Hampton University Starts Academy to Improve Young Journalists’ Skills
RICHMOND, Va.
Troubled by students with high grades but poor grammar and spelling, journalism administrators at historically Black Hampton University have launched a writing academy to improve the skills of the next generation of minority reporters.
Sixty-seven students are enrolled in the Academy of Writing Excellence. They meet for writing labs, complete special writing assignments, get one-on-one mentoring sessions with local journalists and opportunities to go on school-sponsored field trips.
“It is for the student who wants to go above and beyond,” says Will Sutton, head of the program in the Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications.
Dean Tony Brown, a former television commentator, created the program in response to entrance exams that showed students still struggled with the basic mechanics of English.
“Fewer and fewer high school graduates are able to read and write well,” Brown says. “Most students that I’m running into have not had grammar, punctuation and spelling since elementary school.”