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Newsroom Training Study
The Newsroom Training Study, conducted via telephone from January
23 to March 13, 2002, interviewed 1,178 editors, reporters, producers,
on-air talent, and other staff members.
In 1993, a newspaper training survey titled "No Train, No Gain"
found that 1 out of 10 news staffers was receiving regular training.
The 2002 study, the largest ever survey of newroom training, found
that 3 out of 10 news staffers are getting regular training.
Key Findings from the 2002 study:
- Training shortages concern journalists
- Executives agree more training is needed
- Executives say budgets are big
problems…
- …but so is lack of time
- Training demand greatly exceeds supply
- Training gap is widest in TV newsrooms
- Higher training budgets? Not for most
- Training coordinators: ‘the elite few’
- Basic skills training is more likely
- Most training is done in-house
- Execs favor quicker, less-costly training
- Staffers favor longer, off-site training
Complete 2002 survey results can be found at:
Poynteronline: No. 1 Complaint of U.S. Journalists is Lack of Training
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