Poynter Online Poynter Online
New UserLogin
Poynter Online Main Page
Poynter Career Center
Design / Graphics
Diversity
Ethics
Leadership
Online
Photojournalism
Writing / Editing
TV / Radio
Journalism & Business Values
About Poynter
Seminars
Faculty
Columns
Resource Center
The Poynter Store

Help Poynter


Create Your Personal Page
Add Your Bio
Add Your Photo
Share Your Favorite Links

Signup for Poynter Newsletters
Get Poynter Delivered to Your PDA

ASNE Online Ethics Tool



Reporting & Writing for Multi-Platform Newsrooms
It's not about the tools or the toys. It's about the journalism. -- Travis Fox, washingtonpost.com

Add/View All Reporting & Writing for Multi-Platform Newsrooms Feedback
More Reporting & Writing for Multi-Platform Newsrooms

Saturday, March 10, 2007


Don't Stop, Go! When the Learning is Hard and Long
What does Flash, a sophisticated software program for creating interactive websites and digital animations, have to do with with Go, the ancient board game that originated in China?

Read this blog post by Mindy McAdams, who holds the Knight Chair for journalist technologies and the democratic process at the University of Florida and is author of "Flash Journalism: How to Create Multimedia News Packages." In it she compares her experience teaching Flash to her students to her attempts to master Go.

The image “http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/14/Go_Kano_Eitoku.jpg/300px-Go_Kano_Eitoku.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Two statements from her first Go teacher speak to those of us struggling to to master the tools of multimedia.

"Go is a hard game."

“Go is a long game."

While her focus is Flash, these Zen-like statements can be applied to any technology that put journalists  in the uncomfortable position of replacing their competence as reporters, editors, photographers, and designers with a dismaying sense of incompetence.

I think we can take  comfort in McAdams’ story;  I certainly do as I return to photography for the first time in decades, try to learn audio recording and the editing software these technologies demand.

It's a hard game.
It’s a long game,

It brings to mind the statement attributed to the 19th century French novelist, Gustave Flaubert, that has consoled me as I struggle to master the writing process.

“Talent is a long patience."

"Just because something is hard and can take a long time to learn” McAdams says, “doesn’t mean you can’t learn it. But it’s not a quick or simple process. Hard things take time. Hard things offer great rewards. Learning a hard thing is more mind-expanding than learning an easy thing.”

Wise advice.

Image source: Detail of The Four Accomplishments, by Kano Eitoku. One of six folding screens: ink on paper. Shows people playing Go. Japan, Momoyama period, 16th century. On exhibit at the Sackler Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution. Published under Wikipedia Commons.



Posted by Chip Scanlan 10:18:38 PM
E-mail this item | Add Your Comments | QuickLink this item: A119642



Reporting & Writing for Multi-Platform Newsrooms Archive
View items published between:   and   
(MM/DD/YYYY) (MM/DD/YYYY)

MAIN | Back to Top




Search Poynter Online
Search Poynter Online

My Boss Likes Me, He Likes Me Not
My Boss Likes Me, He Likes Me Not
New On Poynter
A Case for Subsidies?
By Rick Edmonds

Whither Bush's Blog?
By Alan Abbey

Olympian Ruling
Al's Friday Meeting

Tech-Savvy Cities
Al's Friday Meeting

Taking a Grammar Vote
By Roy Peter Clark

Covering Disabilities
By Susan LoTempio

News from Israel
Page One Today


  Site Map | Advertise | Search | Contact | FAQ | Our Guidelines QuickLink  
  Copyright © 1995-2008 The Poynter Institute
  801 Third Street South | St. Petersburg, FL 33701 | Phone (888) 769-6837
  Site developed & hosted by DataGlyphics, Inc.



Poynter Career Center
Friday: Can New Media Save My Career?
Giving Credit Costs Little