Henri-Nannen-Schule

The Henri-Nannen-Schule, formerly Hamburger Journalistenschule, is the journalist school of Europe's largest publishing house, Gruner + Jahr (Brigitte, GEO, Stern), German weekly Die Zeit and national news magazine Der Spiegel. Its seat is Hamburg and it is considered one of the best schools of journalism in Germany, along with the German School of Journalism (Deutsche Journalistenschule) in Munich.[1]

History

The Henri-Nannen-Schule was founded in 1978 on initiative of the late Henri Nannen, founding editor of the German news magazine Stern. Wolf Schneider, a renowned journalist, later language style critic and author, became its first director.[1] Since 2007, the post has been held by Andreas Wolfers.[2]

Education

The Henri-Nannen-Schule offers aspiring and experienced journalists a broad 18 months education encompassing magazine, newspaper, online, radio and television. Its curriculum consists of both four internships at major media outlets organised by the school (9 months) and seminars (8 months) given by experienced journalists with varying specialities – including politics, arts and culture, religion, science, education, business and economics, investigative reporting, national and international affairs.[1] All of them are preeminent in their fields, and many have won numerous journalism awards.[2]

Admission

Every 18 months, the Henri-Nannen-Schule selects 16 students[3] (20 before 2014) in a two-phase-procedure. The applicants minimum qualifications are they are between the ages of 19 and 28 with command of the German language, both spoken and written. First, applicants are asked to research and write a report and a comment. The best 60 of usually 1,500 applicants are subsequently invited to turn in a personal letter and a CV. They are invited to Gruner+Jahr headquarters in Hamburg, where they research and write another report, edit news, sit a general knowledge and a picture test and pass a personal interview with a jury of preeminent editors and reporters. Tuition is free and all students receive a monthly stipend.[1]

Prominent Alumni

  • Nikolaus Blome, vice editor-in-chief of Bild
  • Peter-Matthias Gaede, editor-in-chief of GEO
  • Christoph Keese, Senior Vice President Investor Relations and Public Affairs, Axel Springer AG
  • Peter Kloeppel, anchorman and editor-in-chief of RTL Television
  • Stefan Kornelius, senior editor for foreign policy at Süddeutsche Zeitung
  • Ildikó von Kürthy, German bestseller writer
  • Mathias Müller von Blumencron, editor-in-chief of digital products at Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
  • Marcel Rosenbach, reporter at Der Spiegel, Journalist of the Year (2013)
  • Wulf Schmiese, anchorman at ZDF Television
gollark: As I said, C's metaprogramming isn't good enough to patch shiny new features in in a pleasant way.
gollark: I don't think C has those? Or at least nice ones.
gollark: It's not good. People don't consistently get it right and it's annoying.
gollark: Yes, it's Turing-complete*, but that doesn't mean I want to write```cint32_t_iterator_of_some_kind thing = make_iterator();while (int32_t x = get_element(thing)) { // do thing with x}free_iterator(thing)```* not actually Turing-complete, due to weird spec quirks
gollark: It isn't. Its type system CANNOT correctly express generics, which you need for good iterators. Its insufficiently good memory management mechanisms would require manually freeing and allocing them, which is no. Its lack of good metaprogramming capabilities (the macros are not sufficient) means I couldn't make iterators which were actually *nice to use*.

References

  1. Bardey, Anja (May 2007). "Journalism in Germany - Journalistic Training". Goethe-Institut. Archived from the original on June 26, 2012. Retrieved May 15, 2019.
  2. "Schule: Kleine Crew an Bord". Henri-Nannen-Schule. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  3. "Courses". Henri Nannen School. Retrieved May 16, 2019.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.