Source: Alamy
Field days: a new television station aims to pair with a University of Oxford group to broadcast campus sporting events
Universities are broadening their efforts to find work experience for students by helping to run the UK鈥檚 new crop of local television stations.
Scottish broadcaster STV won the licence for a new Glasgow station in mid- January, and a key part of its bid was that journalism students at Glasgow Caledonian University would contribute their work to the programmes.
Julian Calvert, senior lecturer in journalism at Glasgow Caledonian, said that students were 鈥減roducing a lot of material which is near broadcast quality鈥 that could be used for the station, GTV.
探花视频
The university was 鈥渧ery much in favour of community involvement鈥, he said, and GTV would cover 鈥渃ommunities that haven鈥檛 had a route to getting on TV before鈥.
Noting that there were already graduates of Glasgow Caledonian working at STV, Mr Calvert said that the partnership would bring even more opportunities for work experience for current students.
探花视频
Pamela Gillies, the vice-chancellor, will be a director of the station, which will be broadcast via Freeview and is set to go live on 1 October.
A similar partnership was struck between STV and Edinburgh Napier University in a successful bid for the licence to run a local station in the Scottish capital. As in Glasgow, Edinburgh Napier students will gain experience by working on programmes for the channel, ETV, which will also go live on 1 October.
Bobby Hain, director of channels at STV, said that while many higher education institutions had their own television stations, 鈥渢his is the closest formal association a broadcaster has formed鈥 with universities in the UK.
The partnerships 鈥渁re the first of their kind. They are unique,鈥 he said.
GTV will also cover university arts groups for its magazine programmes, he added, and could add 鈥済reater depth鈥 to programmes by featuring academics.
探花视频
Mr Hain said that while some students would be paid for their work, others 鈥渨ill be exposed to GTV and ETV as part of their course鈥.
鈥淚 would look to take material [from students] on merit,鈥 he said, adding that if work was good enough, it would be broadcast without any further editing.
In May 2012 Ofcom invited bids to run 21 new TV stations in cities across the UK.
探花视频
In Oxfordshire, a new station, That鈥檚 Oxford, will be supported by journalism students from Oxford Brookes University. The institution will also offer a new foundation degree in local TV journalism in conjunction with the station.
The station will also work with Oxford University Sports Federation to 鈥渞eplicate the North American success of college sports on local TV鈥, according to its Ofcom bid.
It also hopes to bring viewers live coverage of 鈥渉igh-profile鈥 lectures at the ancient university.
The station, which boasts presenter Esther Rantzen as vice-president for programming, aims to launch in the first half of 2014.
探花视频
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




