The media world is changing faster than ever, and the way information is created and shared today looks nothing like it did a decade ago.
With a young, digitally active population driving growth, this shift is opening new doors while also exposing serious gaps especially in how universities train mass communication and journalism students.
Across many institutions, a clear imbalance has emerged between what students learn in theory and what they can actually do in practice.
While classrooms remain heavy on lectures and textbooks, access to modern tools and real-world training is often limited.
Outdated equipment, underfunded programmes, and weak digital infrastructure continue to hold back meaningful hands-on experience.
This disconnect is becoming harder to ignore in an industry that now demands far more than traditional reporting skills.
Today’s journalists are expected to produce multimedia content, analyse data, create podcasts, report using mobile devices, and navigate social media trends all at once.
In such a fast-paced and interactive environment, relying on theory alone doesn’t just fall short; it leaves students unprepared.
At the same time, the nature of journalism itself has transformed.
Newsrooms are no longer centred around printing presses or analogue studios. Instead, they operate as digital hubs where storytelling, editing, publishing, and audience engagement happen simultaneously across multiple platforms.
As a result, employers are paying less attention to certificates alone and more to what graduates can actually show real work, real skills, and real impact.
Funding remains a major part of the problem.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has repeatedly highlighted the need for increased investment in public universities, stressing that quality education cannot exist without proper financial support.
Beyond the headlines about strikes, the core issue is structural. Modern media training requires constant upgrades functional labs, up-to-date equipment, reliable internet, licensed software, and ongoing training for lecturers. Without these, institutions risk preparing students for an industry that has already moved on.
Still, the solution isn’t just about buying new equipment. Around the world, journalism education is evolving beyond traditional classroom simulations.
There is a growing shift toward learning within real publishing environments, where students don’t just practice they participate.
In these spaces, education becomes continuous, visible, and connected to real audiences.
At the University of Ilorin, this shift is already taking shape. Students are being introduced to a broader digital workflow that goes beyond campus radio, television, and print.
Instead of producing assignments that end up archived and unseen, they are encouraged to build digital portfolios that showcase their growth over time.
Through a collaboration with Blogshop, students publish stories, multimedia content, and discussions in an open digital space.
Here, their work reaches real audiences, attracts feedback, and becomes part of a larger conversation.
The focus moves away from simply completing tasks for grades to creating content that can stand on its own in the public eye.
This reflects a wider global trend. As digital media becomes more decentralised, professional identity is no longer shaped solely within institutions.
It is built publicly through consistent output, audience engagement, and visible growth.
Increasingly, employers are drawn to candidates who can demonstrate their abilities, not just describe them. In this context, a strong portfolio is becoming just as valuable as a degree.
The planned Digital Media Laboratory tied to this initiative further strengthens this approach.
By combining structured learning with real-time publishing, it creates a hybrid model where students can test ideas, refine their storytelling, and observe how audiences respond.
In many ways, it mirrors the reality of modern journalism, where creating, sharing, and evaluating content happen all at once.
Beyond one university, this points to a larger shift in how journalism education may evolve.
As the media industry continues to change, training will likely focus more on visible, verifiable work rather than classroom assessments alone.
Institutions that embrace this model stand a better chance of producing graduates who are ready to step directly into professional roles.
Ultimately, the challenge goes beyond upgrading facilities.
It requires a deeper rethink of what practical training really means in a connected, digital world.
Preparing students for the future may depend on immersing them in it turning education from a rehearsal into the real thing.
