If you’re exploring your Broadcasting Career options, you’ll inevitably be faced with the choice of whether traditional Radio Broadcasting Schools are a viable option for your learning style, budget, and schedule.
The big question becomes…do they even work anymore in the fast changing world of radio broadcasting?
FWIW, for the sake of this post, a “traditional radio broadcasting school” is a stand alone brick and mortar facility. They usually have a set faculty comprised of retired or out-of-work broadcasters, with a smattering of a few working broadcasters employed to maintain their credibility.
A few examples of these types of traditional radio broadcasting schools would be the Connecticut school of broadcasting, Columbia school of broadcasting, and the American broadcasting school.
OK, I’ll admit: I’m NOT a big fan of traditional Radio Broadcasting Schools at all – with reason.
Nothing personal, I’ve just had too many of their graduates come to me AFTER they’ve completed their ‘training’ and were extremely sour on the experience and expense.
Their biggest gripe always centered around false claims of job placement assistance, and their inability to get their foot in the door of the real broadcasting industry once their training was over.
After all, what good will having broadcasting skills do you if no one in the industry knows who you are, and how great your skills, work ethic, or personality may be?
Face it, regardless of what new field you may be looking to enter, it all boils down to a common sense, age old truism:
It’s not just WHAT you know….But WHO you know.
Don’t park your common sense at the front door on me now, but think about it…
Traditional Radio Broadcasting Schools will have at least 15- 20 people in each class, who all serve as your competition when it comes to landing your first radio job.
Just how do you plan to stick out to a prospective employer from all your job-hunting classmates?
Sure, your broadcasting school may stick you in a radio station to do an internship, only to learn…
That radio station also has 10-15 college students doing internships, who ALSO serve as your competition for whatever job opens up.
Why would or should station pick you out of all of these candidates when a job opens up? They may, but always remember… you’re just one of many when the hiring decision is being contemplated.
You may be good, but it’s a numbers game at that point. A certain element of timing and luck has to factor in if you hope to be “the chosen one”.
Is luck or fortuitous timing a sensible foundation on which to build your broadcasting career?
For instance…say a job opens up right after you begin your internship.
Three other college students have been there for 6 months now – which is way longer than you – and have been able to leave a positive impression with the PD.
You may be better than they are, but the boss just doesn’t know you as well. Who likely gets that job?
Then, if nothing becomes available during the rest of your internship….
You’re stuck – and on your own – with few or no industry related relationships to build upon.
The Broadcasting School has cashed your check by now, and has moved on to making the same lofty promises of job placement services to their next enrollee, as they did with you!
Nonetheless, let’s partially review traditional radio broadcasting schools:
So Much Money - There are several regional and national broadcasting schools throughout the US and Canada.
These brick and mortar facilities offer broadcasting courses much like a college, and their price tags are much the same, too. Tuition usually ranges between $9,000 and $15,000! (Yep, you read right: nine thousand to fifteen thousand dollars! There’s one in Minnesota that’s over Thirty thousand dollars and one in Florida which approaches that)
. . . So Few Results: Because broadcasting schools are just stand alone schools, and are not connected with actual working radio stations, little or no insider radio contacts are available to the student.
This should be of concern, because most jobs come from having contacts in the business. Without having a chance to make these contacts, all the other students from the school end up competing for the same limited openings.
Your real chances of becoming hired upon graduation from a traditional Radio Broadcasting School are sadly, very slim.
How do radio industry decision-makers view them? (After all, this is whose opinions REALLY matter).
Bob Thornton, General Manager of KXOJ Radio in Tulsa, once told me how most general managers and program directors feel about broadcasting schools:
“We’ve found in the past that students of broadcast schools are often taught outdated or irrelevant techniques that get in the way of training. In fact, I speak at radio seminars all over the country, and work extensively with some of the top consultants in the industry, and I have never met, in all my years, a single graduate of broadcast schools working in radio.”
Certainly, some have had success through broadcasting schools, and are gainfully employed today. Bob just hasn’t met any.
