All posts by Camille Barnett, University of Louisiana at Lafayette

Wenger Shares Google News Lab Tips

Deb Wenger, a trainer of Google News Lab, led an interactive presentation at the SEJC convention at Ole Miss, which demonstrated ways that aspiring journalists can utilize accessible tools to improve their future writings. 

  “How many of you search Google more than 10 times a day?” Wenger asked to a crowd of about 40 students as she introduced her presentation.

All hands in the audience rose in response.

“The goal of the perfect search engine is to understand exactly what you need and return exactly the results that you want, regardless of what you put in the search box,” she declared.

Wenger showed how searches can be narrowed, depending on what is entered in the search bar.

She exhibited how to include or exclude words that appear in search results, as well as how to locate postings specifically from certain domains or posted by particular websites.

  “This is a good tool if you do a lot of Google searches to refine and narrow what you get,” she reiterated.

Wenger then shifted from word searches, to image searches.

She asked the audience, “How many of you have had a story before where you didn’t have an image, so you went to Google Images to find something that would fit with it?”

The majority of hands rose again.

Wenger stressed the importance of using searched images in stories if the rights are available.

  “The one that you’re looking for is the one that is labeled for reuse and modification. That means that you can take that photo and do what you want with it,” she explained.

She also showed attendees how to conduct a reverse image search, to discover where an image originated. She stressed that reverse image searches can often unveil hoaxes or “fake news” once the origin is discovered.

She projected a picture of a photo that circulated as Malaysia Airlines 370 crash footage. However, after a reverse search, she proved that the photo had been edited and was obviously a photo from the television show, “Lost.”

She projected another image of a ballot, circulated on Election Day, which claimed Donald Trump was not on the ballot in Oregon. After another reverse image search, it was revealed that the photo originated from a man’s personal Facebook profile.

“It’s probably not an official ballot if it’s on only one guy’s Facebook feed,” she suggested.

Wenger joked that she uses this feature to check pictures provided by students as excuses from tests and homework assignments. She gave the example of a reverse search that she did on a picture of a car accident.

She chuckled as she said, “I upload and I’m like, ‘Huh! Amazing! How’d you end up in Brazil?!” 

The audience joined her laughter.

“This is where I think it gets fun,” she said as she switched gears from image searching to discussing Google Trends. 

Google Trends tracks the trends of popular internet searches, updating results every three to five minutes. 

  “We’ve become a much better predictor in breaking news situations about what the problems are that people are interested in,” she proclaimed.

Wenger asked the audience to guess one of the five most commonly searched cities in the United States within the past year.

“I still haven’t heard one,” she teased as an array of incorrect cities were called out from eager students of the audience. 

Eventually, a student called out, “Flint, Michigan?” and was rewarded with a large T-shirt that Wenger tossed across the room to him.

She flashed the five most-searched cities on the projector: Flint, Baton Rouge, Charlotte, Dallas and Palm Springs.

  She continued to test and toss T-shirts to other students who correctly responded and exclaimed trends.

“The most important thing for us as journalists to think about with Google Trends, is how much more honest it is than polling or talking to people.  It allows us to connect to our audience about what they’re really asking questions about,” she said.

Searching behind a computer is a safe, judge-free zone, she said. People are more likely to ask questions behind the safety of a screen, than to risk potential ridicule for ignorance from peers. 

After a presidential debate last fall, Wenger said that the most-related search to Hillary Clinton was, “What is Roe vs. Wade?”

“We always have to take this data and apply it to journalism,” she explained.

She elaborated that through Google Trends, journalists can get ideas on what questions people want answered in stories, as well as what topics people care to read about.

She offered one final tip regarding how stories can be improved through the use of visuals and maps, by utilizing My Maps and Google Street View. 

She prompted attendees to download the Google Street View application. She then urged everyone to test it by standing, rotating in place and taking a 360-degree photo of the auditorium.

“Page views are still relevant and important but ‘time on site’ is something that has become even more important to news organizations to try to keep people on their site,” she said. “So, when they take that extra time to absorb what’s on that 360 image, that’s a benefit.”

Wenger also explained how maps serve as a helpful contribution to stories.

  “Any web map can be embedded on any website. If someone makes a map that works, you can use it,” she declared.  “And get in the habit of searching for a map if your story has a geographic component to it.”

She gave the example of a map that tracked the path of Malaysia Airlines 370 before it disappeared. This map was featured in a story about the crash. She also provided the example of a map pinpointing where fires were in California embedded in a fire cover story.

