The book to the right is my self-help guide to writing at super-speed, apparently. I’ve decided to learn shorthand, specifically the (easier to learn, harder to master in terms of speed) Teeline variety. I don’t refute the argument it’s a skill that’s increasingly being undermined by technological advances, but I do think there are circumstances where shorthand is still a valuable skill for a journalist to have. I’m also keen, as ever, to throw myself in guinea-pig-with-a-parachute style and see if it’s something you can successfully teach yourself.
Why bother though? The lecturers who designed my BJTC-accredited journalism degree didn’t think it was a necessary skill. It was rarely mentioned, never taught. I do still think it has it’s place in a journalist’s playbook though, even in these multimedia times.
Courts are an example I’ve recently mentioned, upon reading about Heather Brooke’s run in with a judge over audio recording in court. Since I wrote that, it’s made a small splash into campaign-mode, but no matter how much I support the campaign, I can’t help to feel it’s an issue that will struggle to get the backing of those who can actually change things.
So we’re left to battle on with pen and paper. I remember someone once asked in a lecture (prior to a court reporting assignment) what we should do without the ability to write shorthand. The answer was along the lines of ‘make notes of the key things said accurately, and make friends with one of the freelance or print journalists working the court’. That strikes me as an awfully dependant strategy, and one that leaves you on a sure-fire route to failure as journalists become more thin on the ground.
As a case in point – Heather did mention on twitter how few reporters were at the hearing she was trying to record.
On top of that, ‘making notes accurately’ is exactly what shorthand is for isn’t it? Despite the technology we have, we’re still not at a stage where transcribing an interview for the web is as easy as playing it to a computer. I’ve been a geek since I was 13, and I still can’t play a recording back and type it up at a matched speed. Shorthand allows you to get the whole thing in front of you, and type it up from there. Without it, it’s an endless *alt-tab* *play* *alt-tab* *type* *alt-tab* *skip back a bit, play* *repeat*.
I’m still of the belief that interviews should be transcribed for web articles first, with a full (but edited to make it tidy) interview accompanying if your resources allow. It’s all well and good to pop the audio online, but when I’m perusing the news sites I’m often listening to music. Some people are on computers which would require them to plug in headphones (think libraries, internet cafes). It’s also fantastically relevant data for search engines.
With all that being said, it’s still a long task to learn it to a point where it becomes useful. Wish me luck, I’ll update you on my progress. If you’d like to join me in learning it, I got the book used off eBay for less than £3, grab it and give me a shout on twitter.

David Stone 2010
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