News & Tips
Training
Groups
Top Story
When Photojournalists Get Stuck Between Police, Protesters
Most Recent Articles
1.
Reporte del Pew Research Center Sobre los Cambiantes Hábitos Noticiosos
6:56 PM September 5, 2008
2.
When Photojournalists Get Stuck Between Police, Protesters
6:17 PM September 5, 2008
3.
J-student says having to take NYT to class is a drag
5:27 PM September 5, 2008
4.
Twin Cities Journalists Arrested Covering RNC Protests
5:11 PM September 5, 2008
5.
New York Times to combine some sections
3:51 PM September 5, 2008
More Recent Articles
6.
Great Presidents are Great Communicators
3:07 PM September 5, 2008
7.
Some PBS viewers wanted Ifill to show more enthusiasm for Palin
1:36 PM September 5, 2008
8.
Follow Journalism Conversations on Twitter
1:32 PM September 5, 2008
9.
The Eastern media elite's secret handshake revealed!
12:59 PM September 5, 2008
10.
Al Jazeera Covers the Conventions (And Coins a New Phrase for McCain)
12:06 PM September 5, 2008
Fewer Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
1.
When Photojournalists Get Stuck Between Police, Protesters
6:17 PM September 5, 2008
2.
J-student says having to take NYT to class is a drag
5:27 PM September 5, 2008
3.
Palin speech prompts ex-Life editor to dig up an old cover
12:49 PM September 4, 2008
4.
Great Presidents are Great Communicators
3:07 PM September 5, 2008
5.
Daily Mail Ignores Comments: Bad Idea
8:56 AM September 5, 2008
More E-mailed Articles
6.
The Eastern media elite's secret handshake revealed!
12:59 PM September 5, 2008
7.
The 11 Layers of Citizen Journalism
11:04 AM June 15, 2005
8.
Looking Through 'The Girl in the Window'
3:03 PM August 7, 2008
9.
Report: Tampa Tribune considers a one-section paper
2:48 PM September 2, 2008
10.
Noonan, others should write what they're really thinking
8:14 PM September 3, 2008
Fewer E-mailed Articles
Recent Comments
1.
Everything raises eyebrows
Posted By:
Alex Dering
12:25 PM September 6, 2008
2.
Rhetoric on rhetoric
Posted By:
J.David Knepper
12:03 PM September 6, 2008
3.
A couple of tried-and-true options
Posted By:
Alasdair Stewart
10:18 AM September 6, 2008
4.
But I wasn't between the police and anything
Posted By:
REG CROWDER
9:25 AM September 6, 2008
5.
Turning a drag into a discovery
Posted By:
Tom Grubisich
7:36 AM September 6, 2008
More Recent Comments
6.
And here's ANOTHER handy Propaganda Detector for everybody
Posted By:
REG CROWDER
6:38 AM September 6, 2008
7.
banner market
Posted By:
billy mail
12:09 AM September 6, 2008
8.
Thankyou Jill!
Posted By:
anders powell
11:03 PM September 5, 2008
9.
Don't blame the reader
Posted By:
Richard Klicki
9:32 PM September 5, 2008
10.
Gustav uncovered
Posted By:
Milford Fryer
9:08 PM September 5, 2008
Fewer Recent Comments
Recent Tags
1.
Political and campaign reporting
2.
Media criticism
3.
Layoffs/buyouts/staff cuts
4.
Online/new media
5.
TV News
More Recent Tags
6.
Magazines
7.
Ethics
8.
Political coverage
9.
Hurricanes: Reporting and Writing
10.
Blogs
Fewer Recent Tags
Community Activity
Welcome
bri deA
to the
Journalism Conversations: Online & Multimedia
group.
Read
John Bowen's
blog post
Seeking information about scholastic media freedom
in the
Journalism Education: Tips, Trends, Discussions
blog.
Read
Antonio Lopes's
comment to the blog post
Seeking information about scholastic media freedom
in the
Journalism Education: Tips, Trends, Discussions
blog.
View a
photo
that
Steve Myers
has posted.
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
1.
Poynter Leadership Academy
Apply NOW
2.
NewsU: Writers at Work: A Process Approach (II)
Apply by Sept. 8, 2008
3.