Through the many Google News Lab training sessions that Wenger has led, she said she often finds that many journalists are ignorant of how to access of these tools.

“Tools have gotten better. Google News Lab has listened to journalists and made them easier for them to work with, but journalism students are extremely busy,” she explained. “You may have heard about it, but unless it’s in your daily routine, you forget that it even exists.”

Panel suggests journalists should pick their battles

Jerry Mitchell, investigative reporter for the Jackson Clarion-Ledger; Kate Royals, education reporter for Mississippi Today; Bill Rose, senior Overby Fellow for the University of Mississippi’s Overby Center for Southern Journalism; Ronnie Agnew, executive director of Mississippi Public Broadcasting; and Marshall Ramsey, editorial cartoonist for the Clarion-Ledger, discuss covering news during a time of heightened distrust toward the news media.

Four prolific Mississippi-based journalists discussed continuing their professions in a largely Republican state at a time of increased hostility toward the press at a 2017 SEJC panel held in the University of Mississippi’s Overby Center for Southern Journalism Feb. 17.

Titled “Assault on the Media,” the panel featured Jerry Mitchell, an investigative reporter with the Jackson Clarion-Ledger; Marshall Ramsey, an editorial cartoonist for the Clarion-Ledger and radio host; Kate Royals, an education reporter for Mississippi Today; and Ronnie Agnew, executive director of Mississippi Public Broadcasting discussed the current state of distrust towards the news media on both a local and national scale.

Bill Rose, senior Overby Fellow for the center, first asked panelists about President Donald Trump’s 77-minute press conference that occurred two days prior, during which the commander-in-chief claimed the media are no longer trustworthy.

Agnew, erstwhile executive editor of the Clarion-Ledger and four-time Pulitzer Prize judge, said with every tweet, Trump weakens his own power.

“I think it plays well in some parts of the country, but I believe that when you cry wolf as many times as the president has with the media in 6 a.m. tweets, people with brains can start to decipher for themselves what is news and what is not,” he said.

Ramsey, an editorial columnist whose work has appeared in the New York Times, Clarion-Ledger and USA Today, said members of the media must also face “trolls,” or people who make contentious statements for shock value, who have been “emboldened” by the polarizing national discourse.

Mitchell said regardless of what subject matter reporters cover, journalists must exercise caution, especially in a time when objective journalism may fall prey to U.S. public opinion, which he said is “splintering” in wake of polarizing news media outlets such as Fox News and MSNBC.

“We have to pick our battles as journalists,” he said. “I think the more important battle is truth, and the more important battle is reporting on things.”

Agnew said the press should consider what it misses when reporting; he noted that the press missed covering Trump when it missed speaking to community members.

“How did we miss Donald Trump?” he asked the crowd of around 130 students and collegiate faculty members. “How did we miss this discontent of the country that would put Donald Trump in office? I think because we weren’t watching. We covered the incendiary things that he said  … We didn’t cover the people who were actually embracing his message.”

He advised the audience to “cover the people” instead of “covering the celebrity.”

Ramsey, meanwhile, said journalists should take note of who they follow on social media, as well as avoid creating an “echo chamber” of concurring opinions on their feeds.

“We can all now go safely into our little news bubble and we can get a la carte news how we want it, when we want it, what we want to hear,” Ramsey said. “I’ll sit there and read different views on my Facebook feed from different people and (will think) ‘Wow, did they watch the same thing I watched?’ Then I realize that they were watching a different news source than I was watching.”

The panelists also discussed covering Mississippi, which Mitchell said has poor records laws. Mitchell, a Pulitzer Prize-nominated investigative reporter with the Clarion-Ledger whose work has prompted four Ku Klux Klansmen’s convictions, said developing sources is crucial to community reporting.

Royals agreed.

“There’s constantly roadblocks — people are never going to make it easier for you to get what you’re trying to get,” she said. “You just expect it.”

Brian Blakely, a senior mathematics student from Louisiana Tech University and photographer for the university’s newspaper, said although he is not a journalism major, the panel spoke to what he sees his coworkers experience.

“It’s still interesting to see and hear the stories of people and the trouble’s they’ve had then and how things have changed over time,” he said.

2016 Convention, Austin Peay State University, Clarksville, Tenn.

The onsite awards luncheon was held in the Student Union at Austin Peay State University on Feb. 20.
The onsite awards luncheon was held in the Student Union at Austin Peay State University on Feb. 20. —Photo by Robert Buckman

The 30th Southeast Journalism Conference convention teemed with alacrity as student journalists and their advisers brushed up on the latest news trends, tricks and technology.

