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Ask Amy: Aspiring journalist’s instructor buried the lede

Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Amy: I always dreamed of becoming a reporter, so I took “Newswriting 101” for four credits at my local community college.

Based on the catalog description, I expected to cover a lot of material and eventually transfer the credits to a university program, but our instructor, “Jack,” had other ideas.

Instead of challenging students to learn journalistic skills, Jack said he made big money posting on the internet. After covering a few basic concepts, he ignored the “boring” required textbook and just assigned random internet videos for us to watch.

Rather than prepare lectures, he repeatedly cut short our weekly Zoom classes and even canceled three classes at the last minute without explanation.

I’m serious about my studies, and I want to continue, but this class didn’t give me the academic knowledge I need to build on. Should I go to the dean of the college and inform them that class time was cut by more than half?

Jack is a “nice guy,” but I don’t need a buddy. I need rigorous training for a tough, competitive profession.

 

I don’t want to hurt Jack during the current economic downturn, but I believe the students were seriously short-changed by the low level of instruction. What should I do?

— Reporting

Dear Reporting: I beg to differ about one aspect of your account: “Jack” is NOT a nice guy. Jack is a lazy guy who highjacked an entire class of students who paid for instruction and deserve to receive it.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but if Jack really was making “big money” on the internet, he would not be fleecing the local community college. His online history and presence might be something to look into.

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