Multimedia Journalism for the Ethnic Media
Apply by Sept. 8, 2008
All Poynter Seminars
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
All NewsU Courses
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars
Romenesko
Latest News
Reporting
& Writing
Ethics &
Diversity
Leadership &
Management
Visual
Journalism
Online &
Multimedia
TV &
Radio
Journalism
Education
Ask the Recruiter
Home
>
Ask the Recruiter
Tools:
Text Size
or
,
Print
,
RSS
,
Subscribe via e-mail
Joe Grimm
Joe Grimm
, visiting journalist at the Michigan State University School of Journalism, tackles the toughest recruiting questions.
FOLLOW JOE ON Twitter
JOIN JOE'S "Ask the Recruiter" FACEBOOK GROUP
To get your question answered on this page,
send it to Joe
. Please include your full name in your message. If you prefer that your surname not be published, please indicate why.
If you're a student just getting back to school, now is not too soon to start thinking about internships for the summer of 2009. Get
"Breaking In: The JobsPage.com Guide to Newspaper Internships."
You can download a copy immediately.
Editing or Writing?
Q:
My situation is unique to me, but I'm sure not to you. I was a full-time freelance features writer in Stamford, Conn., in the late '80s. I have a pile of clippings to show for it, which is great. Then I married and had a couple of kids. While taking care of my two very little boys, I was offered a job as an assistant editor for a peer-reviewed professional society magazine (
IEEE Electrical Engineering
), which required a great deal of copy editing, including papers and articles from around the world. I was lucky enough to be able to work out of the house, using e-mail, Fed-Ex and the telephone for all of my duties. The job lasted four years; in that time, I lived in Connecticut, Georgia and then the United Kingdom. I was laid off in 2003, due to lower bidding from an editing/production firm.
While all of this was happening, I was divorced, moved back to the States, and am now a single mom. I decided to return to school and currently have a couple of loose ends to tie to finally get my BA.
I would like to re-enter the news-writing world, armed with editing experience. I'm unsure how to package myself -- copy editor? Features writer? I live on Cape Cod and have many ideas that could easily become "lite" news pieces, but I don't know how to contact various editors without giving my ideas away for free!
Any help would be *treasured.*
Sue
A:
It sounds like you have a movie in you. Or an episode of "Desperate Housewives."
In the meantime, pursue both of your interests.
It sounds as though you enjoy both, so I'd try both. You might find that you like the variety that comes from features writing, but an editing gig like the one you had before can give you the steady income stream you need.
And, right. Only a fool would give ideas away for free. (Free advice is an entirely different matter.)
Posted by
Joe Grimm
11:49 PM October 2, 2006
Tools:
Comment
,
e-mail
,
Permalink
,
Share
More from the Ask the Recruiter Archives >
View items published between:
&
(MM/DD/YYYY)
(MM/DD/YYYY)
Latest Poynter Blogs (
See All Blogs
)
Romenesko
J-student says having to take NYT to class is a drag
Al's Morning Meeting
When Photojournalists Get Stuck Between Police, Protesters
E-Media Tidbits
Daily Mail Ignores Comments: Bad Idea
Links to the News
Page One Today / McCain's Speech
Writing Tools
Great Presidents are Great Communicators
The Biz Blog
Checking the Pulse on Print: An Update
Diversity at Work
New Orleans: Largely Absent from Political Talk
SuperVision
Managing Gustav and GOP Coverage at CNN
Visual Voice
Next Generation of Visual Thinkers is Drawing the Future of Journalism
Shop
About Poynter
Give to Poynter
Best Newspaper Writing
Edited by Steve Myers and Tom Huang
$32.95
Who We Are
& What We Do
History and mission
Where is Poynter?
The Institute's location
Faculty & Staff Listings
Contact information
Poynter on the Record
Faculty in the news
Resource Center
Tips & Bibliographies
Invest in Journalism
Your gifts support Poynter's teaching and provide scholarships.
Advertise
You aim, we deliver
Reach thousands of journalists with your message on Poynter Online.
Contact
|
FAQ
|
Guidelines
|
Corrections
|
Site Map
|
Press
|
Advertise
| © 1995-2008 The Poynter Institute
801 Third Street South | St. Petersburg, FL 33701 | Phone (888) 769-6837 | Fax (727) 896-6703
Username
Password
Remember Me
New User? Signup Now
See All Jobs
Add Your Resume
Post Your Job
Ask The Recruiter
Friday: How Bad is a Gap in My Clips?
Colleen on Careers
You Worked Hard to Get the Interview, Make it Count