It occurs to me now that I don't think I'm cut out to continue pursuing my major. As a Journalism major, I'm currently taking a class that requires me to write a minimum of 2 articles a week.
I'm having difficulty just writing one, and part of that is because I can't come up with any ideas for stories so the one I came up with was kind of last-minute and ill-prepared. I'm sitting at my desk right now with barely 15 minutes worth of interviews (probably less since some of that recording is silence) and I have no idea how to put that into a cohesive story that isn't extremely dry.
Real journalists don't really "come up with ideas" very often. They'll have templates for the kind of stories they can use to pad the paper. Go into pretty much any small business when they're not too busy, ask the owner about what they think of the local government rules that affect their business. Get a chatty person and you'll probably get hours of recording on a variety of topics. The key would probably be to ask "open" questions at first. Don't go in with a pre-prepared list of "closed" questions, because then you'll get short answers you probably won't be able to use. If you get more than one topic from a conversations, split it up and use the material to craft multiple weeks worth of stories. That'll give you some topics you didn't know about so you can fine-tune it by interviewing different people about it, or doing research and quoting other publications. And keep any quotes around from the first interview to pad out more than one story. Nobody ever said you can't quote the same person in two different stories and just omit the fact that both quotes came from the same interview.
For ideas about types of stories that you can write when you have nothing to write about, go read small town papers. That's suitably local for the type of stuff a journalism student can write. Also, go look for any student council, campus clubs, classes, workshops, meetup.com things etc that are running in your vicinity. You don't need "breaking news" two times a week. There are all types of subcultures, band fans, D&D/boardgame/videogame players, sports fans etc. Interview people about hobbies and interests. Also consider hanging round a cinema and interview people about a movie or about how often they go to the cinema.