Held at Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, Tennessee, the three-day-long conference Feb. 18-20, 2016, hosted around 350 people from 37 universities in six states. Conference-goers meandered around the Student Union halls like children around a candy display. The university’s hilly landscape transformed into a refuge for college reporters from which they could gather anything from insight to sheer motivation.

“It was just an incredible experience seeing all these people that are passionate about the same thing as I am,” said Claudia Young, 20, from Arkansas Tech University.

The APSU newspaper, The All State, celebrated its 85th anniversary of publication with a “birthday party on” Thursday, Feb. 18. A panoply of old newspapers decorated the room, and party-goers decorated the air with questions and comments about the papers’ designs. The smell of old newspapers accentuated the rummaging through the venerable parchments.

Every SEJC convention gives student journalists an opportunity to share their schools' newspapers, providing a useful exchange of information and ideas.
Every SEJC convention gives student journalists an opportunity to share their schools’ newspapers, providing a useful exchange of information and ideas. —Photo by Robert Buckman

The night of news nostalgia also commenced the conference’s onsite competitions, which tested journalists on subjects such as news writing, law and ethics and anchoring. During the birthday party, feature writing contestants threw questions to The All State’s editorial staff like a major league pitcher.

“I got to talk to a lot of students and get interviewed about my career at The All State,” said Katelyn Clark, SEJC student president and The All State editor-in-chief.

While feature writers queried the paper’s loquacious staff, the arts and entertainment contestants covered a comedy show hosted by the Upright Citizens Brigade.

The next day’s competitions had news writing contestants cover a staged protest regarding APSU’s missing mascot, Governor Peay X.

Peay X, the original mascot, was replaced with The Governor. Despite students’ voting for the original mascot, Peay X has still eluded APSU.

“It was a lot of fun because we have been documenting the missing mascot stuff, so this was a good way to kind of get the ball rolling on that,” Clark explained.

When students weren’t flaunting their finesse, they were in professional development panels. Reporters and professors offered a peek into their experiences, which ranged from digital storytelling methods to the relevance of World War II to today’s news.

One session that stuck out to Young was “Digital Chameleon: Shape-Shifting in the Ever-Changing Media Landscape.” Young, who said she enjoys editorial and op-ed writing, found solace in the panel.

“I’m not super interested in news, but (the speaker has) made a living out of not doing news at all,” she said. “It was great seeing someone who is passionate about the same thing I am, because I’m afraid I won’t make a living because I don’t want to do news, so that was really encouraging.”

According to Clark, preparation for SEJC began after last year’s convention in Atlanta.

“Once we realized that we were gonna be the host school for the following year, when I got elected SEJC student president … we pretty much started planning right then,” said Clark.

The process provided Clark with an experience she said will help her in the real world.

More than 300 faculty and students from 37 schools in six states attended the Best of the South Awards Banquet in the Wilma Rudolph Special Event Center in Clarksville, Tennessee, on Feb. 19.
More than 300 faculty and students from 37 schools in six states attended the Best of the South Awards Banquet in the Wilma Rudolph Special Event Center in Clarksville, Tennessee, on Feb. 19.                      —Photo by Robert Buckman

The onsite awards luncheon was held in the Student Union at Austin Peay State University on Feb. 20.

The event culminated with the Best of the South Awards Banquet on Friday, where students were garlanded for feats accomplished in 2015,  and the onsite awards luncheon on Saturday. An antsy ambiance filled the rooms as nominees and applicants awaited results.

“It was such a huge event, and I’ve never been part of planning an event of that magnitude,” Clark confessed. “Most of the planning that I’ve helped with has been on a smaller scale than this huge conference that we planned, so I think the perspective that it gave me was, there’s always a bigger picture.”

With the conference location’s shift from bustling Atlanta in 2015 to bucolic Clarksville, the SEJC shifted to a more spacious venue.

“Atlanta was a very urban area, and this one was kind of in a rural area, so it was a little bit harder to find things around here,” said Emily Proud, 21, from Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee. “I definitely think there’s a lot more space for us here.”

Despite the conference’s ample space, the shared passion of journalism students made the event intimate.

“Belmont has a really small journalism department, so sometimes I feel like I’m one of the few people wanting to do what I want to do,” Proud related.  “But now it’s really cool because I get around all of these people who are like, ‘I want to do it, too.’”

