Program Analysis
While Stamford is a corporate hub just a train ride from New York City, the media landscape you'll enter is intensely competitive. The low earnings data likely reflects graduates taking entry-level roles at smaller, local Connecticut publications or in communications support roles, rather than landing prestigious, higher-paying jobs in the NYC media ecosystem right away. This campus doesn't have the same deep-rooted recruiting pipelines as flagship journalism schools that feed directly into national newsrooms. The industry itself is also shifting, with many early-career writers working on contracts or freelance assignments, which can mean inconsistent income. Your key to overcoming this is to be strategic from day one. Use Stamford’s location as a launchpad: aggressively pursue internships in Manhattan every semester and summer, even if they're unpaid, to build the network and portfolio needed to compete with graduates from city-based programs.