

BA Journalism
About this course
Journalism is the practice of finding, verifying, interpreting, and communicating information to public audiences, and it sits at the foundation of democratic life in a way that no other profession quite does. Good journalism holds power to account, provides citizens with the information they need to make decisions, and creates the shared body of knowledge on which public deliberation depends. Studying journalism at university means developing not only the practical skills of reporting and production but also the critical and ethical frameworks needed to practise it responsibly in a media landscape that is being transformed by digital technology, social platforms, and the economics of attention. At the University of Winchester, this three-year full-time degree is built around a combination of vocational practice and rigorous academic study. You will develop the skills needed to produce journalism across television, radio, online, and social media platforms, working in state-of-the-art studio facilities. Alongside production skills, you will study media law, investigative journalism, documentary making, and the broader context of how the media operates in society, developing the analytical foundations that allow you to practise journalism critically and ethically rather than mechanically. You will learn to find and develop stories, conduct interviews, write clearly and accurately under deadline pressure, and edit and publish content across multiple formats. The degree is taught by practitioners with decades of experience across international broadcasting, editing, feature writing, and documentary production, connecting your learning directly to the realities of professional practice. Journalism graduates work across broadcast, print, digital, and specialist media, in roles including reporter, correspondent, producer, editor, documentary maker, and digital content journalist. The skills the degree develops, including clear writing, critical thinking, and the ability to find and communicate stories, are also valued outside journalism in public relations, communications, policy, publishing, and the charity sector. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in broadcast journalism, multimedia journalism, or communications, building specialist expertise for careers in areas such as international reporting or documentary production.
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