Clark related to the energizing conference feel; in her third year as part of The All State and SEJC, she recalled her conference experiences.

“I’ve been to every SEJC conference since I started my All State career, and so it’s been a lot of fun seeing a lot of different places,” she said. “I’ve seen a lot of different schools, and I’ve met a ton of people, students and professionals who have helped me further my career and networking and things like that. SEJC has been a big part of my college career because it was The All State, just on a grander scheme.”

The schematics behind hosting a reporters’ retreat, however, demanded an even more attentive eye as Clark transitioned from attendee to administrator.

“I think the hardest part was just making sure that what we put into different people’s hands was the right thing and that we chose the right people for it, and it turned out that way,” she said passionately. “We chose the right people to do what needed to be done.”

Policinski warns against ‘Kardashian effect’

Gene Policinski, chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute and its First Amendment Center in Washington, delivered the keynote address during the Best of the South Awards Banquet on Feb. 19.
Gene Policinski, chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute and its First Amendment Center in Washington, delivered the keynote address during the Best of the South Awards Banquet on Feb. 19. —Photo by Robert Buckman

In an age where everyone can be a journalist, Gene Policinski, a founding editor of USA Today and chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute and its First Amendment Center, predicted that use new technologies will make reporters’ credibility a more valuable commodity.

Policinski was the keynote speaker for the Best of the South Awards Banquet, held in the Wilma Rudolph Event Center during SEJC’s 30th annual convention in Clarksville, Tennessee, on Friday, Feb. 19.

He called the modern cell phone both a toy and a necessity in today’s media world.

“You and I, I suspect, see our lives through this prism, through this device,” Policinski said, holding his cell phone. “And that, to me, is where we’re going to have to be in the 21st century, despite all of the talk about the future of the free press — the viability of journalism in a world where everybody is a journalist. And when everybody is a journalist, whom do I trust?

“But when you move across that spectrum of a toy to a tool to a necessity, the value of the information that I receive goes up exponentially in terms of, is it reliable and is it credible?” said Policinski.

With information so easily available, he noted, people have begun to say newspapers are dying and are not concerned about the credibility of the information they receive. Explaining what he calls the “Kardashian effect,” Policinski said every time journalists publish a click-bait or eye-candy story meant only to entertain and draw in readers, “we do ourselves a disservice, we do our profession a disservice, and we do the future of the free press a disservice because we say to people, ‘Look how trivial we can be.’”

However, he added optimistically, consumers will still turn to good journalism because they will still ask themselves where can they find the information they trust and where can they find the people who really know what’s happening.

Even with op-ed columns, he said, he has found people look for opinions that challenge them.

“Ultimately, the value in journalism has always been to give people the news and information they need to make decisions about their lives,” Policinski told the audience of more than 300 faculty and students. “The need and want of people to make informed decisions is the key to defending a free press.”

He stressed the importance of quality journalism, and the positive impact a story can have on thousands of lives, citing a story about two local journalists who recognized a regional trend in infant deaths in hospitals.

“You tell me journalism isn’t important when it does that story,” he challenged the crowd. “You tell me that it’s biased media or irrelevant media. We saved 16,000 lives with one series of stories. I think that’s the tremendous power of credible, accurate, meaningful, relevant, serious and maybe even boring information.”

He also stressed the importance of the media to be able to get interviews, get information and provide discussion for the masses.

“We’re all participants in this incredible moment in human history where, for the first time, we can talk to the rest of the planet and it can talk back,” he said.

Policinski is a co-author of the weekly, national column, “Inside the First Amendment,” and is host of the online news program “Journalism/Works.” He is an adjunct faculty member at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, South Carolina, as well as a certified journalism educator from Journalism Education Association.

“It’s up to you, and for me as long as I’m still active, to stay the course in terms of bringing information, of bringing news to the best of our ability, the most accurate, fair representative way that we possibly can because that is what people will come to value.”

Slimp urges columnists to ‘write like you think’

Kevin Slimp, founder and director of the University of Tennessee Institute of Newspaper Technology, addressed the continuing importance of newspaper columns during the 2016 SEJC conference on the Austin Peay State University campus.

Although newspapers are traditionally known for relaying news, they also feature columnists’ opinions on a multitude of potentially controversial subjects. Even though columns may not be considered news, Slimp said good columns can be highly regarded because of what goes into them.

“They aren’t just a list of facts,” Slimp said. “Columns include other things. They include your opinion, other sources that you pull in, other people’s opinions and things that happen in history.”

