
Audio By Carbonatix
The Pro Vice-Chancellor of the University of Media, Arts and Communication (UniMAC), Prof Winston Kwame Abroampa, has called for a fundamental rethink of journalism education, warning that the rise of artificial intelligence and misinformation demands a new generation of journalists equipped with advanced digital skills and strong ethical values.
Delivering the welcome address at the opening of the inaugural State of Journalism, Media and Communication Conference (SJMCC 2026) on Wednesday, July 15, Prof Abroampa said journalism was entering an era where traditional reporting skills alone would no longer be enough.
He noted that universities must prepare graduates who are capable of navigating rapidly evolving technologies while remaining committed to truth and public accountability.
"Journalism has often been described as the first draft of history. Today, it must become much more: a guardian of truth in an age of synthetic content, a defender of evidence in an era of misinformation, and a bridge between polarised communities, while continuing to hold power accountable and remaining accountable itself."
According to him, journalism schools can no longer rely solely on conventional training methods but must redesign their programmes to meet the demands of a changing profession.
"Our students now require skills that are beyond traditional reporting. Data journalism, computational thinking, multimedia storytelling, platform governance, and the ethical dilemmas created by artificial intelligence."
Professor Abroampa said future journalists must be equipped to adapt to a profession being reshaped by emerging technologies.
"They must become adaptable lifelong learners capable of thriving in professions that continue to evolve."
He urged universities to respond by modernising their curricula, strengthening partnerships with the media industry, investing in digital infrastructure, and promoting interdisciplinary learning.
"This requires universities to rethink curricula, strengthen industry partnerships, invest in digital infrastructure, and encourage interdisciplinary collaboration. The University of Media Arts and Communication remains committed to this transformation."
The Pro Vice-Chancellor stressed that the responsibility of protecting the integrity of information extends beyond newsrooms.
"This responsibility cannot rest with journalists alone."
He said universities must produce ethically grounded professionals, researchers must generate evidence to inform policy, governments must create enabling regulatory environments, and technology companies must acknowledge that innovation comes with social responsibility.
According to him, protecting the integrity of the information ecosystem is a shared responsibility.
Prof Abroampa expressed confidence that discussions at the two-day conference would contribute to shaping policies and strengthening journalism practice in an increasingly complex media environment.
He concluded with a reminder that the future of journalism would ultimately be determined by the choices made today.
"The future of journalism will not simply happen to us. It will be shaped by the decisions we make today. May this conference become one of those defining moments."
Latest Stories
-
Cabinet approves reforms to limit mining leases to 20 years
8 minutes -
Environmental health practitioners push for independent regulatory council, stronger sanitation governance
9 minutes -
J.E.A. Mills Heritage outlines activities to mark 14th anniversary of former president’s death
18 minutes -
Strategic fuel stock programme key to cushioning consumers from pump price hikes – COPEC
18 minutes -
Misinformation is eroding public trust in the media—Prof Etse Sikanku
21 minutes -
Hanan Abdul-Wahab’s lawyers move to strike out fresh criminal charges
27 minutes -
Reliable funding model critical for protecting two decades of sanitation gains — Stakeholders
30 minutes -
Farihan Alhassan urges African banks to rethink risk to unlock growth capital
33 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover rose 56% to GH¢2.44bn
34 minutes -
Illegal mining persists because some state officials are failing to act — Ken Ashigbey
51 minutes -
Informal cross-border trade increases to GH¢31bn, surpasses formal trade – GSS
53 minutes -
FIFA celebrates 23-year-old Ghanaian medical doctor for his voluntary service at World Cup
55 minutes -
Journalism schools must lead AI, misinformation debate — UniMAC-IJ Rector
55 minutes -
Pruride returns for seventh edition with GHS15,000 top prize
1 hour -
Andrew Tandoh Adote calls for stronger copyright laws to protect voice-over artistes
1 hour