Olivet College of Journalism (OCJ) students learned firsthand how to access public records at government offices during a trip to the San Francisco Civic Center.
Christian photojournalist Gary Fong, winner of numerous awards for his coverage in the San Francisco Bay Area, shared some of his prized photo-taking tips during a photojournalism workshop for Olivet College of Journalism students last week.
Olivet College of Journalism (OCJ) will offer two new graduate courses from its Master of Arts in Journalism program in the upcoming semester. The courses will be taught by two of the College’s recognized professors who are both veteran journalists and published authors.
As part of their Christian service this semester, several journalism students volunteered their time to publish a weekly newsletter for a local Christian fellowship
Olivet College of Journalism students are learning that the challenges facing journalists entering the news industry today are daunting but nothing a little innovation and flexibility can't solve.
Student reporters are learning the ropes of running an online newspaper through the integration of the school paper, OU Weekly, with Olivet College of Journalism courses.
The dean of Olivet College of Journalism, Dr. William Willis, recently published a new reference book that introduces journalistic decision-making to aspiring reporters.
Olivet College of Journalism students recently attended a Commonwealth Club lecture entitled "Newspapers are Dead. Now What?" to learn about innovative ways to develop a for-profit news model amid an era of abundant, free digital content.
Olivet College of Journalism (OCJ) has doubled the number of classrooms equipped with web-conferencing software this semester.
Students from the Olivet College of Journalism (OCJ) were among the over 6000 attendants at the annual gathering of the National Religious Broadcasters (NRB),which concluded on Tuesday February 10, 2009 in Nashville, Tennessee.