidence until at least a couple of years or so into their working lives.
I think you are right about the defined routes but there are some reasons for that - nctj, restrictive industry etc.
It's interesting you picked up on Chris' blog. I came across it a while back and spat feathers for a while over the attitudes expressed. (so much so I left a comment).
It was less that the students didnt get online, more that they thought print was somehow the safe way to go. As one commentor said:
"That said, if I really wanted to be an online journalist (which I don’t) I’d actually do the newspaper course anyway. Print and web are fairly close disciplines.
In that statement you have all you need to know about why students arent equiped to work online. All I need to do now is find out who peddles that bulls**t line to them and lock them in a box and perhaps we can all move on.
LOL. That comment made my day, Andy.
Another problem is that journalism schools generally don't teach media economics. The conservative student attitude reminds me of those newspaper types who were saying, a few years ago, "but Craigslist doesn't have a Baghdad bureau, so it isn't anything to worry about".
Students need to understand that the structural change in publishing is happening whether they like it or not, and that this is going to have consequences for what kind of jobs are going to be available for them in the future.
I've blogged on this:
http://markansell.blogspot.com/
Maybe the postgrad journalism courses are a bit technical - they focus on the 'how', rather than the 'why'.
But having graduated, and picked up a job in commercial radio, it seems the conservatism of some journalists isn't confined to universities. The web is seen as a bit of a necessity, rather than a place for possibilities. There's no interest in content, or making it a useful destination for audiences. It's not even considered as a revenue stream by those with the purse-strings.