Facilities & Location
At Up To Speed you can learn in a bright, friendly, modern environment based
around three areas:
» The Newsroom
» The Seminar Room
» The Common Room
When you are working in the Newsroom
you can expect the working journalists
who visit us to be envious.
This is where you will chase up, write
and publish stories for our online
newspaper www.poolepeople.co.uk.
The newsroom is equipped with
- sleek new i-mac computers
- wireless internet and printing
- free photocopying, scanning and fax
- two Humax lcd flat screen televisions running BBC News 24 and Sky News
- eight phone lines with a dedicated number
- your own poolepeople e-mail accounts
- a daily supply of national and local newspapers
- data projection facilities to help explain subbing and editing packages

You will use the Seminar Room for lessons
in Politics, Law and Shorthand.
This is also the room where you will meet guest speakers and take part
in drama workshops.
The room is equipped with:
- a data projector
- a mac mini running both apple and microsoft software
- wireless keyboard and mouse
- an Overhead Projector
- a DVD player
There is a spacious Common Room where
you can relax between lectures and
at the start of the day.
In the Common Room you can have:
- cold drinks
- free fresh coffee and tea
- books
- magazines
The Town
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Up To Speed’s Training Centre is based in Poole on the South
Coast. That means we have sea, sand and a lot of sunshine. But our
location also has real advantages when you are training to be a reporter.
We are within walking distance of courts, council offices, a major
Arts Centre and the Town’s main shopping precinct. The NCTJ exams
you take on our Fast-Track course are based around covering a Town
of this size. To do well in those exams, you need to know what makes
a Town tick and how to find stories from the people who live there.
And there are plenty of stories out there.
Poole Facts
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Poole is not a sleepy seaside town. It is part of a conurbation, with
Bournemouth and Christchurch, of 350,000 people. The three towns are
fronted by a seven-mile sandy beach, and Poole itself is set at the
mouth of one of the world’s biggest natural harbours.
Within a few miles of Up To Speed’s front door you can find wildlife sanctuaries, a fishing fleet, the Sunseeker yacht factory, Premiership footballers and pop stars living in glitzy waterfront mansions, farming communities, the home of the Royal Marines’ crack SBS unit, red squirrels, and even Britain’s most popular naturist beach.
There
is no shortage of things to write about. And when you’ve finished
writing at the end of the day, you can head to the beach to relax.
It’s a whole lot better than rounding off your day of training
crammed onto an underground train.
