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What I learned during my internship

By Tracie Hunte
2002 Chips Quinn Scholar

08.02.02

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During my internship, I learned ...

  • To always write the best story you can. Even if you think it’s a bad idea, the important thing is that your editor doesn’t. So shut up and write.

  • To talk to the reporters around you. You’d be surprised how much they are willing to help you.

  • To 'fess up to mistakes before your readers can point them out. There's nothing worse than a letter to the editor pointing out your mistake.

  • Not to get upset when every story doesn’t get a compliment. Fishing for compliments is unattractive.

  • To know your state's open-records laws. They don't call Florida the "Sunshine State" because it's hot. Almost every government document is subject to the "Government in the Sunshine Laws."

  • To be nice to secretaries. They often are the gatekeepers standing between you and your sources.

  • Not to underestimate the intelligence of your readers.

  • Not to always write stories about what you think readers ought to know, but about what they want to know.

  • To be always thinking of story ideas and, when you think of one, automatically check the archives. Pitching stories that your paper ran three months ago is really embarrassing.

  • To never put your head on a desk, even if you're just "thinking really hard." Trust me; you look like you're sleeping on the job.

Tracie Hunte, a University of Florida student, was a Chips Quinn Scholar at FLORIDA TODAY in Melbourne in Summer 2002.

Related

Summer journals: Learning about life while covering news
Chips Quinn Scholars gain journalism experience as interns — sometimes the hard way.  08.02.02

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