With unprecedented cutbacks in social services throughout Calif. and deep budget cuts to almost every pot of money in the state, we as residents of Calif. have all been affected. Yet, no institution has been subject to the amount of uncertainty and deep-seated change as students.
From canceled courses to an anticipated boom in class sizes, students will be forced to reevaluate the way they plan for school.
That is why we at The Collegian have been hard at work for the past few weeks gathering information to prepare our readers for the upcoming school year. And this year, we have tuned into the needs of the student body and have expanded our resources to better serve our readers.
Last spring, The Collegian distributed an online readership survey to the entire student body. We spent the better half of the summer analyzing the results, and from it we gained valuable insight into how our readers evaluate newspaper content and what they want from our editors.
One of the most striking responses we received was that our staff has not been accessible. In response, we have made ourselves available through our web site, by e-mail and in person. Our goal this year is to expand the lines of communication between ourselves and our readers.
We want to ensure that The Collegian provides opportunities for individuals and organizations to respond to any work that is published under our heading.
We have also heard the claims of inaccuracies and factual errors, and we plan to address those issues this year as well.
Our core values lay in producing fair and unbiased content that adheres to the journalistic code of ethics. Fairness, accuracy, accountability and excellence in journalism are paramount.
We will try with the utmost vigilance to ensure every story is fact checked thoroughly and that our writing accurately communicates the voice of our sources. It̢۪s important to us to fulfill public trust and satisfy our readers̢۪ expectations.
Likewise, we plan to hold student legislation and the governing bodies on campus to the same standards of accountability.
Striving for excellence in our print edition and becoming more accessible is only half of our goal.
In recent years, it has been our ability to deal with an ever-changing and increasingly interconnected world that presents the greatest opportunity to reach our readers.
Last year, the former editor in chief emphasized the evolution and growth of technology through the use of paperless medium. Our multimedia team plans to continue this trend by evolving our web site and significantly advancing our digital content.
However, as we navigate and conquer this evolving digital landscape, it becomes increasingly more important to focus on the aspects that make journalism reliable and effective. To us, this means emphasizing foremost news value likes accuracy and truth in reporting.
Our content is our greatest asset, not the platform from which it is conveyed. The common denominator is journalism that preserves the industry̢۪s integrity. So, whichever way you decide to access your news it will reflect our commitment to presenting information that affects the campus community.
The Collegian staff is devoted to providing excellence in reporting. We recognize our responsibility to Fresno State and we’re delighted to have you as readers. So please write in, we will respond — we are accessible in a variety of platforms. Send us an e-mail, write to an editor, follow us on twitter or leave comments on our online articles. Your feedback helps us become a stronger news forum.
This school year we pledge to give our readers 100 percent, so please keep reading.
Brian Maxey is the editor in chief of The Collegian.
Billy Mays Here! • Aug 25, 2009 at 10:42 pm
good—-finally you guys are earning the increased stipends the students awarded your paper and writers.
Why did content decrease about 20-30% from 07-08 to 08-09?
Why did I see a major jump in AP and fair use articles last school year? Where were the investigative reports and hard-hitting columns from 2002-05/06?
It’s a tough gig, you guys should stop making promises and simply deliver. Print media is dying, you all need to give us more and bring in new concepts—–not fluff and drivel.
Billy Mays Here! • Aug 26, 2009 at 5:42 am
good—-finally you guys are earning the increased stipends the students awarded your paper and writers.
Why did content decrease about 20-30% from 07-08 to 08-09?
Why did I see a major jump in AP and fair use articles last school year? Where were the investigative reports and hard-hitting columns from 2002-05/06?
It’s a tough gig, you guys should stop making promises and simply deliver. Print media is dying, you all need to give us more and bring in new concepts—–not fluff and drivel.
Heather • Aug 25, 2009 at 6:51 pm
I’m not having a problem with the apostrophes. Weird.
Sounds like good goals, guys. I look forward to seeing what you do this semester. Just remember that news outlets that think the platform has nothing to do with readership are having a tough time right now. ‘Course, you know I’m biased. 😉
Heather • Aug 26, 2009 at 1:51 am
I’m not having a problem with the apostrophes. Weird.
Sounds like good goals, guys. I look forward to seeing what you do this semester. Just remember that news outlets that think the platform has nothing to do with readership are having a tough time right now. ‘Course, you know I’m biased. 😉
Scout • Aug 25, 2009 at 2:53 pm
This is all well and good, but do you guys know all of your apostrophes are not formatting correctly?
On every story?
“Itâۉ„¢s important to us to fulfill public trust and satisfy our readersâۉ„¢ expectations.”
Scout • Aug 25, 2009 at 9:53 pm
This is all well and good, but do you guys know all of your apostrophes are not formatting correctly?
On every story?
“It’s important to us to fulfill public trust and satisfy our readers’ expectations.”