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The Pitt News. Investing in your staff | CoPress. Innovation can’t happen without a knowledgeable staff, but a knowledgeable staff isn’t born into existence — it takes training and education on everyone’s part. That’s what this video is all about: invest in your staff and make sure they’re properly educated for the Web. Furthermore, make sure that their education is a continual process.

You can do this by encouraging the knowledgeable people in your newsroom to lead lessons over pizza lunches or by teaming up staff to compete on specific projects. Investing in your staff isn’t only a matter of training, but of hiring the right people. Newsrooms should have at least one or two Web developers who are proficient in HTML/CSS, PHP, and/or Python to continue developing your website.

You’ll be surprised at how many good ideas will come when you all sit down together and brainstorm. A case for innovation in college newsrooms | CoPress. We hear it over and over again – “Innovate, innovate, innovate!” But what does that really mean in the context of newspapers, and why is it necessary? Let’s start by stepping back to see where newspapers went wrong. Like we’ve mentioned before, the newspaper industry is a lot like the railroad industry, which essentially stopped growing because it didn’t transform its mindset.

Because they failed to see the train as a part of the transportation business, they lost their customers to highways and airlines. Newspapers are falling into a similar trap, but college media can change course before it’s too late. We should be the ones experimenting and taking risks. To quote Jason Calacanis, “Innovation is all you have. What is innovation really, though? After you take a look at the video above, be the innovator in your newsroom. Why Do Some College Newspapers Still Have No Web Pr. Summer’s almost over and college newspapers across the country will be cranking up to full speed soon. Likely, they’ll be getting ready for further adventures in online journalism, expanding their online presence while attempting to keep the print product financially successful.

But hard as it is to believe, there are still student newspapers around the country that have no online presence at all. At the Associated Collegiate Press Summer Workshops recently, I asked for a show of hands from students whose newspapers didn’t have websites. In two sessions, several hands were raised. I won’t say which schools these students represent, but I’ve come across the phenomenon in other presentations over the years as well. And it still surprises me that any school newspaper would be without an online presence in this day and age. Technology I spoke to one student who was working to bring the college newspaper online at a school in the Southeast U.S. Institutional A disservice to future journalists.

Center for Media Innovation and Research | University of Florida. Daily Tar Heel - Becoming the best: Innovation can make us No. 1. Link Journalism made easy | Publish2. Innovation in College Media. Time once again for one of my pet peeves. In fact, it’s not so much a pet peeve as something that summons my rage to levels no mere listicle can, and especially when an online-only outlet does it. I’m writing, of course, about the profound inability of some web sites to actually do a hyperlink properly. What do you think? I’ve written about this again and again and again and again , and until outlets start writing links like they understand what the World Wide Web is for, I’ll keep on raging about it. So here’s today’s villain: Engadget . Exhibit A: As you can tell from reading, this is a story about an app called Fleksy . A savvy veteran of the World Wide Web, or even a rank noob who’d spent more than a day with a browser, would think those links would point you to, I don’t know, the app company’s web site (in the case of #1) or the web page for the Android version (in the case of #2).

But you, dear WWW browser, would be WRONG . Multimedia Examples. College rag. UWIRE - Content from Universities. The College Network.