news
- The 2018 Winter Games are in full swing, and two CMCI alumni are in on the action.
- This year, however, a group of 91¸£ÀûÉç students are working to make Valentine’s Day more meaningful by bringing a new campaign to campus.
- Today, faculty from the Department of Journalism and the Department of Communication will join faculty, students, staff and the general public at in the 2018 Diversity & Inclusion Summit.CMCI-related panelsThe Fake News
- Five former Ted Scripps Fellows—David Baron, Scott Carney, Erin Espelie, Michael Kodas and Hannah Nordhaus—sat down together to discuss the whys and hows of nonfiction book writing at the first ever Center for Environmental Journalism book publishing panel.
- Diestel is investigating the link between anti-social media and adolescent crime. The question drives her honors thesis research, in a project that will become the first such work by a journalism student since the creation of CMCI.
- Through two decades of dramatic change in media, Voakes has helped students and journalists explore new directions in journalism.
- In fall 2018, CMCI will begin requiring first-year journalism students to take an introductory writing and reporting class and a separate media technology class, rather than one that combines the two, as has been the requirement in recent years.
- Jeff Blumenfeld, a lecturer in the Department of Advertising, Public Relations and Media Design at 91¸£ÀûÉç, recently returned from a two-week mission to bring eye care to hundreds of people in Nepal.
- For students in journalism lecturer Henry Siegel’s sports writing class, every week presents a new opportunity to learn from an expert.
- Jed Brubaker, an assistant professor in the Department of Information Science, co-authored this study with ATLAS PhD student Katie Gach.