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Wale Ojo-Lanre charges matriculating journalism students to embrace developmental journalism

by Editor
May 8, 2026
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Wale Ojo-Lanre charges matriculating journalism students to embrace developmental journalism
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The Director-General of the Ekiti State Bureau of Tourism Development, Barrister Wale Ojo-Lanre, has charged newly admitted students of the International Institute of Journalism (IIJ), Ekiti State Campus, to distinguish themselves from the growing army of untrained citizen reporters by embracing development journalism as a responsible professional pathway.

Penpushing reports that Ojo-Lanre gave the charge while delivering the matriculation lecture titled “Development Journalism: The Responsible Pathway for Rookie Journalists in the Age of Phone Journalism” at the matriculation ceremony of the institute in Ado-Ekiti.

The veteran journalist and lawyer pointed out that journalism was passing through one of the most dramatic revolutions in human history, noting that the mobile phone had become both a blessing and a danger to truth.

Penpushing further reports that he observed that the rise of citizen journalism has created a situation where anybody with a phone, data bundle and a smattering of English can post, report, accuse, mislead, praise, condemn or destroy reputations in the name of journalism.

The former Chairman, Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Oyo State Chapter warned that while technology has democratised access to publication, it has also opened the public space to reckless posting, fake news, blackmail, propaganda, rumour and unethical communication.

Penpushing also reports that Ojo-Lanre said the challenge before rookie journalists was to prove that journalism is not noise, abuse, gossip, social media excitement or reckless publication, but a disciplined public service built on ethics, verification, fairness, balance and public interest.

The guest lecturer told the students that one of the most reliable ways to stand apart in the crowded media space was to embrace development journalism, which he described as journalism with depth, context, conscience and public purpose.

“Development journalism is the journalism of social progress. It focuses on the welfare of the people, the growth of communities, the performance of institutions and the transformation of society. It does not merely report events; it interrogates their meaning and impact on the people,” he said.

Penpushing reports that Ojo-Lanre explained that development journalism compels journalists to go beyond surface reporting by asking deeper questions about policies, projects and public programmes.

The Ekiti State Bureau of Tourism Development boss added that a development journalist must not merely report that a road has been built, but must ask who will use the road, how it will affect farmers, traders, students and patients, whether it will reduce transport costs, whether the community was involved and whether there is a maintenance plan.

Penpushing further reports that in similar vein, he said a development journalist must not only report the commissioning of a hospital, but must investigate whether there are doctors, nurses, drugs, electricity, affordability and real benefits to the people.

The former Entertainment Editor with Nigerian Tribune and one of the pioneer students of International Institute of Journalism (IIJ), Ibadan Campus, recalled his own professional journey, explaining that he enrolled at the institute in 1997 despite already holding a degree in History and pursuing a Master’s degree.

Penpushing also reports that he said the experience taught him that writing and journalism are related but not the same, stressing that professional training remains the dividing line between ordinary writing and responsible journalism.

The Director General narrated how, during a professional registration exercise by the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Oyo State, he was told that despite being a fine writer and media practitioner, he was not qualified to be registered as a professional journalist because he had not received formal journalism training.

Penpushing reports that he said the humbling encounter pushed him to seek admission into International Institute of Journalism (IIJ), where he submitted himself to professional training and discipline.

“That experience taught me a lesson I will never forget. A writer may impress, but a journalist must verify. A writer may entertain, but a journalist must inform. A writer may provoke, but a journalist must be responsible. A writer may depend on flair, but a journalist must depend on facts, fairness, ethics, balance and public interest,” he said.

Penpushing further reports that he congratulated the matriculating students for choosing to pass through the furnace and rigour of professional journalism training, noting that their admission into the institute marked the beginning of their transformation from ordinary writers, commentators, social media enthusiasts and public analysts into trained and certificated journalists.

The renowned journalist said the ability to speak good English or write beautifully does not automatically make anyone a journalist, just as fluency in legal language does not make anyone a lawyer without passing through the discipline of legal training and Law School, stressing that  influence, social media followership and visibility should never be mistaken for professional competence.

“A phone is not a newsroom. A phone is only a tool. A phone does not teach ethics. It does not teach balance. It does not teach verification. It does not teach media law. It does not teach fairness. It does not teach public interest. That is why professional training is important’, he stated

Penpushing also reports that he explained that development journalism is not propaganda, public relations, advertorial, paid praise or government bulletin, adding that a true development journalist must be able to commend good policies and also expose failed projects.