Even though columns are based off opinions, Slimp said the important part is backing up opinions with research and talking to experts on a particular subject.

He also said the best columns are the ones that bring light to issues in society. However, Slimp said these controversial topics often scare young columnists away.

“When you’re younger and when you’re starting out, it’s only natural that you don’t want to push too many buttons,” Slimp said. “You don’t want to make people mad. But as you develop the skill of being a columnist, you’ll come to the point just like I did, and it was about 17 or 18 years into it when I figured this out, that you realize if you’re a good writer, and if you’re a reasonably intelligent person, and most people in journalism are, then probably most people think about the same way that you do.”

Ultimately, he advised young columnists to “(not) be afraid to write about what you think, if it’s the truth.”

After choosing a topic, Slimp said the writing process is different from newswriting. While it is important to make sure your grammar is correct, he said you have to be more casual when writing a column.

He said the best advice he ever received was from his high school senior English teacher.

“You write the way you think and people will read it,” he said.

Writing the way you think includes putting more of your personality in it than you would with news writing.

Slimp also addressed the claims that newspapers are dying out, and said those claims were a “load of crap.”

He talked about a column he wrote three years ago regarding large newspapers that elected to go “digital only,” including The Times-Picayune in New Orleans. So Slimp wrote a column about the importance of newspapers.

He said a small group in New Orleans composed of eight individuals who owned about 75 percent of the city’s wealth contacted him about New Orleans losing its primary newspaper with the Times’Picayune going to three-days a week for its print edition and focusing on its nola.com website. The group was concerned that the loss of a daily newspaper would drastically affect the city’s economy.

“They were concerned that if New Orleans loses its daily newspaper, then everyone will consider us a second-rate city and nobody will want to move their industries here and it will be a huge economic blow to the city,” Slimp said.

Ultimately, rather than the city losing a newspaper, he said The Times-Picayune just lost its quality. In turn, The Advocate of Baton Rouge swooped in and became New Orleans’ only daily newspaper.

Slimp said this was proof that newspapers will never die, but also partially because newspapers are the most accurate medium for news.

“Really, if you really want to find the truth today about news, you really need to look at a newspaper,m because newspapers check sources and double-up on sources and check facts,” he said. “When you watch TV, like ‘60 minutes,’ they can stick a microphone in front of anybody, and anybody can say anything.

“I had no idea the response that that story was going to have. That week, that story ran in over 2,000 newspapers in the United States. I got thousands and thousands of messages from people, and guess what? Not one bad message. Every one: ‘You were right.’”

Baron: Social media are ‘like white-water rapids’

Among the plethora of presentations at the SEJC convention, one that every journalist in this modern age should have attended was “Rethinking Journalism in the Age of Social Media.”

Austin Peay’s Rob Baron, Ph.D., a communication professor, focused on the ever-changing state of modern journalism, particularly focusing on social media’s role in that evolution.

“There’s a famous quote by John Culkin: ‘We shape our tools and then our tools shape us,’” Baron said. “That idea is that we create technologies, we use those technologies and then we in turn are changed by those technologies. It’s not like technology is some magic genie that forces us to do things. We’re always forced or pushed to do things by how the tools shape us.”

This "painter" in the Austin Peay Student Union, where the professional development panels were held, caused many a double-take.
This “painter” in the Austin Peay Student Union, where the professional development panels were held, caused many a double-take.                                              —Photo by Robert Buckman

This quote was the thrust for the entire panel: Because journalists and their readers use social media, journalism must adapt the way they write, then market the news to how the consumer wants to receive it. Just as journalists in the past had to adapt their styles to radio or television, Baron said, today’s journalists must adapt to the new frontier called the Internet and the new technology called social media.

Citing data, Baron said that in 2013, 47 percent of Facebook and Twitter users used the social media sites to access their news; by 2015, the percentage jumped to 63 percent.

He added that 23 percent of Twitter users and 28 percent of Facebook users discuss the news on these platforms as well, and the need to adapt becomes apparent.

“No one really is just a print journalist anymore,” Baron said. “You have to be involved with audio, video, images, stuff like that. It’s all becoming this big blob of media.”

Some of the key points Baron outlined for becoming successful at using social media to promote journalism were that the “spreadability,” or availability, when the audience needs the information, must be considered along with portability, reusability and its relevance to multiple audiences. Also, the information must be a part of a steady stream of material to keep your audience engaged.

