Archive | Journalist of the Year RSS feed for this section

Journalist of the Year deadline approaching

February 15 is the deadline to send portfolios for this year’s Journalist of the Year competition. Advisers may nominate one student journalist for the award. For contest details, please visit http://jea.org/home/awards-honors-2/journalist-of-the-year/portfolio/.

The journalist with the winning portfolio will be awarded JEANC’s Arnetta Garcin Memorial Scholarship and qualifies for a travel stipend to attend the JEA/NSPA National Convention in Seattle.

For more specifics and to view a sample portfolio, read a message posted by the committee chair last year at http://jeanc.org/2011/01/journalist-of-the-year-portfolios-due-feb-15/.

Entries must be received by the committee at the following address by Feb. 15:

JOY Competition
℅ CNPA Services
2000 O St., Suite 120
Sacramento CA 95811-5299

Contact us at jeanc@jeanc.org with questions.

Comments Off

2011 scholarship recipients announced

Palo Alto student George Brown reports for Viking sports magazine from the CIF volleyball championship sidelines.

Congratulations to George Brown of Palo Alto High School, the California High School Journalist of the Year. Brown is co-editor-in-chief of Viking sports magazine (Ellen Austin, adviser) and the official state winner for the national Journalist of the Year competition from the Journalism Education Association.

 

The JEANC scholarship committee met Feb. 26, 2011 at San Francisco State University to evaluate student portfolios and select scholarship recipients.

 

 

 

Please join JEANC in honoring all three of this year’s Arnetta Garcin Memorial Scholarship winners:

First Place: George Brown, Palo Alto High School (Ellen Austin, adviser)

Second Place: Alison Sale, Granite Bay High School (Karl Grubaugh, adviser)

Third Place: Ben Breuner, Redwood High School (Tom Sivertsen, adviser)

 

Each of this year’s applicants in the JOY competition demonstrated excellence in journalism. Portfolios were professional quality and included outstanding examples of writing, leadership and courage. The scholarship committee was impressed by the thorough research, eye-catching design, reader-relevant stories and each candidate’s personal commitment to serving their readers. These students truly exemplify outstanding high school journalism.

Winners demonstrated thoughtful reflection on each journalistic experience and had a wide range of journalistic activities within and beyond the school’s student media. Brown’s portfolio showcased in-depth reporting and important stories, but also included experiences with live blogging and timely, professional use of Twitter and Facebook to report breaking news, in addition to dealing with online comments, video editing and more. His outstanding practice with the mobile, multidimensional responsibilities of reporting demonstrate not just what good journalism has been but what good journalism is becoming.

JEA’s national Journalist of the Year results will be announced April 17, 2011 in Anaheim at the JEA/NSPA Spring National High School Journalism Convention.

 

Comments Off

Journalist of the Year portfolios due Feb. 15

Enter your top seniors in the Journalist of the Year competition by Feb. 15, 2010. Creating a portfolio is a time-consuming task but provides a powerful reflection opportunity for your best student journalists and can lead to state and national recognition.

The state competition is aligned with JEA’s national Journalist of the Year competition, so please refer to the official guidelines and submission information.

A panel of qualified journalism educators evaluates each year’s portfolios to determine local winners. The Northern California winner receives JEANC’s Arnetta Garcin Memorial Scholarship and then competes with the Southern California entry for the official state spot in the national competition. Results will be announced via Twitter in mid-March and student winners will receive official recognition by mail.

Last year’s winner, Ina Herlihy (Convent of the Sacred Heart High School, San Francisco), went on to win the national Journalist of the Year title from JEA and a $5,000 scholarship. Herlihy has made her portfolio available in the interest of helping future applicants plan and prepare the best entries possible. Click here to see part of Herlihy’s 2010 portfolio.

Members of the local and national scholarship committees note the importance of following instructions and having a wide variety of journalistic experiences evidenced in portfolio entries. Students who do well in this competition demonstrate courage and leadership in addition to outstanding skills in writing, design, photography or other forms of journalism.

As you help your students prepare their portfolios, consider these helpful hints:

1. Mail portfolios to the state director, Sarah Nichols, at the new JEANC headquarters.
JOY Competition

℅ CNPA Services

2000 O St., Suite 120

Sacramento CA 95811-5299
Please note that the Feb. 15, 2011 deadline is a “received by” date and plan accordingly.

2. Organize portfolios according to the guidelines under the Preparing Your Portfolio section from JEA. Clips and work samples will represent four key areas:

(1) Skilled and creative use of media content – writing, production, photography, etc.
(2) Inquiring mind and investigative persistence resulting in in-depth study or studies of issues important to the local high school audience, high school students in general,         or society.
(3) Courageous and responsible handling of sensitive issues — local or societal — despite threat of or actual censorship.
(4) Variety of journalistic experiences, each handled in a quality manner — newspaper, yearbook, broadcast, photography, Web design, other design work, community and other outside-of-school journalistic work, etc.

3. Check your membership status. You must be a current JEANC and JEA member in order for your students to be eligible. Scholarship opportunities and awards are just another benefit of your membership. (If you receive this message and are not a JEA member, I’d love to share with you the benefits JEA has to offer and extend you a free membership if you are new to the organization, so please get in touch with me.)

This info and other great news, resources and information is available at our website, http://jeanc.org, and you can contact me directly with any questions. We’d love to see all of your outstanding seniors recognized for their efforts in scholastic journalism.

Sincerely,

Sarah Nichols, MJE
Northern California state director, JEA
past president/scholarship committee, JEANC

Comments ( 0 )