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You’ve seen court reporters in action. In television,
movies, and the highly publicized cases that dominate the news,
the court reporter is always present, recording history as it
happens. Their job is to use the latest technology to create a
verbatim account of the spoken word. It even goes beyond the courtroom,
with reporters documenting what’s said in conventions, classrooms,
hearings, depositions, speeches, cyberspace, television studios
and Congress, to name only a few.
And for over 60 years, Bryan College has produced
the finest court reporters in the nation. Our faculty includes
veteran reporters and professional educators, all committed to
providing students with the most complete and dynamic education
possible.
Our students find themselves prepared for a strong
career full of possibilities. Right now, roughly 60,000 court
reporters are employed nationwide, doing exciting work and earning
competitive salaries. In fact, according to the Journal of Court
Reporting, reporters nationally earn an average of $54,900 a year,
with over 17 percent of court reporters in the United States earning
$75,000 to $100,000 annually.
Change your future by recording the present. Have your questions
answered and get more information about careers in court reporting
by calling 1-877-484-8850 or by clicking here.
Do you know the difference between what a court reporter hears
and what a court reporter writes? Try reading this transcript
of stenotype notes.
Need a little help? Read across, one word to a line.
Words are written just the way they sound. Silent letters are
dropped. For example, cat is written KAT; walk
is written WAUK. Trained court reporters write as fast
as people speak. The skill comes in writing one word to a keystroke
and sometimes writing phrases of two or more words in a single
stroke. Computer systems then translate these strokes into standard,
written English.
This is stenography, and no one teaches this unique
and lucrative skill better than Bryan College.
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