There are no requirements for journalism in a secondary school. If you want to major in college in journalism it helps to have been on the school paper or year book. To have good grades in English and to have gotten a few things published in local papers. Write, write, write is the thing to do. Hone your skill and use it. Ask a favorite teacher to read your work and tell you how you can improve. Be ready for people to reject what you have written, but keep at it.
1.Best Schools for Journalism - Journalistics blog.journalistics.com/2009/best-schools-for-journalism/ 2.Top 10 Journalism Schools in the U.S. education-portal.com/top_10_journalism_schools.html
The usual requirements for describing events, as mandated by most journalism schools would be answering the following: "What," "where," "who," "why," and "how"?
Universities are very good options for journalism majors. Journalism is offered at most colleges and universities.
Only some schools have a maximum age for journalism students. The schools that do usually require students to be under 28 years of age.
I have attended two post-secondary schools.
I would look at Journalism Schools website. They will mention what schools are best for broadcasting.
Roosevelt University in Chicago (loop) has an amazing journalism department, you should check it out
I think we call them Secondary Schools here... Primary > Secondary > College/Job/Whatever
Academy of the New Church Secondary Schools was created in 1876.
St.marys boys secondary school-apowa takoradist.marys boys secondary school-apowa takoradi
Richard D'Aeth has written: 'Secondary schools in the British Caribbean' -- subject(s): Education, Secondary, High schools, Secondary Education
Yes, many educators do believe that chemistry should be taught is secondary schools now.