When Delta Digital at Arkansas State University came into being in 2016, its purpose was to create an online showcase for the reporting work that journalism students were completing in their classes. The work would be available to local news outlets, as long as students received a byline.
In 2019, multimedia journalism program instructor and Delta Digital News Service advisor Terrance Armstard decided that the service would focus exclusively on off-campus stories. The student newspaper already had campus covered, Armstard reasoned, and the site would be a needed addition to existing student journalism opportunities.
鈥淲e had a student newspaper, a radio station and a television station,鈥 Armstard said. 鈥淲ith the creation of the digital news service, it provided a fourth avenue where students could go and complete a news practicum.鈥
Armstard wanted Delta Digital to form its own niche, with his student journalists reporting local stories that other outlets did not cover. This would prevent competition with local media while increasing the chances that the students鈥 work would be picked up, he said.
One student, Rangsiya Faihin, an engineering major, was a fantastic photojournalist. Armstard, himself a former photojournalist, worked with her to learn the craft, and soon, she was adeptly providing award-winning content.
Armstard said he imparted the skills needed to complement her existing photography skills: 鈥渉ow to interact with the police, how to interact with fire, how to listen to broadcast.鈥
He also taught Faihin which types of events required coverage. 鈥淲e're going to go to collisions, we're going to go to fires, we're going to go to emergency situations.鈥 And he explained what to do on the scene: 鈥淲hat questions to ask. Creating business cards. Giving them business cards.鈥 He added, 鈥渨ith these skills, she was a complete success. She won a ton of awards in the SPJ Arkansas Pro Chapter Diamond Awards.鈥
Delta Digital鈥檚 current reporter, Avery Jones, has worked there since Fall 2022. She has covered stories ranging from the challenges that formerly incarcerated women have found in securing local housing to the local library鈥檚 Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month festival. An English major, Jones noted that the experience has provided opportunities she would not have had otherwise.
鈥淚 think I definitely gained a lot of skills that would be transferable to a lot of careers, including the one that I'm planning,鈥 said Jones, who noted that the Delta Digital editing and reporting role has strengthened her research and writing skills, as well as given her more confidence.
Professor and chair of the multimedia journalism program Lillie Fears notes the confidence boost as a key benefit to student participation in Delta Digital.
鈥淵ou're going to be working with sources off campus and not just [covering] what the fraternity is doing. You鈥檝e got to go and work with strangers. It's very important. You've got to get out of your comfort zone,鈥 said Fears. 鈥淵es, you're a student, but you've got to be the student who comes across as professionally as possible. And I think that's what Delta Digital does for students.鈥
Delta Digital pays its students an hourly wage and provides some summer reporting opportunities鈥擩ones has continued reporting during the summer.
Delta Digital work appears in the RSS feed of local Black-owned radio station KLEK, and occasionally on local NPR affiliate KASU, but the service is hoping to expand.
鈥淚 think if we could get the word out for Delta Digital News, it will be a pretty significant service to a lot of the papers because we are in a unique position,鈥 said Fears. 鈥淲e're at the northeast corner of Arkansas, so we're northwest of Memphis and we're below the boot heel of Missouri. We have the potential to cover our 75-mile radius which covers Missouri, Tennessee, maybe the north of Mississippi and Arkansas.鈥
Whether the students鈥 work remains on the Delta Digital or also appears elsewhere in local media, Armstard said, he is satisfied that students are getting the experience of reporting for its own sake. When people ask what he does at Delta Digital, he noted, 鈥淚 say I provide students with an opportunity. In the end it鈥檚 really not about being published, and our content being used for local media. That's a good goal. But guess what? If it's not, that student went out and covered a story, into the community, and that person got their experience. I鈥檓 happy once that last period comes down on the page. I'm done. I'm happy.鈥