Ooo, thanks for that!braindrainedAsh said:If you want to do journalism in a specialist area you should just do a degree in that area. E.g. do a degree in art theory or something. Or just do a general arts degree maybe where you can study art alongside writing. YOu need to have specialist knowledge to become a specialist writer. By art criticism do you mean being an arts reviewer, or writing stories about art criticism? I don't really understand what type of writing you are talking about. A lot of journalism is news focused particularly in first year but after first year you can pick subjects like print features, editing and publishing that are a bit less newsy. But there is still a news focus.
If you are interested in editing and not interested in creative writing, journalism might be better than the writing degree.
What I did before I picked UTS was to look at the content of subjects that form part of the degree. You can find out what stuff you do in subjects and what subjects form part of the degree by looking at the faculty handbook.
http://www.handbook.uts.edu.au/hss/index.html
Have a look at what the subjects focus on, that will give you more of an idea.
By art criticsm, I mean me actually being a critic and writing reviews etc. While that is a specialised area (so it would be better for me to do Art Theory or something), are employers more partial towards the journalist students or the art theory students? Because I want to do a degree that will be recognised by employers so that the chances of getting the actual job will be easier.