From News Reporting to Arguing Cases: How Some UConn Journalism Grads Take a Legal Turn

Sara Bigman graduated from UConn Law in 2022 after earning her bachelor's degree in Journalism from UConn in 2017. Contributed photo.

For some UConn graduates with bachelor's degrees in journalism, their experiences as J-majors served as a launching pad for a different, yet related, career path: law.

"I became a lawyer to help people — to give people advice," said Sara Bigman, a 2017 UConn Journalism graduate and current litigation associate at Cohen and Wolf P.C. in Bridgeport, Connecticut. "As a journalist going into law, learning to digest information, working under pressure, and learning new topics definitely helped."

The study and practice of journalism at UConn exposes students to civics, local government and the justice system. Through those lessons, some journalism majors find themselves drawn to legal work. Every semester, UConn Journalism also offers one of the few undergraduate courses focused specifically on the law:  JOUR 3020: Media Law.

Media Law students learn foundational concepts such as the rule of law and the free speech protections of the First Amendment. They study laws regulating digital media, such as recording audio and taking photos, and exercise their rights as members of the public to access government records through Freedom of Information Act requests. They also gain exposure to tort law, including libel and privacy, and take part in a mock trial.

"In my junior year, I took Journalism Law with Associate Professor Amanda Crawford, which was my first exposure to any sort of legal education. At the time, I wasn’t sure exactly why, but that class was the one that I found myself most excited by. Being excited by a class was something that I had largely missed since going to college, so I found myself wondering how I could capitalize on that feeling. That is when the prospect of going to law school first occurred to me," said Wyatt Cote '23, now a third year UConn Law student.

Crawford, who developed the current curriculum for the Media Law course, said a key aspect of the class is the focus on modern challenges, such as those posed by widespread social media use and an executive branch that is openly hostile to protestors and journalists.

“I really don’t think there has been any time in my life that the issues we teach in Media Law have been more relevant to college students,” Crawford said.

Cote said in his senior year, he took Professor Michael Stanton’s Investigative Reporting class, which worked on a project about Connecticut’s housing and eviction crises. The course required students to attend eviction court in New London.

"There, we were firsthand witnesses to the inequality that pervades the Connecticut housing market," Cote said. "There, I realized that I wanted to be a housing lawyer." 

UConn Journalism student Wyatt Cote '23 listens to an interview Friday, Nov. 18, 2022, before an eviction court hearing at New London Superior Court. (Courtesy of The Day/Dana Jensen)

All the alumni agreed that UConn Journalism's rigorous nationally accredited curriculum played a vital role in equipping them with career competencies for effective legal practice.

"What is less obvious is how wonderful journalism is for the students who are like me, who can’t say that they know what they want out of their careers. Even if those students don’t think about law school at all during their undergraduate years, a journalist’s training prepares them well for legal work. The ability to connect to a stranger and tell their story in a compelling, persuasive way is an invaluable skill to lawyering," Cote explained.

Cote also recommended UConn Journalism's Newswriting courses — quoting Supreme Court Justices Scalia and Garner: That lawyers "possess only one tool to convey their thoughts: language. They must acquire and hone the finest, most effective version of that tool available. They must love words and use them exactly. Cultivating an appealing prose style and broad vocabulary is a 'lifelong project, and you may as well begin [it] at once'."

"Students who go on to join a journal in law school will assuredly encounter pages upon pages of dull, uninspired academic writing," Cote noted. "Taking writing classes as an undergraduate will give them a leg up on their peers and help make the pieces published by their journals actually readable."

Sydney Mazur graduated in 2019 with her bachelor's degree in journalism. She earned her law degree from Western New England University in 2022. Contributed photo

Transitioning to law can be a natural progression for J-majors seeking a different avenue for public service.

"I knew I wanted to do something that helped people," said Sydney Mazur, a 2019 UConn Journalism alum and attorney-at-law at Litchfield Cavo in Simsbury, Connecticut. "It definitely helps not being afraid to ask questions and to have that kind of passion or fuel within you to want to know … talking to people, asking questions, kind of getting into the nitty-gritty of what's going on, and you have to be fast enough in your mind to think of a follow-up question. So, I think journalism at UConn prepared me."

UConn Journalism senior Rebeca Marin '25 contributed reporting to this story.