Select language:

School of young journalists in Moscow enrolls mass media representatives from 23 countries

 / Главная / Russkiy Mir Foundation / News / School of young journalists in Moscow enrolls mass media representatives from 23 countries

School of young journalists in Moscow enrolls mass media representatives from 23 countries


01.11.2017

pixabay.comInternational School of Young Journalists organized by Sputnik news agency starts in the Russian capital, RIA Novosti reports.

According to organizers, this school session became the most extensive one over the whole history of the school’s existence: representatives of thirty different mass media companies are taking part in it. Journalists from Iran, Afghanistan, Serbia, Tunisia, Cyprus, Vietnam, Bulgaria, Portugal, Greece, China and Denmark arrived in Moscow. They work in print and online media.

They will go through busy agenda. Young specialists will be able to see operations of a modern multimedia news agency. They will get to know basics of online news platforms’ development and principles of work of journalists and press photographers in military zones of the planet.

Participants will solve practical tasks of contemporary editorial offices and news providers at numerous master-classes. The young journalist school will end up on November 4.

According to the editor-in-chief of Sputnik Anton Anisimov, this is an unprecedented project. It enables learning more about national media content, improving professional skills and setting contacts with colleagues from all over the world.

Russkiy Mir

News by subject

Publications

Italian entrepreneur Marco Maggi's book, "Russian to the Bone," is now accessible for purchase in Italy and is scheduled for release in Russia in the upcoming months. In the book, Marco recounts his personal odyssey, narrating each stage of his life as a foreigner in Russia—starting from the initial fascination to the process of cultural assimilation, venturing into business, fostering authentic friendships, and ultimately, reaching a deep sense of identifying as a Russian at his very core.