“I don’t know anyone who has given me or given anyone a reason for why things go viral,” said Baron. “If you think about your favorite viral media moments in the last year, I think there are lots of things that go viral, but no one can really explain why that’s the case.”

However, Baron pointed to the work of Henry Jenkins, Ph.D., Sam Ford and Joshua Greene, Ph.D., from their book, “Spreadable Media: Creating Value and Meaning in a Networked Culture,” as having a potential answer.

In their book, they hypothesize that a piece of medias’ viral nature may come from engaging in a shared fantasy, using parody and humor, activating “cultural production” in audiences, offering an air of mystery, engaging rumors that speak fears or desires and activating civil engagement.

However, Baron said, the most important thing journalists can do is to build themselves as a “brand” they can sell online.

“I think building a social media brand means finding a voice, being able to find out who you are in terms of a coherent identity,” Baron said, “finding like-minded allies that can help you spread your message and inhabiting social media communities.

“All of these different things get at a core question that every journalist or person who is creating content needs to be aware of, and that is the simple question of, ‘Who are you on social media?’ The more you can do to do those kind of things, that’s going to help you to be there.”

Baron closed by telling the audience that social media and the Internet are like floating down a massive river and you’re “along for the ride.”

“It doesn’t mean you’re out of control and you don’t have a role to play in it, but, like white-water rapids, social media is going to go the way it wants to go,” Baron stressed.

“I think the same can be said for those making content for social media,” Baron added. “You can’t direct where the river is going; all you can do it make sure your message stays in line and afloat. So your job as a professional is to ride the waves of social media and make sure you end up where you want to be and at a given moment you’re cognizant of how the river is flowing and how you can navigate that river as best you can.”

SEJC announces 2016 Best of the South AWARDS

[Clarksville, Tennessee] – The Southeastern Journalism Conference named Sudu Upadhyay of the University of Mississippi as 2016 College Journalist of the Year, and Austin Peay State University took home the coveted Best College Newspaper award.

The awards, chosen from 441 qualified entries from 35 universities, were announced at the SEJC’s annual convention, hosted by Austin Peay in Clarksville, Tennessee Feb. 18-22.

