KelownaNow and UBCO wrap up successful 1st term of new partnership

| April 13, 2018 in UBCO

Local Community Advertising

If you haven’t noticed, KelownaNow has published a few articles over the last few months that were written by very talented UBCO students.

These students are in the university’s new Economics and the Media course, which was created through a partnership with KelownaNow.

Teaching the course is Julien Picault, who has seen a noticeable improvement over the four-month duration of the course.

“I am seeing an improvement in the students in terms of the writing,” he said. “I think that having a course in writing and writing media is very interesting and what we need.”

“It's an addition for (the students) and I think we have (had) multiple papers at the end (of the term) that you have published, which shows that students have reacted and improved along the term.”

He calls the difference between stories written in January and April as “day and night,” and we have to say, we agree.

For the final term project, students were free to cover a Kelowna related story that they felt had an important impact on the city.

Here’s what a few of them came up with:

UBC Okanagan Faces a Housing Shortage on Campus

Introducing Co-housing

When a University Comes to Town

Earn Extra Cash this Summer by taking Advantage of the Kelowna Rental Market

Wildfire Impacts Give Little to Wine About

Kelowna Gospel Mission Embodies Team Work

What Causes Homelessness in the Okanagan?

UBCO and Kelowna’s Diverse Connection

Local Community Advertising

Trending Stories

Downtown Kelowna coffee shop appears to have mysteriously closed

BC Mounties 'very concerned' about missing 29-year-old woman

'Highly destructive' tree-killing insect found in BC for first time

Decades-old temperature record broken in chilly Merritt

Loblaw leaders push back on 'misguided criticism' of grocer as boycott begins

These 14 Kelowna roads will be resurfaced this summer

Category 3 open fire ban now in effect in the Kamloops Fire Centre

London Drugs rebuilding infrastructure after cybersecurity breach