William Jones: establishing connections through journalism

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Estimated time to read:

3–4 minutes

Deciding what you want to do for the rest of your life is a very intim­i­dat­ing deci­sion. You go through all of your hob­bies, inter­ests, and strong suits to fig­ure out what works for you. Sometimes, how­ev­er, we can pick more than one.

Teacher William Jones is a prime exam­ple with his teach­ing career, pho­tog­ra­phy, and sports jour­nal­ism business.

Mr. Jones start­ed his web­site, 10thRegion.com, after tak­ing pic­tures for his high school’s yearbook.

“I remem­ber cov­er­ing the 10th Region Baseball Tournament in 2017,” Jones said. “Throughout high school and col­lege, I cre­at­ed a web­site and social media for the Bracken County Polar Bears from 2014 until 2022.”

Jones did his best to con­sis­tent­ly pho­to­graph his high school’s sports, even while work­ing hard to become a teacher.

“While get­ting my bachelor’s degree from NKU, I would often dri­ve 45 min­utes back home to cov­er their games. I still real­ly enjoyed it and had fun sup­port­ing my alma mater. I was hap­py because it allowed me to do the two things I enjoyed most.

Starting a jour­nal­ism career isn’t easy. It takes a lot of time, mon­ey, and deter­mi­na­tion to get start­ed and keep up with it. 

“I only did the 10th Region account for a few months before I real­ized it was too hard to keep up with that and Bracken County sports,” Mr. Jones said. “After I got my first teach­ing job, I was about an hour and a half from home and knew I couldn’t cov­er just Bracken County. So I decid­ed to expand to the entire 10th Region and its 16 schools.”

(The 10th Region includes George Rogers Clark High School.)

Jones said the hard work is worth it because of the inter­ac­tions and rela­tion­ships he’s made along the way. 

“It is exhaust­ing and tir­ing work­ing some events. For some state events, I spend almost eight hours a day going through tens of thou­sands of pic­tures,” Mr. Jones said. “What makes it worth it is get­ting that one pic­ture where you’ve cap­tured a his­toric moment filled with emo­tion and it tells a sto­ry. I get mes­sages from peo­ple telling me they appre­ci­ate the work I do and it means a lot. A great part is also meet­ing all the new peo­ple at these events and mak­ing con­nec­tions and friend­ships with them.”

Managing 10thRegion.com has also enabled Mr. Jones to con­nect more close­ly with his students.

“The best part is the con­nec­tions I have made with stu­dent-ath­letes, coach­es, and oth­er media mem­bers,” he said. “I enjoy see­ing stu­dents doing what they love on the field or the court. Sometimes they look like com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent peo­ple out­side of school. It is fun to cap­ture some of the excit­ing moments, and it is a great talk­ing point with students.”

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Mr. Jones says choos­ing a career path is dif­fi­cult when you have sev­er­al dif­fer­ent inter­ests. He has changed his path­way many times through­out his education.

“I knew I want­ed to be a teacher in my junior year of high school. However, I also want­ed to be a sports jour­nal­ist. By my senior year, I had changed to a jour­nal­ism major, before even­tu­al­ly chang­ing it back to edu­ca­tion after being inspired by my col­lege US History pro­fes­sor. When I first start­ed teach­ing four years ago, I thought I want­ed to be a prin­ci­pal or super­in­ten­dent.  Now, I am work­ing on my master’s degree in School Counseling and Educational Technology.”

Mr. Jones encour­ages stu­dents to keep an open mind when decid­ing on their careers. 

“Take class­es that you are inter­est­ed in, don’t just take them because your friends are. The best part of col­lege is being able to take class­es you are inter­est­ed in. Use that time to try new things and find new inter­ests,” he said. “I have made so many con­nec­tions through­out the state in the edu­ca­tion world that have helped me tremen­dous­ly. Just keep an open mind and be hap­py with what you do!”

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