Picture
Past winner Erin Caughey (left) joins latest AP Style Bowl honorees: Victor Jacobo (first), Colleen Yanke (second), Alex Rydin (third).
Getting students in an introductory journalism course to embrace the Associated Press Stylebook is no easy task. Tell them that AP style is used in any significant newsroom, and by many public relations companies, and you will hear, "This is like taking me back to first grade." Tell them that learning AP style is key to writing with accuracy, consistency, clarity and authority, and you will hear, "Will I need my stylebook in other journalism classes?"

Frequent quizzes and a two-point penalty for each AP style error in writing assignments only add to the complaints. However, let the students compete in class to see who can correctly answer the most questions and suddenly – surprise! surprise! – it seems the stylebook is everyone's best friend. It warms my heart to see these aspiring journalists answer as many as 21 style questions in a row when bragging rights and prizes are on the line.

On the last class day each semester in my Digital Journalism I course, students compete for first, second and third place in the "JOUR 1100 AP Style Bowl." Briefly, here's how it works: divide the class into two teams and let them go at it until one reaches 21. Those on the winning team then get to vie for recognition and prizes. The questions come from AP style quizzes provided at Gerald Grow's Newsroom101.com. Previous end-of-semester winners: Caroline Campbell (spring 2010), Anthony Manno (fall 2010) and Erin Caughey (spring 2011).

Last week, Team Kvartunas upset Team Herndon in the most-competitive first-round match of any term so far, 21-20. ("We only got three wrong," said a disappointed member from the losing team. "We can't help it that they got 20 straight cupcakes.") The prize-winning round was just as fierce. One student was beside herself when she choose wrong between convince and persuade. Sympathetic protests came after another student didn't properly answer "noon" to the question asking, "The meeting is scheduled at ____________." 

In the end, sophomore Victor Jacobo emerged victorious when he chose "B" for the question, "Which is longer, a yard or a meter?" Afterward, Jacobo, the first broadcast and electronic communication major to win the Style Bowl, humbly accepted his $25 gift certificate and accolades (see ceremony video below). "I'm, like, ridiculously lucky at these things," he said to much laughter, "so it had nothing to do with, like, skill."

No luck or skill necessary, my friends. Whether it's for the JOUR 1100 final exam this afternoon, or for any opportunity henceforth, just a readiness to check the AP stylebook – for as the company's president, Tom Curley, writes in the foreword of its 2011 edition, it's "the essential tool for anyone who cares about good writing" and will help "make a story written anywhere understandable everywhere."
 


Comments

Colleen DuVall
12/24/2011 10:30am

Nice article, Professor Lowe. Thanks for creating enthusiasm for AP Style!

Reply
Brynne Ramella
01/17/2012 6:37pm

This day was my favorite day in journalism 1100! It has definitely motivated me to brush up on AP style.

Reply
Carlie Campbell
01/18/2012 12:11pm

It looks like the AP Style Bowl has changed a lot since 2010! I use my knowledge of AP Style on a daily basis and I'm glad to have such familiarity with it.

Reply
Olivia Morrissey
01/18/2012 3:23pm

This article convinced me learning AP Style can be fun! Following AP Style is important in journalism, but I liked how the article was lighthearted and presented a creative way to teach it.

Reply
Alex Rydin
01/18/2012 6:48pm

It should be known that I lost on a science question. Still a little miffed about that. That said, it was a fun day, and it was much more enjoyable than a test or something of the sort.

And I will never forget that hertz is cycles per second.

Reply
Tess Quinlan
01/18/2012 9:14pm

As a sports nut, I can appreciate it when a writer takes a regular story and adds a sports twist to it. Learning about AP Style might be boring for some, but adding an element of competition makes it entertaining for all.

Reply
Rebecca Hixson
01/18/2012 11:26pm

I will not let myself lose this competition again! I will study that book with a fury. I got knocked out after using a lifeline!

Reply
Joe Kvartunas
01/19/2012 1:30am

It was a tough battle. I just want to thank God for giving me the opportunity to compete and use my talents. We may have been underdogs but we had heart, and because of that we were able to come out on top.

Reply
Melanie Lawder
01/25/2012 11:25pm

I loved this AP Style test - maybe even a bit too much at certain times, because I definitely remember things getting a little heated. But I still maintain that this was rigged - the other team got all the easy questions. I call for a rematch in Digital Journalism II.

Reply



Leave a Reply

    Author

    Journalism faculty member and graduate student at Marquette University. Native of Camden, N.J.; former president of the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ); former communications director for the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation (CBCF).

    Archives

    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010

    Categories

    All
    Branding
    Digital Divide
    Digital Storytelling
    Emerging Media
    Journalism
    Journalism Education
    Marquette
    Nabj
    Newsu
    Poynter
    Storify

    RSS Feed