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Future TV Journalists Partner With Future Diplomats for Joint Exercise on Public Affairs

Students working in a busy newsroom
Students prepare for their interviews in the NCC Newsroom at Newhouse 2.

More than a dozen students from the made a field trip to the television studios at the this fall for a hands-on lesson in how to make foreign affairs topics relatable to the American public.

The international relations students took part in a series of live, on-camera interviews with broadcast journalism students in the weeks leading up to the 2022 midterm elections. Students answered questions about how other countries view U.S. politics and why foreign governments pay attention to U.S. election outcomes.

The Maxwell students were recruited by Professor Michael Williams, who teaches a class on international relations, for the exercise. The Newhouse students were part of a television newscast class taught by Professor Elliott Lewis.

鈥淟ast year, I was interviewed by one of Elliott鈥檚 students for a project,鈥 says Williams. 鈥淚t dawned on me that having journalism students partner with international affairs students was a great way for both to gain experience and enrich the learning process.鈥

Williams and Lewis paired each international relations student with a broadcast journalism student who had to conduct a pre-interview with their partner in preparation for the five-minute segment on camera.

Professors Elliott Lewis and Michael Williams behind a news desk in the Newhouse School
Newhouse Professor Elliott Lewis (left) and Maxwell Professor Michael Williams

Journalism student Erin O鈥橞rien was matched with a student who is specializing in Sub-Saharan Africa. 鈥淚 didn’t know much about the area before,鈥 says O鈥橞rien. 鈥淣ot only did I gain knowledge through this experience, but I also got to work on my interviewing skills.鈥

Lewis said the exercise was a way for his students to practice hosting a live segment in the style of The Today Show or Good Morning America. 鈥淔or most story assignments, all of the interviews are pre-recorded for editing later, and they take as long as they want,鈥 says Lewis. 鈥淗ere, students got to experience what it鈥檚 like to interview a subject-matter expert in a limited amount of time and help that expert impart their knowledge in a relatable way.鈥

The Maxwell students also received guidance from Professor Beverly Kirk, who serves as program director for 网爆门鈥檚 new Democracy, Journalism and Citizenship Institute in Washington, DC. Kirk, a former NBC News correspondent who holds a master鈥檚 degree in diplomacy and international commerce, spoke to Williams鈥 class via Zoom to offer tips on making complicated topics understandable to a broad audience via the news media.

Williams said the overall experience was 鈥渁 great way for two top schools to combine their efforts into one successful outcome.鈥