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Career in Journalism  

Preparation

Annie Rzepecki, a first year student in Jim Heynen's First Year Writing seminar, wrote to journalist Kate Stanley, a recent visitor to the class, about her interest in journalism. Ms. Stanley replied with advice about preparation for careers in journalism.

Stanley recently won the Scripps Howard Walker Stone Award Trophy in the "Editorial" category for her editorials on homelessness, teen pregnancy prevention, and mental health. The judges said she is "an especially engaging writer, not afraid to try different approaches to editorial writing."

Here is the exchange:

Hi Kate! I am one of Professor Heynen's first-year writing students at St. Olaf, and I wanted to thank you for your visit. Heynen has been trying to persuade me to become an English major, and after hearing you speak I decided that journalism is exactly what I want to do. I just interviewed for the school newspaper and I hope to continue in journalism, perhaps as an intern at the Star Tribune next summer. Thank you for inspiring me!

Sincerely,

Annie Rzepecki

Dear Annie,

Lovely to hear from you, and it is heartening--if humbling--to hear that I've tossed some inspiration your way.

But before you leap into the fray and become a journalism major, I do feel obliged to report to you that I, myself, was NOT a journalism major. I was precisely what Prof. Heynen is urging you to become: a student of English literature. Writing is learned largely by reading great writers and by practice; journalism is learned by throwing oneself into a newsroom.

I have nothing against journalism school except that its majors often come out of the mill never having read a bit of Shakespeare or Yeats or Heaney or Ellison or Thoreau or Morrison or Austen or Achebe or the Brontes or Wilde or Swift (Do you know these names? Before you graduate you should.), and thus are fully prepared to deliver the facts but have never made friends with the world's many wise minds--those who have made a life out of turning facts and even plain old concoction into gold. Thus the students know less about the enterprise than they should.

THIS--the spinning of gold--is the ultimate task of the writer, and the best journalists find a way to fulfill it. I am not saying that such gold-spinning can only be learned in English Departments, and anyone interested in journalism should of course take a few reporting classes along the way, but I am pretty sure that you can glean more sparkle-of-language--and more life-knowledge--by excavating the poetry and prose sent your way by English professors than by paging through the material dispensed by the faculty in other disciplines.

So there you have it--my prejudice in a nutshell. Take it for what it's worth. DO go work at the newspaper; you'll learn important things. But one way or another, make a point of exposing yourself to great writers--lots and lots of them--and to the insight thoughtful teachers can stir up as they talk with you about literature. All the best journalism is, in the end, a kind of literature. All the best journalists have sought out wise minds.

Best of luck to you as you launch your writing boat into the lake.

All the best,

Kate


What can an English major do?  

What can an English major do for you in the world of work? Read "An English Major's Secrets for Success," by Rose Doherty, in the Christian Science Monitor. http://www.csmonitor.com/2001/1114/p18s2-hfes.html

Famous English Majors


What can I do with an English major?  

The variety of career opportunities available to English majors increases every year. Teaching jobs at the secondary or college level remain important options, but for many other students English is an outstanding "liberal arts major" that prepares them for work in areas such as journalism, communications, public relations, business, law, or medicine. The St. Olaf Career Development Center maintains a "Career Advisory Network" of graduates who have gone on from an English major to many different kinds of jobs and who are willing to advise current students about finding the right career. To give you an idea of what that variety is, we list below the occupations of those on a recent Career Advisory Network for the Twin Cities area.

Occupation                                                                  Employer

Physician                                                                       Chisago Health Service
Information Writer                                                        Hennepin County Medical Center
VP/Manager Investment Relations                          Colle & McVoy Public Relations
Public Relations                                                          Honeywell, Inc.
Teacher (Special Ed)/Author                                     Robbinsdale Public Schools
Teacher (Social Studies/History)                              Alexandria Public Schools
Account Supervisor                                                     Mon, Meyer & McGrath
Teacher (English)                                                       Princeton Public Schools
Lead Programmer/Analyst                                        I.D.S.
Writer                                                                             Interactive Technical, Inc.
Minister/Writer                                                              Self-Employed
Teacher (English)                                                       Anoka Public Schools
Assistant County Attorney                                          Carver County
Promotion Planner                                                     General Mills, Inc.
Director/Curator                                                          Speedboat Art Gallery
National Sales/Marketing Manager                         Audio Research Company
Production Development Coordinator                    Dayton Hudson Corporation
Flight Attendant                                                            Northwest Airlines
Landscape Architecture                                            Active Buyers Network
Teacher/Coach                                                           Rochester Public Schools
Teacher/Department Chair                                       Cretin-Derham Hall High School
Public Relations Writer                                             Physicians Health Plan
Marketing Communications Manager                    Applied Vision Systems
Teacher                                                                         Minnehaha Academy
Editor                                                                             U.S. Art Magazine
Copywriter                                                                     Craig Wiese & Company
Reservations Manager                                              Northwest Airlines
General Counselor                                                    Richard Knutson, Inc.
Restaurant Manager                                                  Burger King Corporation
Copywriter                                                                    Hazelden
Artist/Writer                                                                  Self-Employed
Associate Editor                                                          Augsburg Publishing House
Financial Planner                                                        Waddell & Reed
Graphics Manager                                                     Gopher State Litho Corporation
Production Assistant                                                   West Publishing Company
Development Director                                                  Fresh Air, Inc.

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Department of English: Rolvaag Memorial Library, St. Olaf College, 1520 St. Olaf Ave., Northfield, MN 55057, (507) 646-3200. Comments and questions can be directed to Department Chair - Mary Steen, msteen@stolaf.edu, or Department Secretary - Cleo Granneman, grannema@stolaf.edu