Female Multimedia Journalism student operating the control deck in the radio studio. They are wearing headphones and have their right hand raised, signalling to begin recording. They are photographed against a red background

Multimedia Journalism Facilities

Multimedia Journalism Facilities

School of Creative Industries / Facilities / Multimedia Journalism Facilities

Multimedia Journalism students have access to industry-standard facilities including a green-screen, three-camera TV studio with an adjoining production gallery. There is also a radio studio which reflects the layout of BBC local stations.

£5 million investment in Journalism facilities

The University of Wolverhampton has invested £5 million to bring industry standard facilities to its new Screen School – and a new high-profile lecturer for its Multimedia Journalism degree course is all set to broadcast the improvements.

Gareth Owen, previously working at ITV Central News, has joined the University’s School of Art and is teaching Multimedia Journalism degree students in the Screen School based at its City Campus in Wolverhampton.

The industry standard facilities include a green-screen, three-camera TV studio with an adjoining production gallery. There is also a new radio studio which reflects the layout of BBC local stations. News readers have access to a second bulletin studio and the technical kit and software will enable the replication of the workflows of national news journalists and the running orders of professional news programmes.

Introducing the Wolverhampton Screen School

Wolverhampton Screen School has state-of-the-art teaching facilities and equipment with the aim of boosting skills in the digital arts and media industries.

Students benefit from production space, an equipment media store, a video studio with movable partitions and a large multipurpose studio. There are also Mac labs, edit suites, staff offices and a production base room.

The industry standard facilities include a green-screen, three-camera TV studio with an adjoining production gallery. There is also a radio studio which reflects the layout of BBC local stations. News readers have access to a second bulletin studio and the technical kit and software that enable the replication of the workflows of national news journalists and the running orders of professional news programmes.

Wolverhampton's First Ever Live Esports Event

The event saw the Le Mans Virtual Series kick off with the iconic circuit – Monza. Wolves GR Esports went toe-to-toe with racing giants including Red Bull Racing, BMW, Ferrari and Porsche in the four-hour endurance race.

The event was hosted at, and livestreamed from, the University of Wolverhampton’s Arena Theatre, with hundreds of sim-racing enthusiasts tuning in to see the action as well as a number of them making the trip to the theatre itself to experience it in person.

Inside the Octagon

Multimedia Journalism students can get to grips with current industry-standard equipment in our purpose-built media suite, complete with:

  • 14 Mac Edit suites running Avid Media Composer and Adobe software
  • Avid Nexus dedicated Media server and digital workflow
  • 14 Industry standard HD video camera kits
  • Industry standard mobile journalism and audio recording kits
  • Dedicated Radio Studio and multicam HDTV studios with virtual sets, networked autocue and broadcast capability
  • The latest tripods, lighting kits, portable monitors, steadicam and audio equipment to loan.
student using camera monitor
Control desk in the TV studio
student recording in the radio studio
student recording in the radio studio
students using the journalism TV Studio
camera in the TV studio
Student operating a camera in the TV studio
Student operating a camera in the TV studio
student using the control desk in the radio studio
Students recorded in the journalism radio studio
student recording in the radio studio
Students recorded in the journalism radio studio

In Addition

Wolverhampton Screen School is an ambitious epicentre for stimulating screen based culture, education, research and industrial development within the region and beyond.

Students have full access to a range of high-end audio and video recording facilities, alongside a specialist in-house digital printing service – the Print Support Hub.

Print Support Hub

The Print Support Hub is a technically supported, open access area. It offers all School of Art students a range of specialist printers that are capable of printing onto a vast array of different materials.

Including:

  • A3 Risograph printer
  • 2 medium format high-end Epson printers (A4, A3, A3+ and A2)
  • Large format thermal lithographic printer
  • Large Format Mimaki textile printer
  • Large Format Mimaki textile printer

The room also offers two large format scanners that will scan artwork up to A0 size.

Learn more about the Print Support Hub