My name is Lea Stevens and I am a second year Bachelor of Communication (Professional Communication) student at RMIT University.
I’m interested in politics and good books, and like reading in-depth opinion pieces on modern day issues.
I hope to one day work in communication in either the media or government.
Photo credit: Alex Kinsman
FacebookX
You may also like
Technology Reflections 2022
The Affordances of Podcasts and Digital News, and What...
Innovation in Journalism
The Case For Responsible Drones Journalism
Innovation in Journalism
Artificial Intelligence and Journalism
Innovation in Journalism
Melburnians flock to Fed Square for the Rio Opening
Innovation in Journalism
Ballkids ready for Australian Open
Innovation in Journalism
Replace Hazelwood rally
About the author
Lea Stevens
My name is Lea Stevens and I am a second year Professional Communications student at RMIT University. I'm interested in politics and good books, and hope to one day work in communication in either the media or government.
View all posts
Leave a Comment X
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Why $49.1 million towards Endometriosis simply isn’t enough
Joan Didion and Me: Unpacking the Importance of Long-Form Journalism in War
‘My options are limited’ – Tram 19 Users Rue Lack of Wheelchair Access
The Role of Social Media in Modern Conflicts
Archives
Meta
Log in
Entries feed
Comments feed
WordPress.org
October 2024
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Recent Comments
cony merlon on Beat The Beast: How Chris Ross’ MND battle extended far beyond himself
Opportunities and Challenges in Data Journalism - Top Always on The challenges of data journalism
UniMelb divestment campaign – Partisan Magazine on How pro-Palestine students took on the University of Melbourne – and won
Natalie on Are 20-minute Cities a Solution to Melbourne’s Housing Crisis?
Antonio Castillo on Are 20-minute Cities a Solution to Melbourne’s Housing Crisis?
City Journal is produced by RMIT journalism students. Work is produced by students under the guidance of academic staff in the Bachelor of Communication (Journalism) and in the Graduate Diploma of Journalism.