Bachelor of Journalism (After-degree option)
Want to know the best reasons to earn your journalism degree from the University of Regina in Saskatchewan?
- Only journalism program in Canada that offers paid 13-week internships
- 90 per cent of our journalism degree graduates land jobs in the field within a year of graduation
- Key courses capped at 26 students to ensure personal attention needed to grow your talent and professionalism
Whether you want to work in print/online, television, radio, documentary, literary journalism, or investigative fields, this bachelor’s degree in journalism teaches you to:
- Do research and interviews
- Communicate clearly
- Think critically
- Report accurately
- Better understand public affairs
- Identify and avoid misinformation and media bias
- Use social media to handle the pressures of the 24/7 news cycle
- Work inside studios with the same editing, camera and sound equipment used in media today
- Build inclusive and respectful work-teams
Your journalism journey starts here. First, you complete university undergraduate and pre-journalism courses, which typically takes two years. Then, you apply to the School of Journalism. If accepted, you complete two years of intensive journalism classes and work with faculty-mentors who teach relevant courses such as:
- Rights and Responsibilities of the Journalist
- Photojournalism
- Investigative Journalism
- Advanced Radio, Documentary and Magazine Writing
Want to know the best reasons to earn your journalism degree from the University of Regina in Saskatchewan?
- Only journalism program in Canada that offers paid 13-week internships
- 90 per cent of our journalism degree graduates land jobs in the field within a year of graduation
- Key courses capped at 26 students to ensure personal attention needed to grow your talent and professionalism
Whether you want to work in print/online, television, radio, documentary, literary journalism, or investigative fields, this bachelor’s degree in journalism teaches you to:
- Do research and interviews
- Communicate clearly
- Think critically
- Report accurately
- Better understand public affairs
- Identify and avoid misinformation and media bias
- Use social media to handle the pressures of the 24/7 news cycle
- Work inside studios with the same editing, camera and sound equipment used in media today
- Build inclusive and respectful work-teams
Your journalism journey starts here. First, you complete university undergraduate and pre-journalism courses, which typically takes two years. Then, you apply to the School of Journalism. If accepted, you complete two years of intensive journalism classes and work with faculty-mentors who teach relevant courses such as:
- Rights and Responsibilities of the Journalist
- Photojournalism
- Investigative Journalism
- Advanced Radio, Documentary and Magazine Writing