Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Job Shadow

October 21, 2014

            On Saturday October 11 the Detroit Red Wings played the Anaheim ducks at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit. While the teams were getting dressed in their respective locker rooms I was climbing the back stairs up to the uncharacteristically small press box with Helene St. James.
            Helene is the Red Wings beat writer for the Detroit Free Press. She’s been working for the paper since 1996.
            After emailing back and forth for about a month we finally settled on the Anaheim game for me to shadow her. For me even walking in the media entrance and picking up my media pass was amazing. I then got to walk in the bottom of the Joe past the Zamboni entrance, past the visitor’s locker room and met Helene in the media dining room.  I was excited and nervous. I know that I want to be in the press box for hockey games as a career but I had never been in one until that game. It lived up to all my expectations.
            While the teams below were warming up and fans were pouring into their general admission seats Helene and I talked about the career she’s had and exactly what she does for each game.
            Every game morning she attends the morning skate and after writes a summary of what to expect that night. During the game she writes a detailed outline of what exactly happens during the game. She details penalties, goals, and assists. Also during the game she writes her story. During the game she also gets an idea who she wants to interview after the game and what questions she wants to ask them.
During the game I just sat beside Helene and watched her and the other journalists work. Helene seemed to know everyone in the box. At one point Kris Draper, who had been in an adjoining room with Mickey Redmond and Ken Daniels broadcasting for Fox Sports Detroit, walked by and stopped to say hello to Helene. As he was walking away he said hello to me as well. I grew up watching Draper play for the Red Wings and so for him to see me and say hello to me was pretty amazing.  I wasn’t really doing anything during the game but it was still a great experience just to be in that atmosphere and get a feel for what I would be doing in the future.
One tip she gave me was that as a reporter you technically cannot root for one team or another but you root for the game to end in regulation. If the game goes into overtime and/or a shootout it messes with the 10:25pm deadline. That night all the reporters were big Ryan Getzlaf of Anaheim fans as he scored the game’s winning goal with about 20 seconds left in regulation.
            My favorite part of the whole night was when we basically ran to the locker room after the game for the post-game comments from the players and coach. Luke Glendening, Niklas Kronwall, Gustav Nyquist, Henrik Zetterberg and Coach Mike Babcock all came out to speak to the reporters in the locker room. Helene was the most vocal one, asking most of the questions. I was surprised to see how few reporters were actually in the room. There were only about seven of them. I was the youngest person in the room by about five years and aside from Helene the only woman in the room. After Coach Babcock was done speaking, Helene went back to the media dining room to add the quotes into her story and add the finishing touches before sending it in.
When she went to finish her story I left her to write and walked back to meet my dad who was waiting for me outside. As I passed the visitor’s locker room on my way out, Anaheim’s Ryan Kesler walked right in front of me. I realized I could be in this profession when I didn’t try to talk to him or ask him for a picture. It may sound like a small, obvious  thing but for me not to ask for anything from one of the game’s stars, or even cheer when the Red Wings scored that night, was a big accomplishment for me and I knew I could handle the professionalism that has to come with the job.
Shadowing Helene St. James was so exciting for me. I learned a lot and all my expectations were met and were exceeded.




Monday, November 24, 2014

International Students Recap

Saudi Arabia has over 200 students studying at Michigan State University as of Fall 2013 according to a study by the Office for International Students and Scholars.
Two of those, are Freshmen Yaya Alshammari and Majed Abdullah.
Both came to MSU without knowing English and found that to be the hardest part of adjusting.

“When I came here I didn’t know English, and it was like hard to like talk to people here but they were like friendly and I can speak English well now," Alshammari said. 
Abdullah also said “I came here with no English at also I learned my whole English here. So it was hard to like communicate with them. Was the problem me or them and I couldn’t adjust in the beginning. Once I get to learn English it became easier." 
Internationals students also tend to think that American students are cold and don't accept them very willingly but Alshammari had a different experience. 
Alshammari said, “Yeah before I came here I thought that American people didn’t like international or that didn’t like speak English and when I came here I didn’t speak English but they were so so friendly with us and they helped us to improve our language and now I can speak English because uh them." 
One difference between the American education system and the Saudi education system according to Abdullah in American students are much more free to choose their area of study. 
Abdullah said that in Saudi Arabia students are handed a schedule and expected to follow it but in America students get to choose their own classes. 
 

