FredLeonard said:
A.J. says he graduated from the University of West Virginia. The course requirements include producing TV newscasts, which are critiqued in class, available online and even broadcast on the statewide public television network. This wasn't his first rodeo.
While there are a handful of exceptions, most of the course requirements for a broadcasting degree don't prepare you for what actually goes on in a station on a day-to-day basis. You get critiqued by a professor, most of whom don't want to teach and kept going to college because they couldn't hack it in the real world, or, most likely, a teaching assistant who's going to grad school because he either couldn't find a job in broadcasting or couldn't make it in a broadcasting job. Garbage in...garbage out!
Best advice I've ever heard a broadcasting professor give? "Get a job, any job, at a commercial station while you're here. Even if it's just sweeping the floors, you'll learn a lot more about the real world than anything you'll learn in this, or any other, class!"