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HomeUSA NewsRevamp journalism to draw Gen Z news consumers

Revamp journalism to draw Gen Z news consumers

SJM L MOS SOCIALNEWS OP 01

Editor’s Note: This article was written for Mosaic, an independent journalism training program for high school and college students who report and photograph stories under the guidance of professional journalists.

I’m a news editor at my school newspaper, The Voice, in Fremont. Every month, when we make our rounds to distribute newspapers to our classmates, more of my peers decline to take one. I’ve had my fair share of awkward stares and mumbled “no”s as students look back at their phone screens in response, as I ask them if they’d like a newspaper.

It’s a feeling shared by other student journalists. Janet Guan, opinions editor at Mission San Jose High’s student paper, The Smoke Signal, said, “In recent years, the enthusiasm for reading news and just reading our school’s paper has declined.”

At its core, journalism is meant to disseminate news to the public to keep them informed about the world around them in an accessible way.

So when news outlets are struggling to keep the attention of a generation that consumes information in 20-second TikToks and Instagram Reels, I can’t help but wonder: by not doing a better job at adapting to a younger audience, is traditional news still serving its fundamental purpose?

It’s no secret that fewer youth are receiving information from comprehensive newspaper articles and that many get their information from social media. A 2022 survey conducted by Statistica on Gen Z young adults found that 50% of respondents said they used social media most frequently to get their news. In contrast, the poll showed that less than 7% of respondents get their news from cable news, local newspapers or national newspapers.

It’s not that my peers don’t care about what’s happening in the world — getting information from social media is just easier. Social media allows us to scroll through clips of politicians in Congress engaged in debates, commentators discussing the government shutdown or creators breaking down global events, and much of it is presented in the punchy, all-lowercase-text that young people are so familiar with.

This isn’t the first time technology has changed the way people consume information. “Every single technological development with regard to the spread of information has been criticized for reducing people’s attention spans. In a way, journalism has always been ‘dying,’ ” said Francis Luo (no relation), an arts and entertainment reporter for The Daily Californian at UC Berkeley.

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