The federalist

Journalism ranked as the top regretted college major amid declining trust in corporate media.

At a time when the majority of ⁢Americans recognize⁢ the⁤ corporate media are dishonest, journalism tops the ‌list of the⁣ 10 most regretted college majors, according to a ZipRecruiter survey from​ last ‍November that CNBC republicized on Sunday. A whopping ‍87 percent of journalism graduates regret their​ degree choice, with sociology, liberal arts, communications, and education ⁣next on the⁢ regret list.‌ Of job seekers with college degrees overall, 44 percent regret ‍their chosen major.

It’s conventional wisdom that ‌students⁣ who spend exorbitant ⁢amounts of‌ money on a college degree, or⁤ take out monstrous loans ‌to do so, should​ consider whether their chosen field of⁢ study will leave them with useful and valuable skills. Fields that prize technical expertise, like medicine or ⁤engineering, are generally safer financial‌ bets ‍that justify hefty education bills, as one Georgetown study showed.​ In ⁢the ZipRecruiter survey, the least regretted college major was computer and information studies, with criminology, engineering, and nursing following in the ranking.

But ​modern J-school students,‌ on the other hand, typically write massive tuition ⁤checks ​to be ⁣instructed in the propaganda that passes for journalism at most universities and in the insulated newsrooms their students populate. ‌They are taught by people⁣ like The New York Times’ Nikole Hannah-Jones, the author of the error-plagued revisionist history known ‍as The 1619 Project, often at expensive “elite” schools. A study from⁢ the Journal ‌of Expertise studied two major ‌publications, ‌The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, and found that 44 percent of Times ⁣employees and 50⁤ percent ‌of Journal employees attended elite schools. Further, approximately 28 percent of the ⁢papers’ overall editors and writers ‌attended⁤ Ivy League schools.

In ​the 2022-2023 school⁤ year, the average cost of “tuition and fees” alone ⁢for undergraduate journalism per year was $10,440 for in-state and $30,248 for⁢ out-of-state. (Of⁣ course, the ones from Ivy Leagues are far pricier.) The average journalist’s salary comes out to $45,307 per year.

Meanwhile, Americans’ ⁤faith in⁤ corporate media is evaporating. A Gallup study found that Americans’ trust‌ in media has been⁣ in steady decline since the ⁤1970s. In 1976, 72 ​percent of Americans said they trusted media a “great deal/fair amount,” plummeting to only 34 percent in⁣ 2022.

The field that used to be known as ⁣“reporting” has become⁢ so lazy that⁤ some outlets ⁢are outsourcing their employees’ jobs to⁤ artificial⁤ intelligence. The Columbus Dispatch, a Gannett-owned paper, was mocked for a laughably ‌bad ⁢piece of sports reporting ‍written by ‌AI. News Corp Australia churns out thousands‌ of AI-created articles every ⁢week.

“ChatGPT will become a regular part of‍ many journalists’ tool kits,” declared a Times op-ed.

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