Organizations & Services
Campus Media
The School of Journalism strongly urges all journalism students to work on campus media to develop the skills from their journalism classes.
The school does not offer credit for work on campus media, but many students get the hands-on experience to compete for internships and careers in news, public relations, advertising, and broadcasting.
More than 250 students work each semester for IU student media, on the first floor of Ernie Pyle Hall. They produce the Indiana Daily Student (IDS) newspaper, Inside magazine and Arbutus yearbook, all funded entirely through advertising revenue.
Students of all majors are welcome to apply for the staffs, hired by student editors, who have full responsibility for content.
Working at the IDS are reporters, editors, photojournalists, videographers, copy editors, designers, illustrators, graphics journalists, columnists, editorial writers, bloggers, and podcasters. Students also sell and produce advertising, implement marketing campaigns, and distribute newspapers.
The IDS publishes five days per week in fall and spring semesters and twice weekly in summer, with up to 15,000 copies distributed at dozens of points across and near campus.
Nearly all IDS staff members contribute to idsnews.com, its 24/7 site for breaking news, features, commentary, photos, and multimedia. The site includes blogs for news, sports, and opinion, as well as live blogs for leading Hoosier sports. The IDS also posts Twitter feeds for news, sports, and entertainment. Online readership has grown exponentially, reaching more than 550,000 page visits during peak months.
A lively part of the IDS is the Thursday Weekend section. It covers entertainment and pop culture—from local to global—with features, reviews and calendars. Even more coverage goes on the Weekend site, idsnews.com/weekend, with its Live Buzz entertainment blog.
Inside, the IDS’s quarterly magazine launched in 2006, has grown in sophistication with in-depth features, quick-read departments, compelling portraiture, and four-color designs.
The 400-page IU yearbook, the Arbutus (ar-BYOU-tuss), is named for wildflowers that once grew west of Bloomington. It offers excellent student experience in photojournalism, event reporting, feature writing, sportswriting, copy editing, and design.
The work of IU student journalists has long earned national recognition. The IDS, Arbutus, and now Inside win top national prizes, and students receive dozens of state and national honors each year.
Students aspiring for media careers can also explore opportunities outside Ernie Pyle Hall. IU journalism students work for Indiana Alumni magazine, at 1000 E. 17th Street, and they contribute to many other publications, both print and online, in academic units, residence halls, sororities, and fraternities.
Broadcast-news students gain experience at WTIU and WFIU, the university’s public TV and radio stations, in the Radio-Television Building on the Bloomington campus. WTIU airs a student-produced newscast, and both WTIU and WFIU offer internship opportunities.
Students can also work for WIUX, the student-run FM radio station, as well as IU’s student TV station, IUS TV. Both have offices on campus.