Academy for Journalism in Hamburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Academy for Journalism in Hamburg eV
Logo Akademie für Publizistik.gif
purpose journalistic training
Chair: Barbara Thomass
Establishment date: 1970
Seat : Hamburg, Germany
Website: akademie-fuer-publizistik.de

The Academy for Journalism in Hamburg eV is a non-profit association that was founded in 1970 in Hamburg . Members / sponsors are publishing and journalist organizations, publishers, broadcasting organizations, the press and information office of the Federal Government as well as individuals from all media and also from the Otto Group and Hapag-Lloyd .

education

The Academy for Journalism is an institution for extra-occupational, inter-company training and advanced training for journalists from all media. Each year the Academy offers eleven four-week courses for press volunteers, two courses (two two-week courses) for radio volunteers and two four-week courses for television volunteers. This corresponds to the training collective agreement for volunteers in daily newspapers and magazines: if possible, at least four weeks of inter-company training in the first year of training.

In total, the academy organizes around 250 courses a year on the subjects of photography, management, online & mobile, PR & communication, print, research, social media and TV & video. These are suitable for all formats and all ages and career levels, so that lifelong learning is possible at the academy.

Management and lecturers

The academy or the association is managed by a board that is supported by a board of trustees . From July 1970, Kurt Maschmann, the local manager of the Hamburger Morgenpost , became the founding association chairman and director . In 1971 the editor-in-chief of the Deutsche Allgemeine Sonntagsblatt Eberhard Maseberg became chairman of the academy's board of directors and Maschmann († 1980) remained as managing director of the academy. The head of the academy was Armin Sellheim from 1981 to 1989 . Communication scientist Will Teichert took over from 1989 to 1999 , after which he remained at the academy as chairman of the board. Friedrich Mielke, former press officer of the America House in Hamburg, now occupied his post as director. The academy has had a director for the first time since 2001: Annette Hillebrand , former CvD at taz Hamburg. Nadja Stavenhagen has been director since 2014 .

Will Teichert's successor as CEO was media specialist Rainer Cabanis , who died in June 2009. In November 2009, Barbara Thomaß , a communications and media scientist, became the first woman to be CEO. There are over 200 lecturers.

Other services

In 2003 the academy introduced an ethics council, the composition of which consisted of the journalists Heribert Prantl , Christian Sauer , the professor for multimedia policy Bernhard Debatin and the lawyer Dorothee Bölke until 2014.

location

Originally the founding seat (1970–1998) of the Academy for Journalism on the Outer Alster

Shortly after its founding in 1970, the original headquarters of the Academy for Journalism was in the Pöseldorfer Villa at Magdalenenstraße 64a with a view of Harvestehuder Weg and the Outer Alster. After the property was sold in 1998, the academy - as an interim solution - moved to Mittelweg , resided in Warburgstrasse 8-10 from 1999 and finally found its current location in 2017 in Cremon 32 with a view of Nikolaifleet . The rooms are on the ground floor, include several seminar and event rooms and are barrier-free.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. https://www.akademie-fuer-publizistik.de/ueber-uns/verein
  2. Homepage Academy for Journalism
  3. Nordwest-Zeitung, Oldenburger Nachrichten edition of August 26, 1980, page 2
  4. ^ German General Sunday Gazette
  5. https://www.abendblatt.de/archiv/1971/article201304059/Hamburger-Rundblick.html
  6. Our story. Retrieved August 5, 2020 .
  7. Our story. Retrieved November 20, 2019 .
  8. Our story. Retrieved November 20, 2019 .
  9. http://www.akademie-fuer-publizistik.de/akademie/unser-team/nadja-stavenhagen/
  10. ^ Federal Association of German Newspaper Publishers eV: Rainer M. Cabanis for the Hamburg Academy for Journalism , November 30, 2007
  11. http://kress.de/alle/detail/beitrag/101166-akademie-fuer-publizistik-mit-neuem-vorstand-thomass-uebernehmen-vorsitz.html
  12. http://www.akademie-fuer-publizistik.de/akademie/unser-verein-in-zahlen/
  13. https://web.archive.org/web/20040805220616/http://www.akademie-fuer-publizistik.de/wir/bibl/wir_bibliothek_ethikrat.php
  14. Die Welt, July 14, 2003, p. 36
  15. https://web.archive.org/web/20140921081116/http://www.akademie-fuer-publizistik.de/ethikrat/
  16. https://www.abendblatt.de/kultur-live/article107513533/Die-Akademie-fuer-Publizistik-in-Hamburg.html
  17. https://www.akademie-fuer-publizistik.de/ueber-uns/geschichte