The complete list of winners is as follows: **

Best News Writer/ 35 entries

  #10 Rebekah Barnes, Louisiana Tech University

  #9 Alyssa Newton, University of South Alabama

#8 Riley Wallace, Belmont University

#7 William Hadden, Belmont University

#6 Holly Duchman, University of Louisiana – Lafayette

#5 Becca Risley, Lipscomb University

#4 Lauren Booker, Georgia State University

#3 Chelsea Pennington, Samford University

#2 Sarah Grace Taylor, Middle Tennessee State University

#1 Jonathan Capriel, University of Memphis

Best Feature Writer/ 34 submissions

#10 Tori Roper, Troy University

  #9  Connor Raybon, Southeastern Louisiana University

Tied #7  Danica Smithwick, Union University

Tied #7  Brianna Langley, Lipscomb University

Tied #5  Ashley Lyons, University of Louisiana – Monroe

Tied #5  Holly Duchmann, University of Louisiana – Lafayette

Tied #3  Matthew Wolff, Georgia State University

Tied #3  Patrick Lantrip, University of Memphis

#2  Clara Turnage, University of Mississippi

#1  Joshua Cannon, University of Memphis

Best Opinion/Editorial Writer/ 27 entries

  #10 Adam Quinn, Samford University

  #9 Megan Boyanton, Northwestern State University

#8 Jasmine Fleming, University of North Alabama

#7 John Sadler, Louisiana Tech University

#6 Kyle Waltman, Mississippi State University

#5 Alexis Hosticka, Harding University

#4 Elena Spradlin, Austin Peay State

#3 Mitchell Oliver, Georgia State University

#2 Seth Dickerson, University of Louisiana – Lafayette

#1  Meagan White, Middle Tennessee State University

Best Arts & Entertainment Writer/27 entries

#10 Miranda Brown, Tennessee State University

#9  Natalie Franklin, University of South Alabama

#8  Rachel Brackins, Harding University

#7  Jimmy Lichtenwalter, Samford University

#6  Stephanie Schiraldi, Lipscomb

#5  Zoe McDonald, University of Mississippi

#4  Gus Carrington, University of Memphis

#3  Andrew Wadovick, Austin Peay State University

#2  Stacy Reppond, University of Louisiana – Monroe

#1  John Connor Coulston, Middle Tennessee State University

Best Sports Writer/ 33 entries

 #10 Todd Dean, Tennessee State University

#9  Michael Shipma, Troy University

#8  Ben Wellham, Northwestern State

#7  Matthew Emery, Arkansas Tech University

Tied #5  Sam Chandler, Samford University

Tied #5  Katherine LeJeune, Louisiana State – Shreveport

#4  Omer Yusuf, University of Memphis

#3  Kadin Pounders, University of North Alabama

#2  Samuel Cowan, Belmont University

#1  Dylan Rubino, University of Mississippi

Best Special Event Reporter/Editor/ 16 entries

 #6  Kaleb Turner, Harding University

#5  Jonathan Capriel, University of Memphis

#4  Sean Keenan, Georgia State University

#3  Ethan Steinquest, Austin Peay State

#2  Tierra Smith, Grambling State

#1  Logan Kirkland, University of Mississippi

Best Press Photographer/ 26 entries

#10 David Parks, Union University

#9 Mikalla Cotton, Union University

Tied #8 Logan Kirkland, University of Mississippi

Tied #7 Greg French, Middle Tennessee State University

Tied #4 Erin Turner, Lipscomb University

Tied #4 Hunt Mercier, University of Southern Mississippi

Tied #4  Shelby Watson, Austin Peay State

Tied #2 Courtland Wells, University of Southern Mississippi

Tied #2 Jacob Follin, Mississippi State University

#1  Andrew Hunt, Belmont University

Best News Graphic Designer/ 12 entries

#5 Taylor Bowser, Troy University (ADD)

