steph francis
New Member
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2007
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- HSC
- 2008
anyone know anything about the revised course?
thanks
thanks
No interview. Just UAI.frontin said:mmmmmm
I wanted to do Journalism so badly, now I have no idea. This course looks rather broad now. :S
Now I wonder what the requirement will be.. (as in UAI, will there be an interview? Have no clue)
As the cut off is dictated solely by how many people in your year put it in their preferences, I cannot tell you anything worthwhile.frontin said:ooooooooo
Thanks for that.
Do you have any guesses on what it may be around?
That it's still more professional than most of the others? Or that the system is so flawed the university will probably end up backpedalling.steph francis said::S eeek
i'm so confused. i was pretty sure i wanted to do this at uts but now i don't know...
anything good about the new course??
From what I know, CSU is better in almost every communications area apart from creative writing and social inquiry.frontin said:Hey kami,
me again.
I'm hoping you can give me an honest answer on this (I know you're from UTS, so every student has to have their pride lol)
But with what you have said about the new course (I have also talked to other students, lecturers from UTS who think it's going to a bit wanky), do you think it's better to go to like CSU?
I've heard their broadcast journalism is quite reputable and I've always wanted to specialise in this, loving work experience in the newsroom, media etc
You will have two creative writing subjects per year, each year, in your degree. That's it. You'll be required to pursue more specific focuses on your own accord as they're just going to be more generalised. It's kind of why I hate the new degree they're proposing for you guys - if you are paying for a creative writing degree then why pursue it on your own personal interest? You might as well do English literature or History or some other artsy field and develop your own writing skills if they want to go by this DIY style.nrs1990 said:Does the new writing and cultural studies degree have much in the way of writing? Because, looking at the new course... It looks like it doesn't have a lot of the subjects that looked so interesting and relevant to specific fields of writing; which were what made me want to do the old degree.
Is that really true? I know CSU is reputed to be excellent for its journalism degree... but I have a problem with how rigidly it's separated into a print strand and a broadcast strand. I attended an info session on the new BA Comm (journalism) course at uts, and they explained it was reorganised because employers are now preferring people who are flexible, adaptable and aren't pigeonholed into 1 strand. It seems a fair enough explanation to me... but I'm open to what you have to say about it as well. A whole new structure is making me uneasy. (Wish there were more spare electives too).kami said:From what I know, CSU is better in almost every communications area apart from creative writing and social inquiry.
Eh, CSU is excellent because of its practical skills and industrial links - you learn to do your job from the word go. They also specialise in areas that our uni does not cover as substantially and to be honest, the separation of the strands in the journalism degree doesn't diminish a student's experience in print, for example, as it's still part of the core of their degree (there are only two print specific subjects in the later years of our degree) while the specialisation in broadcast comes at the expense of the studies we'd undergo in colonialism or textuality.lexonfire said:Is that really true? I know CSU is reputed to be excellent for its journalism degree... but I have a problem with how rigidly it's separated into a print strand and a broadcast strand. I attended an info session on the new BA Comm (journalism) course at uts, and they explained it was reorganised because employers are now preferring people who are flexible, adaptable and aren't pigeonholed into 1 strand. It seems a fair enough explanation to me... but I'm open to what you have to say about it as well. A whole new structure is making me uneasy. (Wish there were more spare electives too).
Is there anything else remarkably different to the writing & cultural studies? Do you think it has improved? The only thing they seemed to emphasise about the new degree is that they've introduced a critical approach to the degree, instead of being purely creative. I've read the short descriptions of the new WCS subjects and they look interesting... but yeah, it definitely seems more generalised... I don't know how we're supposed to develop writing skills if it's left up to us :S
It makes people from different specialisations collaborate in a very flexible project. It is unfortunate that your mark will be linked with how you work with another student but it is a necessary skill and a rather practical subject.58301 Communication Practice Project
This is the capstone subject in the BA in Communication, designed to bring together knowledge and skills gained by students throughout their entire course. They have the opportunity to work on projects that develop creative and innovative responses to communication and/or media issues and problems. Students work collaboratively in cross-program teams which may also work with external 'clients' or partners in projects. At the beginning of the semester, a contract for the project is negotiated between the student group and their 'client'. Students need to assess their progress and write critical reflections and evaluations on the projects and project processes. There may be opportunities for students to organise symposia or conferences to present these reflections. Course professional portfolios - electronic and other media - will be finalised.
Not exactly sure what Kami knows about the journalism course since he is enrolled in Writing and Cultural Studies.lexonfire said:phew, thanks so much for the lengthy reply... that's definitely some food for thought
ooh yeah i've heard about that... no i'm pretty convinced of the quality of journalism at uts. i'm just still trying to gather what anyone has to say about the course, there're a lot of things to consider.. at this point im still trying to figure out what i really want anywaypanicstation said:Not exactly sure what Kami knows about the journalism course since he is enrolled in Writing and Cultural Studies.
The new course will be different to the one I'm enrolled in but the people who teach it will be the same. They are completely obsessed with people getting work experience, even from first year. Plus they are making the course more about multimedia from the first semester (when we did television, we only did storyboards. When you do it, you will be doing video straight up).
If you've got the marks, you should go to UTS.
And what about Sydney Uni?panicstation said:Not exactly sure what Kami knows about the journalism course since he is enrolled in Writing and Cultural Studies.
The new course will be different to the one I'm enrolled in but the people who teach it will be the same. They are completely obsessed with people getting work experience, even from first year. Plus they are making the course more about multimedia from the first semester (when we did television, we only did storyboards. When you do it, you will be doing video straight up).
If you've got the marks, you should go to UTS.
maz5 said:And what about Sydney Uni?
I suspect a lot more than you credit him forpanicstation said:Not exactly sure what Kami knows about the journalism course since he is enrolled in Writing and Cultural Studies.