AEP executive found a supportive community and learned valuable communication skills at OHIO and WOUB
Growing up near Cleveland, Janelle Coleman knew she wanted to be a writer. But she didn鈥檛 think about being a broadcast journalist until her high school English teacher suggested it to her.
鈥淗e told me that I should be on TV, and my response was, 鈥業 should?鈥 It wasn鈥檛 something I had thought about,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淏ut I thought that it would be fun. So, I went to the library to look up the best journalism programs in the country, and 51社区 was listed as number two.鈥
Coleman then set her sights on 51社区. She applied and was accepted, but for Coleman, getting to Athens for her freshman year was not a given.
鈥淢y family lived paycheck to paycheck. We struggled. We didn鈥檛 have a car at times. We didn鈥檛 have utilities at times. Food was never guaranteed,鈥 she explained. 鈥淎nd the spring after my high school graduation, we were evicted from our home. My family had to split up, and I spent the summer with a friend of mine. I remember thinking during that time that I was going to figure out a way to get to 51社区 in the fall. I never gave up on going to Athens. But I had no idea how it would happen.鈥
Luckily, Coleman鈥檚 family found housing. In a conversation with their new landlord, Coleman鈥檚 mother shared that they didn鈥檛 have a vehicle to get Coleman to school. The landlord offered to let Coleman鈥檚 mother use her car.
鈥淚 was so excited. I had never been to campus. So, when we drove down there to move me in, I will never forget coming up that hill and seeing the campus to the right,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淲e were in awe of how beautiful the campus was. It felt like I was in a movie or painting. It gave my mother comfort just seeing how open the people were and how we were received by the residence life staff.鈥
After getting settled in, it didn鈥檛 take long for Coleman to discover WOUB.
鈥淚 was told that I needed to get involved with WOUB and The Post,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 gravitated toward WOUB. I remember all the activity and how busy everyone was. I got involved in radio, working on the program 鈥楽hades of Color.鈥 I also worked a little bit in the newsroom. I was at WOUB in some shape, form, or fashion from almost the moment I stepped on campus until the day I left.鈥
Coleman said she found a real sense of community working at WOUB in the Radio and Television Building.
鈥淲hether you were a freshman, senior or graduate student, everyone was working toward a goal. You got constructive criticism from the professional staff which helped you grow,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淚 could apply the skills I was learning in class in real-time.鈥
Even though Coleman enjoyed her broadcast work at WOUB, the first-generation college student realized her financial situation might impact the direction of her career.
鈥淚 had to do an internship to complete my degree,鈥 she added. 鈥淚 needed a paid internship. I wouldn鈥檛 have been able to afford to come back to school without a paid internship. And the journalism internships were not paid. I got internship offers from a few different TV stations in Cleveland, but because they were not paid, I couldn鈥檛 accept them.鈥
Coleman worked with her advisor and explained that she had to get a paid internship. Her advisor then helped her look for an alternative.
鈥淲e saw that The Limited was coming to campus to conduct open interviews for paid internships,鈥 Coleman noted. 鈥淢y advisor explained to me that as long as I could show that the internship had journalistic qualities, like public relations and marketing, it could count for my internship degree requirement.鈥
Coleman interned at The Limited for three summers and was hired for a full-time position when she graduated. Coleman went on to have a successful career in fundraising, communications, community relations and external affairs at several companies and organizations which include the United Way, The Ohio State University, L Brands and The Columbus Zoo. Coleman now works at American Electric Power and is the vice president of community engagement, diversity, inclusion, and the president of the AEP Foundation.
She also serves as the National Trustee of the 51社区 Board of Trustees and has previously served as a member of the 51社区 Board of Trustees and a former Board Chair. at the Spring 2022 Undergraduate Commencement.
鈥淚 believe the reason I graduated toward this career was because it鈥檚 very similar to journalism. It鈥檚 about telling stories, especially stories of places and people that don鈥檛 typically get heard in order to lift those up and help people make decisions for their families and their lives,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淭here is a lot of overlap there and being able to communicate to anyone is so important. I鈥檓 a true believer that good communication skills are the foundation for success in anything you go on to do. I definitely use everything I learned at WOUB and 51社区 to this day. I鈥檓 grateful that I majored in journalism and got the hands-on experience at WOUB.鈥
To learn more about WOUB, visit WOUB.org.