WORLD
JOURNALISM EDUCATION CONGRESS
Also
available in Deutsch
Over 600 journalism educators from
42 countries descended on the small South African university town of
Gramhamstown, for discussions on the challenges facing the sector, and to map
out ways of improving the quality of journalism education in a fast and constantly
changing media landscape
Wanja Njuguna, Senior lecturer, Department of Media Studies, University of Botswana, presenting her work during the FAME research paper presentation meeting. |
The second World Journalism
Education Congress was launched simultaneously with the 14th Highway Africa
Conference at Rhodes University. The organizers of both events said the timing
was deliberate, because convening two journalism conferences at the same time
created a unique global networking environment for both journalists and
trainers.
“It's about building an
international network where people know and trust each other”, said Professor
Guy Berger, Head of Rhodes Journalism and Media Studies School, and the driving
force behind the 2nd WJEC.
The theme of the congress,
"Journalism Education in an Age of Radical Change", reflected the
major social, political, economic and technological changes sweeping across the
globe in general and Africa in particular.
THE “FAME” COMPONENT
The activities of the Forum of
African Media Educators (FAME) were also included in the Conference programme.
FAME, an initiative funded by the KAS media programme, and hosted by Wits
University in Johannesburg, had with this a second gathering since 2009.
FAME began its sessions a day
before the conference officially began, with a publishing workshop for its
members. Professor Herman Wasserman from the University of Stellenbosch (South
Africa) led the seminar, and there was great interest with the non-FAME delegates
to participate in the meeting despite it being flagged as a closed “member
only” session.
The publishing workshop was
followed by another closed meeting, where Professors Siegfried Weischenberg and
Steffen Burkhardt, from the University of Hamburg, outlined why and how their
institution was internationalising their media programme whose character is
very much based on the exchange programmes it offers. Regarding the African
continent, Professor Weischenberg singled out the agreements with the University
of Stellenbosch, and the University of Dar es Salaam (Tanzania).
FAME members then presented their
research papers on journalist education in Africa in an open session, as part
of the official conference programme. The FAME-delegates came from Botswana, Cameroon,
Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Uganda, providing a continental
overview. Cosequently, delegates, especially those from outside Africa, were
able to get first hand information about the situation on the continent. The
FAME-Session was, despite the competition through a whole range of other
sessions, very well attended.
http://www.kas.de/medien-afrika/en/publications/20716/
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