BACHELOR OF ARTS IN JOURNALISM

BACHELOR OF ARTS IN JOURNALISM

 

With internship embedded in its curriculum, The Manila Times College produces graduates who are work-ready. At TMTC, we provide hands-on training from the classroom to the newsroom.

TMTC’s journalism program is one of the few programs in the country to offer dual-degree certifications if journalism is taken in TMTC as a supplement course to the current one being taken in other universities.

From day one, TMTC students get professional exposure and practical experience in journalism at The Manila Times news desk and in the news beats.

The college provides rigorous training in which students are treated like real journalists, given news beat assignments, and taught to deliver newsworthy articles for publication in The Manila Times to hone their journalism skills and prepare them for intensive work in the news media after they graduate.

 

Since its founding in 2002, TMTC has produced journalism graduates who are now employed as reporters, writers, desk editors, producers, anchors, researchers, communication specialists, or photojournalists in the top media companies in the country. Others ventured into public relations, web development, marketing, and advertising. Some pursued higher studies such as law. As a unique advantage of the school- having The Manila Times newspaper as a sister company – students get to have first-hand experience working with news reporters and editors in producing journalistic articles. The school has a strong tradition of training journalists the fundamentals that will help them succeed in any career, whether print, broadcast or online.

 

The program, founded in 2003, is both nationally and internationally accredited since 2010.

​”We focus on journalism – providing students the chance to learn in small classes where they get to know their professors and are instilled in the values of a profession that provides citizens the information they need to self-govern.”

Over the last 15 years, TMTC has produced journalism graduates who are now employed as reporters, writers, desk editors, producers, anchors, researchers, communication specialists or photojournalists in the top media companies in the country. Others ventured into public relations, web development and advertising. Some pursued higher studies such as law.

As a unique advantage of the school, having The Manila Times newspaper as a sister company, students get to have first-hand experience working with news reporters and editors in producing journalistic articles.

The school has a strong tradition of training journalists the fundamentals that will help them succeed in any career, whether print, broadcast or online.