SBU sports media majors interview a guest on Radio Row at Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas. Students with campus radio station WSBU 88.3 FM The Buzz have been regular Radio Row participants since 2018.

St. Bonaventure University

Sports Media Program


The Bachelor of Arts in sports media is specifically geared toward students seeking communication careers in sports-related fields, such as sports journalism, sports broadcasting, public relations, marketing communications, and sports information.

Logo for the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

Like all Jandoli School of Communication programs, sports media is accredited by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications.


A focus on fundamentals

Students enrolled in the major learn the same solid communications fundamentals as in the Jandoli School's undergraduate majors in journalism, strategic communication and broadcast journalism. They then focus on sports-related classes including "Sports Writing," "Sports Commentary and Analysis," "Sports Photojournalism," and more.

A primary focus of the sports media program is equipping students with solid writing skills, the bedrock on which all successful sports media careers rest.


Internships picInternships & opportunities: Put your education to work

St. Bonaventure's NCAA Division I athletics program, with nine men's and eight women's sports, offers sport media majors the opportunity to learn while doing, without leaving campus. Jandoli School students broadcast the university's D-I games on ESPN+. It's just one of a number of on- and off-campus internship opportunities available to our students.

All Jandoli School majors are required to complete 400 hours of internships, a combination of on-campus and off-campus experiences.

Internship Requirements
Campus Media Opportunities


woj-and-vac at ceremonyAdrian "Woj" Wojnarowski, ESPN's Senior NBA Insider, speaks during the induction of his friend and fellow SBU graduate Michael Vaccaro (in sportcoat), lead sports columnist at the New York Post, onto the Jandoli School's Wall of Distinguished Graduates.

Jandoli grads achieve success, from ESPN to USA Today

Graduates of the Jandoli School hold some of the most prominent positions in the most respected sports media organizations in the country. 

Adrion "Woj" Wojnarowski, Class of 1991, Senior NBA Insider at ESPN, has long been considered the most dominant force in reporting on the NBA. He has been named National Sportswriter of the Year three times by the National Sports Media Association.

Woj's good friend, Mike Vaccaro, Class of 1989, lead sports columnist for the New York Post, has a trifecta of his own, having been named New York Sportswriter of the Year three times by The National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association.

Donna Ditota, '83, sports reporter for Syracuse Media Group, is the first woman to be named New York Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sports Media Association. Ditota has also been selected for the U.S. Basketball Writers Association Hall of Fame.

Tim Bontemps, '07, is an NBA writer for ESPN; Rachel Axon, '06, is a sports investigative reporter for USA Today; and Todd Dybas, '99, is a senior writer at NBC Sports Washington..

Jandoli Graduates in Sports Media

 

Program Information


Bachelor of Arts in sports media


Communication minor


Learning objectives



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Bona journalism students take part in fact-checking workshop with PolitiFact senior correspondent

Apr 09, 2020

A team of students from the Jandoli School of Communication at St. Bonaventure University are taking part in a fact-checking workshop with PolitiFact senior correspondent Louis Jacobson.

The students, who began working with Jacobson on Thursday, April 9, will produce fact-checking articles that will appear in PolitiFact and PolitiFact New York, the organization’s New York edition, which is a partnership with the Buffalo News.

“Fact-checking is an essential part of journalism’s vital role in our democracy,” Aaron Chimbel, dean of the Jandoli School, said. “As the public navigates the flood of information in our digital and splintered media worlds, thoroughly vetted information is crucial for them to be informed. This collaboration with PolitiFact will do just that and provide a great learning opportunity for our students.”

Nine journalism students were selected for the workshop based on the strength of their writing, editing and analytical skills.

The workshop will operate on a similar model to PolitiFact West Virginia, which Jacobson has edited since August 2018 as an innovator in residence at West Virginia University's Reed College of Media. Another PolitiFact project, PolitiFact Missouri, uses a similar model with students from the University of Missouri.

Jacobson’s collaboration with St. Bonaventure was arranged by Dr. Richard Lee, an associate professor in the Jandoli School and executive director of the Jandoli Institute, which is coordinating the workshop with Jacobson. Jacobson has spoken by video to several of the courses Lee teaches on media, democracy and elections.

St. Bonaventure’s Visiting Scholar Committee selected Jacobson as the university’s spring semester visiting scholar, and he had planned to come to campus in April to conduct the workshop. Because of the COVIFD-19 pandemic, he will work with the students remotely.

Jacobson has been with PolitiFact since 2009, currently as senior correspondent. Previously, he served as deputy editor of Roll Call, the newspaper that covers Congress, and as founding editor of its legislative wire service, CongressNow. Earlier, Jacobson spent more than a decade covering politics, policy, Congress and lobbying for National Journal magazine.

He was senior author of the 2016, 2018 and 2020 editions of The Almanac of American Politics and also contributed to the 2000 and 2004 editions. Since 2004, Jacobson has been writing a column on politics in the states, which he now divides among the Cook Political Report, Sabato's Crystal Ball, and U.S. News & World Report. 

PolitiFact, founded in 2007, is owned by the nonprofit Poynter Institute for Media Studies and employs reporters and editors in St. Petersburg, Florida, Washington, D.C., and half a dozen other cities. It uses traditional journalism techniques to investigate the accuracy of claims in politics, then provides an overall "Truth-O-Meter" rating ranging from True to Pants on Fire. These articles appear on its PolitiFact.com website and are reprinted by its media partners across the country.

The Jandoli Institute serves as a forum for academic research, creative ideas and discussion on the intersection between media and democracy. The institute, accessible at Jandoli.net, is part of the Jandoli School of Communication at St. Bonaventure University.