Four ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ State students and alumni were recognized among the best in collegiate journalism for the 2022-23 academic year, placing in the Hearst Journalism Awards competition.
The are known as the βPulitzer Prize of Collegiate Journalism,β and recognize outstanding student work in categories spanning writing, multimedia, audio, television and photojournalism.
Alexandria Manthey, β24, 18th place in News Feature
Rising senior Alexandria Manthey received recognition for two television packages: in April of 2022 and the in downtown ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ.
βI wasnβt expecting to be a finalist at all,β said Manthey, a journalism major. βI was more looking to create stories that I was proud of and improve my reporting.β
Associate professor and TV2 adviser Gretchen Hoak, Ph.D., helped Manthey with her submissions. Hoak said Mantheyβs previous experience properly equipped her to create packages that the judges who look at the award submissions want to see.
βAlex has a great understanding of story structure, and sheβs also a really great shooter and editor,β Hoak said. βSheβs coachable. Sheβs not afraid to hear what she needs to improve.β
Gabby Jonas, β23, 20th place in Hard News
βI met this wonderful man (in East Palestine); it was very heartbreaking to see how broken he was from the experience,β Jonas said. βHis whole family has passed away, and heβs on low income. The fact that this situation happened to him was heartbreaking for me.β
At first, Jonas said she βcouldnβt believeβ she was recognized.
βIn the industry, I donβt think you give yourself enough credit,β she said. βI definitely am hard on myself a lot β¦ thereβs a lot of competition in anything you do. Itβs a very cut-throat environment and itβs hard to feel like your story actually means something.
She also said she gained more confidence in herself and her work from the experience.
βI havenβt had that confidence boost with what I do in a long time,β she said. βMy mom will always hype me up β¦ but itβs not the same. These are people I donβt know, people who know what theyβre doing. The fact that they thought mine was still award-winning-worthy, was game-changing for me in how I perceive my own work.β
Isabella Schreck, β25, 12th place in Sports Writing
Rising junior journalism major Isabella Schreck was recognized in the sports writing category for her coverage of the 50th anniversary of Title IX at ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ State.
βThe story I submitted was about the history of Title IX at ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ State,β Schreck said. βIt took everyone all the way back to before there were womenβs varsity sports at ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ State. I focused specifically on equal opportunity for women in sports at the collegiate level.β
She said she initially came up with the idea after seeing a web banner that said βCelebrating 50 years of Title IX at ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ Stateβ during her freshman year. She was serving as sports editor of ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊWired.com at the time, and served as editor-in-chief during the Spring 2023 semester.
Schreckβs main source for the story was Judy DeVine, a pioneer in Title IX for womenβs athletics at ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ State. The in September 2022.
She said her main support system was Media and Journalism Professor Susan Kirkman Zake, retired Associate Professor Carl Schierhorn, along with her peer editors, alumnae Emma Andrus, β22, and Alexandra Golden, β23.
βIt took about six months (between interviewing, editing and reporting),β she said. βI was extremely, extremely excited and grateful.β
Maddy Haberberger, β22, 15th place in Multimedia II
ΒιΆΉΣ°ΤΊ State alumna Maddy Haberberger, β22, currently a social producer for NBCUniversal, received recognition for a piece she worked on during her senior year. She was in Student Media Practicum, a class that prompts students to report on environmental stories through data visualization. She chose to do her project on the Akron sewer system and the Cuyahoga River.
βNotoriously, the Cuyahoga River was not the cleanest for a while,β she said. βThere were fires on the river in the 1960s because of industrial pollution, and then there was a big movement in the eighties to clean it up, and thatβs been in-progress ever since.β
The final project was titled: β.β
As she worked on the project, Haberberger said she knew she wasnβt going to take a traditional news route in journalism. Her professor, Zake helped her along with finding a way to do the project in a way she liked.
βI was in the process of interviewing for my current job, and I knew they use (Adobe) After Effects, and I hadnβt really had an opportunity to work with it a ton in school,β Haberberger said. βIt was really cool to get to mess around in After Effects β¦ Now, I use it every day so that was really instrumental in helping me get familiar with the program too."