SUMMARY: The people who do well in traditional broadcasting schools tend to be “classroom type learners,” who have a sizable amount of discretionary income, or are willing to go heavy in debt through their financing programs. If you’re the type who learns best through the classroom lecture method, then traditional radio broadcasting schools may be for you.
on the other hand, it’s fair to call Broadcasting Schools ‘the $10,000 gamble’, I’d say.
Next, we’ll cover another aspect of traditional Radio Broadcasting Schools that is rarely spoken about – for a reason.
Michael Madden

2 Comments
I currently go to American Broadcasting School. I enjoy the online aspect of the school. I get an internet based On-Air DJ studio where I make my own playlist. They also give me a headset with a mic attached. They gave me Adobe Audition 3 to do editing. I not only use the Au3 program for commercials, but I also use it for my own personal musical production. I learn a new technique about digital production every week because of my assignments. I also have the option when I finish school to keep the On-Air DJ studio as my own internet radio feed. It sounds good, but I am only going to school to get a job in radio. I did previously attend the campus where the programs weren’t as up-to-date as the programs given through the online course. Also, there are lots of lectures and no real digital production.
Furthermore, I have asked a few times about employment after school is out. I have 2 friends that attended ABS and no one has a job yet. One graduated a couple of months ago, and the other graduated a few years ago. I just want to know that I have a job after school is out. I don’t have time to waste. I already have another degree in another field, so going to another school would be a huge waste of time. I asked instructors 2 times about job placement after school and internships. They claim that it doesn’t really matter about an internship because it doesn’t help you get a job after school is out. Why get paid nothing and do all the gofer stuff, when you get out you can simply get a job.
Prior to going to ABS, I applied to a certain local radio station on 3 different occasions.Each time they told me that they normally they only take interns that are currently in school and need intern hours to complete school. There are conflicting views between the schools and the actual radio station.
I love music, and THE ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY IS THE ONLY BUSINESS I can truly be HAPPY at doing. Trust me, I’ve had a lot of other jobs. This is my last resort. I cannot go back to my old profession. I have invested tons of money already for ABS. I have to make it! There’s no other way. Even if I don’t have an instructors approval, I will attempt that internship anyway. And, after that if I have to move to another location to get a job in radio, I will. If you have any suggestions, please post again.
Hello Tanye
Unfortunately, you are a living example of someone who has been sold a bill of goods by a slick broadcasting school salesman who knows nothing about how this industry actually operates.
Although an internship isn’t the greatest way to get a job in this industry, it far surpasses the bad advice given by your teachers at the American broadcasting school. This is a relationship oriented industry. The more relationships you can develop and cultivate along the way, the better your chances become for being employed.
To underscore my point, a study was released in 2008 that revealed 64% of those working in the television and radio industry got their jobs because they knew someone directly from someone in the industry, or they knew someone who knew someone in the industry that enabled them to get their job. That’s nearly 2/3 people working in the broadcasting industry are doing so because they understood the value and importance of a network.
Sending a resume and a demo tape/link out is how jobs were gotten 20 years ago. Today, more than ever, it comes down to who you know being every bit as important as what you know, in terms of broadcasting skills.
At this point, your best bet would be to try and get yourself an internship. Although they aren’t designed for you to develop your broadcasting skills, they do facilitate relationship building, at least.
Frankly, if your teachers at the broadcasting school did tell you to bypass an internship, they should be out of a job. It’s obvious to me they haven’t worked in this industry for a very long time, if ever, when making those claims.
The problem that you are facing is one that I hear about quite often coming from graduates of traditional broadcasting schools. I constantly receive telephone calls asking if I can help them to get a job. Absent the relationships with those in the industry, there is very little I can do for them – unfortunately.
This is the very reason we at BMG created a hybrid between a broadcasting school and an internship. Our students are trained by a working broadcaster inside a local radio station in their area. They’re gaining the necessary broadcasting skills from a working broadcaster, but they’re also placed in an environment where relationships are being developed,and networks being built. in other words, our students are training where the jobs are.
Do you see the difference in the two models?
Best of luck to you, Tanya.
Michael