- May 10, 2012
- 11:48 am
- John Slania
- no comments
Students document historic churches
Our student journalists comb the neighborhoods of Chicago to write stories about some of these churches, and take photographs.
Our student journalists comb the neighborhoods of Chicago to write stories about some of these churches, and take photographs.
Five lucky students won tip-to-toe makeovers as part of the SOC Career Week Fashion event, “Look the Part, Get the Job.”
Watch 2012 STUDENT Winners BEA Festival of Media Arts
Student Video Competition
Music Video 1st Place: Jake Brusha, Loyola University Chicago Rome Has Fallen -Point Place
These small towns are where some of the most precious gems, and most exciting news, are often hidden by outsider misconceptions. But journalists must be curious. It is our job to find these stories and give a voice to people who have simply never been asked about their lives before
Study after study is revealing what most of us already suspect. Teenagers have a difficult time communicating face to face.
Once you start looking [for women religious in popular culture], they are everywhere. Murphy wanted to make sense of why the U.S. seemed to be the only nation to portray women religious in this way.
Internships are everywhere and nowhere. It depends on your perspective and your approach. For a lucky few, internship opportunities fall into their laps; for most students, the process takes time, legwork and diligence.
“The Web tends to feel like an infinitely accessible library, a storehouse of information, waiting to be recalled, rendered and viewed, remixed and reposted,” said Dougherty, “but, in most spaces of the Web, things are continually overwritten, edited, excerpted, and deleted.”
You’ve just finished the internship of your dreams. Or maybe it wasn’t all that dreamy. Either way, you are done. The internship is over and you are on to your next big thing. So what’s your best move now?
Aaron Greer had a simple idea to fill the void left by television content producers, a Web series that plays into pre-teen boys’ love of the Internet by including viewer generated content and giving users the ability to totally re-cut episodes using the content they upload.
These small towns are where some of the most precious gems, and most exciting news, are often hidden by outsider misconceptions. But journalists must be curious. It is our job to find these stories and give a voice to people who have simply never been asked about their lives before
Once you start looking [for women religious in popular culture], they are everywhere. Murphy wanted to make sense of why the U.S. seemed to be the only nation to portray women religious in this way.
Watch 2012 STUDENT Winners BEA Festival of Media Arts Student Video Competition Music Video 1st Place: Jake Brusha, Loyola University Chicago Rome Has Fallen -Point Place