The media guru emphasized that the development journalist is neither an enemy of government nor a servant of government, but a servant of society, and urged students interested in society journalism, social pages, entertainment, lifestyle and celebrity reporting to inject development consciousness into their work.

Penpushing reports that he said society journalism should not be reduced to gossip, glamour and listing of dignitaries at ceremonies, but should explore culture, philanthropy, creative economy, employment, social values, tourism, fashion, local enterprise and community impact.

The guest lecturer noted that the society journalist who reports a festival should go beyond colour and celebration by asking how the event promotes tourism, preserves heritage, empowers youths, attracts visitors, boosts local businesses and strengthens identity.

Penpushing further reports that Ojo-Lanre distinguished development journalism from other genres, including adversarial, critical, constructive, subjective journalism and advertorial.

The legal practitioner explained that while adversarial journalism challenges power and exposes wrongdoing, development journalism focuses on public progress and impact; while critical journalism questions policies and performance, development journalism ties its criticism to improvement; while constructive journalism seeks solutions, development journalism grounds such solutions in development outcomes.

Penpushing also reports that he warned the students to avoid careless subjectivity, propaganda and malicious reporting, saying the best journalist must be curious but not careless, bold but not reckless, critical but not destructive, constructive but not sycophantic, passionate but not subjective, and patriotic but not propagandistic.

The veteran journalist said Nigeria does not merely need journalists who can shout, accuse, write or post, but journalists who can see, investigate, understand and interpret society for the benefit of the people.

Penpushing reports that Ojo-Lanre told the students that International Institute of Journalism (IIJ) was not merely admitting them into a programme of study, but welcoming them into a discipline, a tradition and a responsibility.

“The phone may give you access to publish, but IIJ must give you the wisdom to know what deserves publication. The phone may give you speed, but IIJ must give you accuracy. The phone may give you visibility, but IIJ must give you credibility. The phone may give you followers, but IIJ must give you professional character’, he stated

Penpushing further reports that he charged the students to respect their lecturers, read beyond their notes, understand media law, master ethics, build their language, sharpen their curiosity, learn research, respect facts, listen to the people, visit communities, ask questions and verify everything.

The guest lecturer urged them not to come into journalism merely to be popular, trend or post, but to be useful, build trust and serve society, stressing that development journalism remains the responsible pathway for rookie journalists in the age of phone journalism, and described IIJ as one of the right furnaces where responsible journalists must be formed.

Penpushing also reports that Ojo-Lanre congratulated the matriculating students and welcomed them to what he called “the noble burden, the sacred discipline and the public trust of journalism.”

FOOTNOTE: You want to share story with us? You want to advertise with us? You need publicity for product, or service, or   event? Contact us on WhatsApp +2348073463653 or email penpushing@yahoo.com

Editor

Editor

Dimeji Kayode-Adedeji is a Nigerian Journalist of over decades working experience. He has worked in various media organisations and served in various capacity in the media industry. He was a former member of Central Working Committee (CWC) of Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), where he served as a Zonal Secretary (South-West) of the union. He is presently a member of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE), a member of the Guild of Corporate Online Publishers (GOCOP), member International Press Institute (IPI), Nigeria Chapter and member Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), as well as member Caretaker Committee National Alumni Association of Nigerian Institute of Journalism(NIJ) He studied journalism at Nigerian Institute of Journalism, Lagos, Nigeria, Public Administration at Ogun State Polytechnic (now Moshood Abiola Polytechnic Abeokuta, and read Broadcasting at Crescent University, Abeokuta, Ogun State Nigeria The veteran journalist is the Founder of a Penpushing Media owner of Online Newspapers and Online Television, which is registered with Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC). Penpushing Media is first online newspaper to start operation in Abeokuta, a town where journalism started in Nigeria He is an award winning journalist, with records which include Best Journalist of the year award in Ogun State (South-West of Nigeria), Appreciation Award from United Nations Population Fund (Advocacy Project) and Representative of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG’s) in Nigeria. He is media consultant for Nigerian Youth Organisation(NYO) Ogun State Chapter. Media Partner with Lead Women of Africa, a Non Governmental Organisation with headquarters in South Africa, Media Partner with United Nations Information Centre(UNIC), Media Adviser to late Iyalode Alaba Lawson among others

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