Signal Web site named finalist for Pacemaker award
April 09, 2009 - OBU Signal
The Ouachita Baptist University Signal’s Web site has been named a finalist for the
prestigious Pacemaker award from Associated Collegiate Press (ACP).
Ouachita’s newspaper was one of the smallest schools represented in the non-daily category. Others vying
for the award in the category include University of Missouri-Columbia, Tulane, Temple
and University of Miami.
The Pacemaker winners are announced at the fall ACP meeting in Austin, Texas.
“It’s an impressive list of finalists,” said Mitch Bettis, adviser to the online Signal
and co-adviser to the print edition. “Everyone should be proud to be named a finalist
since our site has been active for only six months.”
The Signal’s Web site went live Sept. 22, 2008, and students Holland Powell and Emma
Smith are co-editors. Chloe O’Connor is editor-in-chief, which includes the print
and online editions.
The contest was judged by Ellyn Angelotti, interactivity editor for the Poynter Institute,
a leader in online journalism training and education.
Angelotti noted that the top sites displayed excellence in the following areas: Integration
of multimedia and user-generated content; navigability; breadth of coverage, including
in-depth reporting; custom, clean design; sound news judgment on the home page.
The 223 total entries into the contest were divided into the following categories:
Four-year Daily Newspaper, Four-year Non-Daily Newspaper, Two-year Newspaper and Non-newspaper
sites, including Broadcast, Yearbook, Magazine and Online-only publications.
“The online site represents a convergence of all that is produced in the mass communications
department,” Bettis said. “That’s why it’s such an honor to be named a finalist —
many people had a role in this recognition.”
In addition to publishing stories from The Signal’s print edition, the Web site contains
video from Dr. David Ozmun’s video students, feature stories from Dr. Deborah Root’s
feature writing class and stories from Bettis’ Media Writing class.
The site features photographs taken by the photography staff members, and it also
features photographs and photo slide shows from the Introduction to Photography class.
Stories written by students working the public relations office are also part of the
online edition.
The university’s sports information department and information technology department
have also been important contributors to the project, according to Bettis.
The National Scholastic Press Association (NSPA), based and incorporated in Minnesota as a non-profit educational association, provides
journalism education services to students, teachers, media advisers and others throughout
the United States and in other countries.
NSPA has three divisions. Memberships for college, university and professional and
technical school student media are organized under the Associated Collegiate Press.
To see a list of finalists in all categories, click here.
by OBU Signal
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