International Students Preview

Michigan State University has, as of Fall 2013 has over 7,000 international students enrolled in classes. With 4,519 undergraduate and 2,233 graduate students in classes MSU's international student numbers are up eight and a half percent from last year according to the Michigan State University Office for International Students and Scholars.
Students from 131 countries are currently taking classes at MSU according to the OISS website. China accounts for the most students with over 4,000 students.
The College of Business, Engineering, and Natural Sciences currently have the most international students enrolled in them.
Over 600 international students are sponsored by their government's, the United States government or another agency the OISS website said.
According to the Association for International Educators the international students account for over $200 million in the East Lansing economy.
Ismail Adawe, an advisor with the OISS said that MSU is known worldwide and that is why so many international students come to MSU.
"MSU’s Admissions Office send recruiters to several countries and almost all continents each year but MSU is very renowned in China, Korea, Saudi Arabia and India. In Collectivistic Societies in the East the word of mouth is very important and students who attend MSU return to their country and share their experiences and send their families and friends. We have brothers, sisters, cousins and neighbors at MSU." Adawe said in an email.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

JRN 203 Graphs



  The first graph represents the number of NHL Stanley Cup Playoff games Detroit Red Wings' goalie Jimmy Howard has played in in the past five seasons. As of right now the Red Wings  have the longest active playoff streak in the big four North American sports with their streak at 23 straight years.
  The second graph shows the current goal leaders for the Red Wings. Gustav Nyquist leads the team with eight while several players including Pavel Datsyuk and Justin Abdelkader come in with five each. Nyquist is a younger player but came into his own last season when many of the veterans had injury issues. He produced prolifically last year and is expected to do the same this season. 
  The third graph shows the percentage of points the top five point producers account for. Captain Henrik Zetterberg leads the team in points. He makes up for about 27% of the team's goal and assists. Each goal or assist is considered one point. Henrik through 17 games played has racked up 17 points. Followed by Niklas Kronwall with 19% of the points. While Datsyuk, Johan Franzen, and Abdelkader all come in with 17% of the points. Zetterberg is usually at the top of this list both scoring goals but mostly assisting on many of them.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Social Media- Recap

    With the growing influence of Social Media one concern is a person's privacy on their pages.
    Only about 10 percent of users who had joined in August 2009 have “protected” Twitter accounts, according to a report from Robert J. Moore on Techcrunch.com.
    According to that same report that number is declining. 
    Mackenzie Gravelyn, a Michigan State University sophomore has all private Social Media accounts to protect herself from people she doesn't know, seeing her personal posts. 
    "Not everybody needs to know what I'm doing," Gravelyn said. 
    A potential implication of having a public account is having future potential employers see what is on your Social Media accounts. 
    A survey done by Harris Interactive on behalf of CareerBuilder found that almost 40 percent of companies search candidates on Social Media.
    Almost 45 percent of companies have found a reason on social media not to hire a candidate.              Rosemary Haefner, Vice President of Human Resources at CareerBuilder suggests in the report to search yourself, keep tabs on your accounts, read your privacy settings, and showcase your talents online to be more appealing to employers. 

Social Media- Preview

     Social Media use over the last few years grown rapidly.

     As of December 2013 there was 1.23 billion monthly Facebook users according to a report by PR

Newswire.
    There are 248 million monthly users on Twitter, according to about.twitter.com. 
    Instagram has 200 million active monthly users, according to its Website.
    According to a report by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, an initiative of the Pew Research Center, teens ages 12-17 years old and young adults ages 18-29 years old are the most likely to be online, both at 93 percent.
    In February of 2008 there were 65 percent of 12-17 year olds on online social networking sites. There are now 73 percent according to the Pew Internet report
     “Now, with low barriers to online participation and widespread adoption of mobile internet-connected devices students can seek and solicit help from their online social networks as well as readily share ideas and information,” assistant professor in the College of Education at Michigan State University Christine Greenhow said via email.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Post Game Recap: Red Wings vs. Capitals

The Red Wings have now won their first game in Washington in nine years. 
Thanks to a pair of goals from Justin Abdelkader, and goals from Gustav Nyquist and Pavel Datsyuk the Red Wings beat the Capitals 4-2 on the road. 
Jimmy Howard got the win in net and realized he needed to shut down Alex Ovechkin tonight. Talking to NBC's Pierre McGuire, pot-game Howard said he knew he needed to "Just get out and get big. Try and make him make a perfect shot on me." 
Ovechkin has now gone five games without a single point. The five games is the longest drought in his career. 

Early frustration came for Detroit when a goal was called off and a penalty was given to Luke Glendening after Capitals' goaltender Braden Holtby fell down. Goaltender interference was called on Glendening although he never touched the goalie. 
However, after some questionable calls the Wings didn't let that effect their play. The Red Wings benefitted most from errant passes from the Capitals and capitalized on their mistakes. 

Preview: Red Wings vs. Capitals

Preview: Red Wings vs. Capitals 

 Tonight the Detroit Red Wings will be playing the Washington Capitals in Washington. Coming into tonight's game the Red Wings are 4-2-2 and the Capitals are also 4-2-2. 
Washington's leading goal scorer at the moment is Alexander Ovechkin with five goals in their eight games. Detroit's leading goal scorer coming into tonight is Gustav Nyquist with four goals through eight games played. 
Both teams are coming off weekend road losses. Both teams lost 4-2. 
To be successful tonight Detroit needs to keep their penalty kill up to its recent standards. The Wings sit atop the NHL in penalty killing, allowing only one goal in 26 attempts. However the Capitals come in third in their power play, scoring seven times in 27 opportunities. 
The Capitals have won the last four home meetings against the Wings.