Posts Tagged ‘Evan Davis’

Great News For Journalism Courses As The BBC College Goes Public

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Journalism students at Up To Speed’s NCTJ Fast Track course in Digital Journalism have been briefed on a new site this morning, which will enhance their learning experience.

The BBC College of Journalism, which was created in the wake of the Hutton Inquiry four years ago, is due to go public today giving students access to master classes in reporting and interviewing by the BBC’s most high profile reporters including John Simpson and John Humphrys.

Up To Speed’s Course Director Tom Hill, a former BBC journalist, has seen parts of the site during meetings with the Director of the College of Journalism Vin Ray.

“We will be able to hear BBC journalists explaining key concepts in journalism,” said Tom. “For instance, Evan Davis who presents Today on BBC Radio 4 and Dragon’s Den on BBC TV, has taken the time to make a film explaining the importance of impartiality, one of the keystones of broadcast journalism.”

BBC Reporter Evan Davis Advises on Impartiality

BBC Reporter Evan Davis Advises on Impartiality

The site, which is used as a virtual learning environment by the BBC’s 7,000 journalists, will also help students on Up To Speed’s Fast-Track in Digital Journalism to prepare for exams in Media Law, Public Affairs and News Writing.

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Can I Become A Journalist With a Degree in Politics, Philosophy and Economics?

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Oxford comes out top in Up To Speed’s look at the educational backgrounds of 75 leading journalists and one course at the university stands out.

 

No fewer than eleven people on our list have a degree in Politics, Philosophy and Economics and ten of them are BBC names. You’ll have seen them on the Six O’Clock News, the Ten O’clock News, BBC4, Newsnight, Question Time and Dragon’s Den.

They are: Zeinab Badawi, Ben Brown, Michael Crick, Evan Davis, David Dimbleby, Guto Harri, Robert Peston, James Robbins, Nick Robinson and Peter Sissons. And over on Channel 4 News you can also find another PPE graduate, Krishnan Guru-Murthy.

 

In a year that has been dominated by the credit crunch and revelations about MPs’ expenses, it is not difficult to see why editors are keen to snap up people who understand finance and who took the same degree as David Cameron and many of Gordon Brown’s ministers and former ministers.

 

But once again, many of the people on the list found time at Oxford to make a mark for themselves in other ways. David Dimbleby edited the university magazine Isis, while Peter Sissons, Evan Davis and Michael Crick edited the student newspaper Cherwell. It was in this capacity that Crick gave Nick Robinson a Pushy Fresher Award. Crick was clearly no push-over himself as he later became President of the Oxford Union.

 

Channel 4 News Presenter Krishnan Guru-Murthy might also have been a contender for a Pushy Fresher Award when he arrived at Oxford as he’d already made a name for himself during his Gap Year. Guru-Murthy had presented Open To Question, part of the Def II strand of Youth Television pioneered by Jane Street-Porter, and went straight into a presenter’s job on Newsround when he graduated.

 

But a degree in PPE and a father who presented the news on ITN didn’t do the trick for the BBC’s Ben Brown. He was turned down for a traineeship with both ITN and the BBC and claims his first break with Radio Clyde in Glasgow was down to a mix-up with a preferred candidate, also called Ben Brown.

 

The PPE degree at Oxford does not have an absolute newsroom monopoly. ITV News presenter Katie Derham read Economics at Cambridge. Channel 4 News Presenter and reporter Carl Dinnen was also at Cambridge, where he read Social and Political Science. The BBC’s Justin Webb read Economics at the London School of Economics and Will Lewis, Editor of the Daily Telegraph, read Politics and Economics at Bristol. Former Channel 4 News Ecomonics Correspondent Liam Halligan read Economics at Warwick before taking an MA at Oxford while Sky’s Jeff Randall took an Economics degree at Nottingham. George Alagiah read Politics at Durham and his fellow BBC presenter Jane Hill took the same subject in London.

Although Philosophy may seem like the poor relation when it comes to practical knowledge in journalism, it may have helped Oxford graduate Will Self and NME editor Conor McNicholas, who studied in Manchester, to challenge their readers’ perceptions of the world around them.

With the recession showing few signs of abating and a general election in the offing, there’s little chance that PPE is going to lose its attraction for editors in the near future.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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