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What To Learn

High School

What high school courses should you take if you're interested in this career? Get your answers from the Arts, Audio-Video Technology and Communications cluster Journalism and Broadcasting pathway.

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Additional Information

A basic grounding in media studies can be found in most journalism or communications programs. Once you've received your basic education, it can take years of experience and further education to be considered a serious media analyst.

Journalism professor Christopher Dornan says most students with an interest in media analysis come from a communication background, as opposed to a journalism background. "We have journalism and communication. The journalism program is designed to feed people into the newsrooms of the nation to become working journalists -- reporters and editors and producers, documentary filmmakers,...but the communications side is entirely academic.

"We take the media as our objects of analysis and scrutiny and criticism, just as the political science department takes the affairs of state and the actions of government as its objects of analysis. The people who graduate with communication degrees often go into work in what one might broadly describe as media analysis."

Some analysts go to film school, where they're immersed in media symbolism and history.

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