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BA Sports Journalism
About this course
Sports journalism is a discipline that combines the craft of journalism with specialist knowledge of sport, its cultures, its business, and its relationship to wider society. Sport occupies an enormous space in contemporary media, from daily newspaper coverage and live broadcast commentary to online platforms, podcasts, and social media content that reaches audiences around the world around the clock. The sports journalist needs to be both a skilled reporter and communicator and a knowledgeable insider, someone who understands the technical dimensions of sport while also being able to tell its stories compellingly to audiences who may be deeply expert or entirely casual. At the University of Winchester, this three-year full-time programme is accredited by the Broadcast Journalism Training Council, signalling that the training meets the highest industry standards both in front of and behind the camera. You will develop the core skills of journalism, including reporting, writing, interviewing, editing, and broadcast presentation, alongside specialist knowledge of how sport is covered across print, broadcast, and digital platforms. The practical orientation of the programme ensures that your learning is directly relevant to the professional contexts in which sports journalists work, and the BJTC accreditation demonstrates to employers that you have met the standards the industry expects. Sports journalism graduates pursue careers across the full range of sports media, including newspapers and magazines, television and radio broadcast journalism, online sports media, agency journalism, club communications, and podcasting. Roles include sports reporter, broadcast journalist, commentary assistant, producer, and digital content creator. The communication, research, and storytelling skills developed by the degree also transfer into broader journalism, public relations, content marketing, and communications roles beyond sport. Some graduates move into sports business, clubs, governing bodies, and sporting organisations where strong communication and media skills are valued alongside sport-specific knowledge. Further professional development through industry experience is the norm in journalism, and many graduates supplement their degrees with vocational training and specialist certification.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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