Posts Tagged ‘tuition fees’

Selection Day for 2012 Journalism students

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011 at 9:00 am

If you are writing the personal statement for your UCAS form, but wondering if you can afford three years of tuition fees at university, then you are welcome to register for Up To Speed Journalism’s selection day in the half-term holidays.

We are interviewing candidates interested in taking our NCTJ diploma courses in 2012 and 2013 on Friday, October 28th. A third of places on the September, 2012 course have already been reserved by successful applicants, but there is still time to apply.

Up To Speed is based in Bournemouth at the offices of the Daily Echo and we offer six-month courses in journalism and photography starting in September and January. Students who have joined us straight from school have gone on to work in news, magazine journalism, fashion writing and politics.

To apply for a place or to book an interview on October 28th, click or tap here.
If you are reading this on your smartphone, scan in our QR code below and bookmark our site.

Scan our QR code with your phone and bookmark our site

 

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Jobs Offer For Up To Speed Journalism Applicants

Monday, June 6th, 2011 at 2:28 am

A booming hotel group is offering budding journalists and photographers a chance to earn their Up To Speed course fees.

 

Akkeron Hotels has agreed to offer jobs to bright, motivated young people referred to them by Up To Speed.

So, if you pass our entrance test and Akkeron’s selection process, you can pay your own way and save towards your fees for up to a year before you join us.

 

Akkeron employs over 1,600 staff at 36 hotels around the UK. The company is expanding rapidly with an acquisition target of 150 hotels in the next 4 years and prides itself on recruiting dedicated staff with a desire to succeed.

 

“Our industries have some very relevant transferrable skills in relation to communication and conversing with customers and people, “ said Akkeron Hotels’ Director of Human Resources, Martyn Ball.

 

The exciting alliance with Akkeron allows you to follow in the footsteps of Up To Speed’s founder Tom Hill, a former television news journalist.

Up To Speed's Founder Tom Hill

 

“When I was working as a producer on News At Ten, it often reminded me of my Gap Year work in kitchens and hotels, “ said Tom.

 

“The pressure of deadlines, the attention to detail and the paramount importance of people skills. It was a great preparation for life in a newsroom.”

Up To Speed has been offering NCTJ-accredited courses since 2007.

 

If you are interested in being considered for work with Akkeron Hotels, please say so when you complete our application form.

 

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Pay In May And Save Ten Per Cent On Fees

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011 at 10:36 am

We are trying to make the merry month of May even cheerier at Up To Speed by offering a ten per cent cut in fees.

If you sign up and pay your deposit for September 2011, or January 2012, before the end of the month, you can take our courses in news, magazine or sports journalism for just £3,600.

Up To Speed’s courses lead to the NCTJ Diploma in Journalism, a tried and trusted route into the career.

From 2012, tuition fees for our accredited fast-track course will work out at just 15% of the price being charged for an undergraduate degree in journalism at many universities.

Students who have joined Up To Speed straight after their A Levels have gone on to work in fashion journalism, in evening newspapers and in news agencies. Their age has been no obstacle to finding paid employment. One is even working as a parliamentary researcher.

 

 

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No Degree, No Debt And A Job In Journalism

Monday, April 11th, 2011 at 2:25 am

By the time most of her former classmates from sixth form college were coming to the end of their second term at university Heather Findlay had already landed a job in journalism.

Heather, 19, left Brockenhurst College in Hampshire with straight As in her A Levels, but decided university was not for her.

“I really wanted to be a journalist and I wanted to make a start as soon as I possibly could,” said Heather.

Heather found the fastest route into an intensively competitive occupation was to take a fast-track NCTJ course. She started the course at Up To Speed in September, 2010 and took her last exams in February, 2011.

Working Journalist: Heather Findlay decided against a degree

However, she combined the second half of the course with freelance work at Medavia, a news and features agency in Bristol.

After a trial period with Medavia, Heather impressed her employers with her ability to dig out and cover a range of features and she was offered a permanent job at the end of March.

“I am really pleased that it has all worked out for me and that my decision to do something different, and not just follow all my friends to university, has paid off,” said Heather.

There are still spaces on Up To Speed’s course in September, 2011 if you have been inspired by Heather’s story.

Call us on 01202 761944 or 01202 411288 to find out more.

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