Survey Finds Job Market Stall for J&MC Graduates
The job market recovery that began two years ago for graduates of U.S. journalism and mass communication programs seems to have stalled, according to findings released today by the University of Georgia's James M. Cox Jr. Center for International Mass Communication Training and Research. Data from the Cox Center's Annual Survey of Journalism and Mass Communication Graduates found that journalism and mass communication graduates in 2006 were no more likely to have a job offer when they finished their studies than graduates a year earlier and no more likely to have landed a full-time job by the end of October—approximately five months after leaving the university. "Graduates of U.S. journalism and mass communication programs confronted a weakened job market in 2006 and early 2007 ," according to Lee B. Becker, director of the Cox Center and professor of journalism in UGA's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. The percentage of 2006 journalism and mass communication bachelor's degree recipients with at least one job offer on graduation was 76 percent, comparable to the figure of a year earlier. The percentage of master's degree recipients with at least one job offer on graduation was 72 percent, also comparable to the previous year. At the same time, salaries for graduates with full-time jobs did increase and even managed to outpace inflation just slightly. Benefits, however, showed a marked decline. Only half of the journalism and mass communication bachelor's degree recipients with a job in communication were working a 40-hour week. A quarter reported working between 41-50 hours per week. More 2006 than 2005 graduates reported writing and editing for the Web as part of their work assignment with 40 percent of bachelor's degree recipients reporting such responsibilities, Becker noted. The percentage of graduates reporting that they are designing and building Web pages also increased in 2006. To download the 2006 Graduate Survey with black and white charts, please click here. To download the 2006 Graduate Survey with color charts, please click here. |