#4 Lewis West, Austin Peay State

#3 Cina Catteau, Harding University

#2 Kali Daniel, University of North Alabama

#1 Maddie Richardson, Georgia State University

Best News-Editorial Artist/Illustrator/ 8 entries

#4  Seth Nicholson, Troy University

#3  Joey Plunk, University of Tennessee-Martin

#2  John Miller, Georgia State University

#1  Jake Thrasher, University of Mississippi

Best Newspaper Page Layout Designer/ 19 entries

#8 Nicholas Davison, Xavier University

#7 Madisen Theobald, University of Mississippi

#6 Taylor Bowden, Mississippi State University

#5 Sean McCully, Austin Peay State

#4 Caroline Carraway, University of Mississippi

#3  Emily Lasher, Georgia State University

#2  Carmen Blackwell, University of Louisiana – Monroe

#1  Shilo Cupples, University of North Alabama

Best Magazine Page Layout Designer/15 entries

Tied #6 Jared Pekenpaugh, University of Tennessee – Martin

Tied #6 Gopal Gurung, Louisiana State – Shreveport

#5 Clair Per-Lee and Rebeccal Terrell, Samford Univeristy

#4 Jordan Knox, University of South Alabama

#3 Andrew Graham, Union University

#2 Brion Eason, Florida A & M

#1 Braxton White, Florida A& M

Best Magazine Writer/ 9 submissions

#4 Ali Renckens, Union University

#3  Cady Herring, University of Mississippi

#2 Cody Sexton, Louisiana Tech University

#1 Sydney Cromwell, Samford University

Best Television Hard News Reporter/ 9 submissions

Tied #4 Ashleigh Burton, University of Tennessee – Martin

Tied #4 Haley Greathouse, Troy University

#3 Leslie Newman, Lipscomb University

#2 Breana Albizu, Georgia State University

#1  Kelly Savage, University of Mississippi

Best Radio Hard News Reporter/ 4 submissions

#2 Ashley Parmer, Tennessee State University

#1 Sydney LaFreniere, University of Tennessee – Martin

Best Television News Feature Reporter/ 13 submissions

#9   Brittany Clark, University of Mississippi

#8  Jake Jones, Mississippi State University

#7  Tierra Robinson, University of West Alabama

#6  Emily Proud, Belmont University 

Tied #4  Brittany Robinson, Southeastern Louisiana University

Tied #4  Ben Goodman, Austin Peay University

#3  Tyler Wayne Smith, University of Louisiana – Monroe

#2  Alex Ro, Georgia State University

#1  Caroline Saunders, Samford University

Best Radio News Feature Reporter/ 9 submissions

#4  Morgan Burger, University of Mississippi

#3  Natalie King, University of Tennessee – Martin

#2 Riley Mueller, University of Mississippi

#1  Erin Thomas, Middle Tennessee State University

Best Radio Journalist/ 6 submissions

#3 Tori Seng, University of Tennessee – Martin

#2 Steven Gagliano, University of Mississippi

#1 David Caddell, Troy University

Best Television Journalist/ 12 entries

Tied #6 Yvonne Thomas, Samford University

Tied #6 Dominique Brogle, Southeastern Louisiana University

#5 Kristen Gautreaux, Nicholls State

Tied #3 Jamal Goss, Georgia State University

Tied #3 Browning Stubbs, University of Mississippi

#2 Ryan Renfrow, Troy University

#1 Heather Black, Mississippi State University

Best Advertising Staff Member/6 entries

#3 Danielle Shearer, Southeastern Louisiana University

#2 Kelsey Shumate, University of Mississippi

#1  Katelyn Clark, Austin Peay State

Best Journalism Research Paper

#4  Hailey Lange, Southeastern Louisiana University

#3 Hayley Taylor, University of West Alabama

#2 Anna McCollum, University of Mississippi

#1  Rachel Stanback, Samford University

College Journalist of the Year/ 18 submissions

#10 Sarah Grace Taylor, Middle Tennessee State University

#9 Danica Smithwick, Union University

#8 Erin Turner, Lipscomb University

#7 Tierra Smith, Grambling State

#6 Emily Featherston, Samford University

#5 Ciara Frisbie, Georgia State University

#4 Grishma Rimal, Troy University

#3 Holly Duchmann, University of Louisiana – Lafayette

#2 Eric Craig, Xavier University

#1 Sudu Upadhyay, University of Mississippi

Best Multimedia Journalist/ 9 submissions

Tied #3 Brianna Champion, University of West Alabama

Tied #3 Sarah Grace Taylor, Middle Tennessee State University

#2 Taylor Slifko, Austin Peay State

#1 Erin Turner, Lipscomb University

Best Public Service Journalism/ 9 submissions

#4  University of Mississippi

#3  Charles Bailey, Georgia State University

#2 Katelyn Clark, Taylor Slifko, Sarah Eskildson, Austin Peay State

#1  Cardinal & Cream, Partnership with Lane College, Union University

Best College Audio News Program/ 5 submissions

#2 University of Louisiana – Monroe

#1 University of Tennessee – Martin

Best College Video News Program/ 11 submissions

#5 Lipscomb University

Tied #3 Southeastern Louisiana University

Tied #3 Georgia State University

#2 Belmont

#1 Troy University

Best College Magazine/11 submissions

Tied #4 Georgia State University

Tied #4 University of North Alabama

Tied #4 Samford University

#3 Louisiana Tech University

#2 Florida A & M

#1 Union University

Best College Newspaper/ 23 submissions

Ranked #10 Grambling State University

  #9 University of Tennessee – Martin

#8 Troy University

Tied #5 University of Southern Mississippi

Tied #5 University of North Alabama

Tied #5 Mississippi State University

#4 Middle Tennessee State University

Tied #2 Louisiana Tech University

Tied #2 Georgia State University

#1 Austin Peay State University

Best College Website/ 26 submissions

#10 University of Mississippi

#9 Louisiana Tech

#8 University of Southern Mississippi

#7 Lipscomb University

#6 Florida A & M

#5 University of Louisiana – Lafayette

#4 Belmont University

#3 Austin Peay State University

#2 Arkansas Tech University

#1 Middle Tennessee State University

Best College Radio Station #10/ 4 submissions

#2 Southeastern Louisiana University

#1 University of Tennessee – Martin

Best College Television Station/ 8 submissions

#4 Samford University

#3 University of Tennessee – Martin

#2 Troy University

#1 Southeastern Louisiana University

SEJC Correspondence Concerning Delta State

Delta State letter (from SEJC)

LaForge letter (to SEJC)

Borsig letter (from SEJC)

Final outcome: The PRINT edition will no longer be funded and the journalism major and minor will be eliminated, by unanimous vote of the 12-member board of trustees.

Letter from SEJC Concerning Delta Statement

Delta State letter III (1)

2015 Convention, Georgia State University, Atlanta

Steve Osunsami, Atlanta-based regional correspondent for ABC News, was the speaker for the onsite awards luncheon. Photo by Robert Buckman
About 300 people attended the Best of the South Awards Banquet in Atlanta, at the SEJC’s 29th annual conventioin.
Photo by Robert Buckman
View of the gold-domed Georgia State Capitol from the conference room where the annual business meeting was held.
View of the Georgia State campus in downtown Atlanta from Woodruff Park.
Photo by Robert Buckman

The display of student newspapers is a SEJC tradition.
Photos by Robert Buckman