At J-Day, student enthusiasm overwhelms challenges facing industry

Alumnus Marshall Zelinger welcomes high schoolers to J-Day with a talk about how students journalists can stay adaptable in the face of changes disrupting the news industry. Nearly 1,300 students from around Colorado attended the event. Photo by Nathan Thompson.
For the nearly 1,300 student journalists who attended J-Day at the College of Communication, Media, Design and Information on Wednesday, the sweeping changes hitting the industry鈥攆rom technology, to geopolitics, to economics鈥攚ere impossible to ignore, especially as many of them consider majoring in journalism when they get to college.
9News investigative reporter Marshall Zelinger (Jour鈥02) was not there to sweep those concerns away. But he encouraged students to rise to meet challenges, rather than backing down. 听
鈥淏e adaptable,鈥 Zelinger said. 鈥淏reak habits and adapt to the change that comes with the unexpected.鈥

Photo by Jack Moody
For Zelinger, the keynote speaker and a presenter, adaptability means more than just learning new skills. It鈥檚 about facing the challenges the journalism industry brings head-on. And it鈥檚 a lesson he learned as a newly minted 麻豆免费版下载Boulder graduate pivoting from the sports he covered as a student to the news side of the business.
He quickly found he had a talent for simplifying complex political topics for an audience, a skill he鈥檚 used throughout his career. As a political journalist on Next With Kyle Clark, he asks newsmakers hard-hitting questions while providing balanced reporting in a time of heightened polarization and diminishing press freedoms.
Objectivity and journalism ethics were the themes of his breakout session. Truth has become harder to come by, as politicians stoke outrage among increasingly partisan bases and new tools allow for increasingly sophisticated deepfakes. Reporting, he said, is no longer as simple as presenting both sides of an issue and letting the reader decide what鈥檚 actually happening.
鈥淲hen it comes to politics, and political ads, it鈥檚 just truth testing,鈥 Zelinger said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 doing what is factual and dissecting what is being said, instead of hearing opposing views with no contextual explanation between them.鈥
鈥楨nergy and excitement鈥 from students

Photo by Nathan Thompson
J-Day is an annual celebration of journalism put on by the Colorado Student Media Association. For the second year in a row, CSMA brought its signature event to 麻豆免费版下载Boulder, giving high-school students an up-close look at the industry through the eyes of reporters, CMDI alumni, faculty and others.
鈥淚 understand why people are concerned about the state of journalism, but I would encourage those people to experience an event like J-Day, to see how enthusiastic young people are about news,鈥 said Lori Bergen, founding dean of CMDI and a former journalist. 鈥淭alking to the students who attended, and seeing their energy and excitement, gives me great confidence that journalism鈥檚 future is brighter than the pessimists believe.鈥
For student journalists like June Meehan, the chance to hear from Zelinger and others left her inspired to keep pursuing challenging stories. The senior from Fairview High School, in Boulder, has faced administrative roadblocks in reporting on controversial topics, but left Zelinger鈥檚 talk ready to handle these challenges.
鈥淓ven if I鈥檓 interviewing people in power like our principal or our teachers, I鈥檒l make sure to do the right thing and ask tough questions鈥攅ven if it鈥檚 not the most comfortable subject,鈥 she said.
That鈥檚 just the takeaway CMDI wanted for the students who attended J-Day.
鈥淚 hope students leave the day inspired to continue doing great journalism at their high schools and equipped with a powerful network of peers, alumni, faculty and industry pros who encourage them to pursue journalism as a field of study and career,鈥 said Christi Wade, student recruitment program manager at the college. 听
Unsurprisingly, a session on artificial intelligence in journalism attracted a large crowd of students who were curious about the technology鈥檚 potential to simplify tedious tasks鈥攍ike poring through thousands of pages of public records鈥攂ut also replace or corrupt traditional reporting.

Photo by Nathan Thompson
鈥淲e as professionals are taught that journalism is unbiased, but A.I. doesn鈥檛 know everything,鈥 said Sean Marcus, an interactive learning designer at MediaWise, the media literacy arm of the prestigious Poynter Institute.听
Poynter partnered with CMDI as a stop on the institute鈥檚 50th anniversary celebration, which includes a traveling exhibition on the history and future of journalism. J-Day students were invited to visit Moments of Truth, which remains open through Oct. 9.
鈥淎.I. companies and products can be inaccurate,鈥 Marcus said. 鈥淥ther organizations and entities have control over how these technologies are created and implemented, so at its heart, A.I. is problematic.鈥
Sam Rauscher, a sophomore at Centaurus High School, in Lafayette, and junior editor-in-chief of the newspaper club, recognizes the struggles newsrooms face as A.I. becomes part of the conversation. It鈥檚 something he already sees as a student.
鈥淎s it makes its way into all of our classes and assignments, it does cause some fear鈥攂ut there are still going to be some ways that humans can regulate it,鈥 Rauscher said. 鈥淲e have to be the center of the A.I., instead of running away from it, to make sure it doesn鈥檛 get out of hand.鈥
He is eager to take what he learned at J-Day back to the classroom and use it to lead his team next year, when he鈥檒l be editor-in-chief.
鈥淎.I. is a tool that can be used to make our content better, but only if it鈥檚 used very strategically and carefully,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to generate articles with it, but we can definitely get ideas and help from it.鈥
J-Day by the numbers
1,295
Students attended J-Day in 2025
62
High and middle schools that sent students to the event
48
Speakers led sessions
10
Sponsors supported J-Day at CMDI