The Student Room Group

Studying MA Journalism at City?

Hi there

For the past few years I've been planning to go into journalism. I'm in my final year of a Politics and French BA degree and I am considering applying for a Master's degree in journalism, which will hopefully make it easier to enter the industry.

Right now I'm pretty much solely considering Newspaper Journalism at City University. I want to stay in London and their journalism department is very well respected from what I've heard. Another option is the News Associates Multimedia Journalism NCTJ diploma, but it is not covered by student finance so I would have to pay over 5K out of pocket which is not really possible for me. (I know some people take a year out to work before doing a Master's but I would rather finish my education as soon as possible.)

Anyway, I'm not too familiar with the process of applying for a Master's in general (first gen) so I was wondering if anyone could give me some general advice about what City wants to see from an application, what it's like studying there, what you gained from the course etc.

Also some more specific questions:

Is the course eligible for student finance? (I'm pretty sure it is, but just checking)

The course isn't even open for applications yet but I know I will have to write a short article based on an interview, so I'm trying to decide what to do for that. It looks like you eventually have to specialise in one type of journalism during the course such as Political, Cultural etc so is it best to write an article which aligns with one of the specialisations?

Does it matter that the course isn't NCTJ accredited?

Also, I'd be open to hearing about any other options as applying to only one course is a bit daunting. I don't think I would be able to get into journalism with no specific qualifications.

In terms of work experience, I've been building up a portfolio over the past five years - I volunteered on my local newspaper, wrote for a bunch of student publications, Empoword etc , and was a News editor for a bit. I recently did a Communications internship on my year abroad that involved interviewing/article writing. I've also attended a lot of journalism talks hosted by Presspad, News Associates etc. Will this be enough?

Sorry for the long post and any help would be much appreciated!
(edited 6 months ago)
Reply 1
Hiya, I'm several decades older than you, have lots of journo friends (including my partner, who teaches on one of the Journalism MAs), and have just been accepted onto the NCTJ myself. So I have a few thoughts I can share:

- City has a good rep, but my journo friends generally rate the NCTJ as much (if not more). If you do the NCTJ in Harlow College, you can get an Advanced Learner's Loan. I was planning to do it there, but it's not running this year. It will next year though.
- If you were willing to move out of London for a year, the MA in Investigative Journalism at Leicester DMU has bursaries.
- You could just try and get on a traineeship, which will pay for your training. journoresources.org.uk have a jobs round up which is really useful.
- I've met plenty of journalists who say it's not necessary to do a course at all. Having worked in journalism for a year back in the 2000s, I disagree and wish I'd done the NCTJ then. Also, while no longer compulsory, the NCTJ courses offer shorthand which is still necessary for regional newspapers and court reporting.

Hope this helps! Best of luck with your final year.
Reply 2
Original post by Tigerbalm
Hiya, I'm several decades older than you, have lots of journo friends (including my partner, who teaches on one of the Journalism MAs), and have just been accepted onto the NCTJ myself. So I have a few thoughts I can share:

- City has a good rep, but my journo friends generally rate the NCTJ as much (if not more). If you do the NCTJ in Harlow College, you can get an Advanced Learner's Loan. I was planning to do it there, but it's not running this year. It will next year though.
- If you were willing to move out of London for a year, the MA in Investigative Journalism at Leicester DMU has bursaries.
- You could just try and get on a traineeship, which will pay for your training. journoresources.org.uk have a jobs round up which is really useful.
- I've met plenty of journalists who say it's not necessary to do a course at all. Having worked in journalism for a year back in the 2000s, I disagree and wish I'd done the NCTJ then. Also, while no longer compulsory, the NCTJ courses offer shorthand which is still necessary for regional newspapers and court reporting.

Hope this helps! Best of luck with your final year.


Hey, thanks so much for the help, I'll definitely look into the courses/traineeships you suggested, and congrats for being accepted :smile:

I did have the impression that the NCTJ is getting more and more important nowadays, I recently went to a News Associates workshop and the person running it said that 80%+ of journalists now have the NCTJ. (I thought that number seemed quite high but she was trying to sell us the course, lol). If I applied for the News Associates course I could also apply for a Journalism Diversity Fund grant, so maybe it's possible :dontknow:

What kind of questions did they ask you in the NCTJ interview?
Reply 3
Original post by MJ1148
Hi there

For the past few years I've been planning to go into journalism. I'm in my final year of a Politics and French BA degree and I am considering applying for a Master's degree in journalism, which will hopefully make it easier to enter the industry.

Right now I'm pretty much solely considering Newspaper Journalism at City University. I want to stay in London and their journalism department is very well respected from what I've heard. Another option is the News Associates Multimedia Journalism NCTJ diploma, but it is not covered by student finance so I would have to pay over 5K out of pocket which is not really possible for me. (I know some people take a year out to work before doing a Master's but I would rather finish my education as soon as possible.)

Anyway, I'm not too familiar with the process of applying for a Master's in general (first gen) so I was wondering if anyone could give me some general advice about what City wants to see from an application, what it's like studying there, what you gained from the course etc.

Also some more specific questions:

Is the course eligible for student finance? (I'm pretty sure it is, but just checking)

The course isn't even open for applications yet but I know I will have to write a short article based on an interview, so I'm trying to decide what to do for that. It looks like you eventually have to specialise in one type of journalism during the course such as Political, Cultural etc so is it best to write an article which aligns with one of the specialisations?

Does it matter that the course isn't NCTJ accredited?

Also, I'd be open to hearing about any other options as applying to only one course is a bit daunting. I don't think I would be able to get into journalism with no specific qualifications.

In terms of work experience, I've been building up a portfolio over the past five years - I volunteered on my local newspaper, wrote for a bunch of student publications, Empoword etc , and was a News editor for a bit. I recently did a Communications internship on my year abroad that involved interviewing/article writing. I've also attended a lot of journalism talks hosted by Presspad, News Associates etc. Will this be enough?

Sorry for the long post and any help would be much appreciated!

You can apply to NewsAssociates and still be eligible for student finance if you do their BA course sponsored by Plymouth Marjon University. It's the same course as the 5K one but you get a degree out of it and it's covered by student finance so you don't have to pay 5K upfront.

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