NCTJ graduate awarded prize in honour of budding journalist

An NCTJ-graduate from Glasgow Caledonian University has been awarded a journalism prize set up in memory of a another budding journalist who died suddenly at the age of 21.

An NCTJ-graduate from Glasgow Caledonian University has been awarded a journalism prize set up in memory of a another budding journalist who died suddenly at the age of 21.

Sahil Jaidka was presented with the Darren Joliny Award after graduating with first-class honours in Multimedia Journalism this year.

 

The prize is awarded annually to the top performing student in the BA course.

He was awarded the prize in memory of Darren, a journalism graduate from the university who collapsed and died suddenly while playing football in January 2012 from Sudden Arrhythmic Death Syndrome.

Sahil, who was the highest performing student in his year, is now working on the sports desk at Clyde and Forth Media. He will also carry out an internship with Sky News in August.

Sahil said: “Darren was a truly inspirational figure, so to receive such a prestigious award, named after someone who is so fondly remembered, is a great honour and means so much to me.

“After four years of studying, I feel fully prepared for the world of work. Following placements at publications such as the Daily Record, Herald and Evening Times, Glaswegian and being the sports editor of our own student magazine at GCU, The Edit, I subsequently gained employment at Clyde and Forth Media.

“The past four years have been great fun and I would not have succeeded had it not been for the support of my lecturers on the course, my family, friends and colleagues at Clyde and Forth Media.”

Sahil received the annual award from Darren’s mum Kathleen Joliny at a prizegiving ceremony, where Darren’s classmate Amy Houston read a poem in his memory.

Ken Garner, programme leader in BA Multimedia Journalism, added: “Sahil has been an excellent student throughout his four years on the course, and stands out as the worthy winner of the Darren Joliny Award this year, even in what’s been a very high quality graduating class.

“Sahil’s also been a leader of his class socially, a popular and effective organiser of events, and someone I know the whole class likes and admires, and that’s something he has in common with the role Darren played for his year.”

Keep in touch

Sign up to receive the NCTJ’s eJournalism newsletter. Sent once a month, it will keep you up to date with the latest news and developments in journalism training.