Doctoral Alumna and Noted Scholar Linda Lederman Wins Graduate School-New Brunswick Award
Linda Costigan Lederman (Ph.D., 1979) has been awarded the Rutgers Graduate School-New Brunswick Alumni Award for Distinguished Accomplishments and Service in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Dr. Lederman, an internationally recognized health communication scholar, will be honored at Rutgers University on March 5, 2010.
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Schement Named to Top 100 Hispanic Leaders in Information Technology List
Dean Jorge Reina Schement of the School of Communication and Information has been named to the Top 100 Most Influential Hispanics in Information Technology by the Hispanic IT Executive Council (HITEC).
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Not Your Mother’s Library: Reference Experts Write for the 21st Century
The next time you walk into a library and the person at the reference desk doesn’t get to you right away, don’t think they’re simply ignoring you – they could be instant messaging with someone from across the country trying to find just the right resource for an important project.
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MLIS Alumna Works With Papers of George Segal at Princeton
Princeton University Special Collections assistant Valerie Addonizio received her M.L.I.S. in archival science and an M.A. in art history from Rutgers. She arrived at Princeton just this year; her first project was processing the papers, artwork, and other documentation by and related to the artist George Segal, donated to the library by Segal’s wife and the George and Helen Segal Foundation.
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Michael Moore Tips His (Rutgers) Hat to Library Science Alumna
It was the question that kept coming up in campus discussions last week: Why did the iconic documentary filmmaker Michael Moore wear a Rutgers University cap during a series of high-profile television appearances?
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Mobile Communication and Social Policy: An International Conference
This weekend, the Center for Mobile Communication Studies hosts an international conference where researchers and academics will gather in New Brunswick to examine the impact of mobile communication on politics, business, family, and other social institutions.
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The "Informers" and the "Meformers": Study Reveals Two Types of Twitter Users
Social awareness streams like Twitter and Facebook are mostly populated by a new category of Internet users known as “meformers”: a term coined by Rutgers researchers. In a study of Twitter, a microblogging service used by millions of people from high school students to national elected officials, Mor Naaman and Jeffrey Boase found that 80 percent of regular users are “meformers,” people who use the platform to post updates on their everyday activities, social lives, feelings, thoughts and emotions. The remaining 20 percent – “informers” – share information, have larger social networks and are more interactive with their followers. (Read their paper here.)
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"The Boss" of the Garden State: Lee Examines Springsteen's Influence on N.J. and the Nation
As a former journalist, Richard Lee knows that telling stories is a vital way of providing citizens with information. One of Richard Lee’s favorite musical artists, Bruce Springsteen, has been telling stories about New Jersey since the 1970s.
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Journalism Major Interviews Rutgers President McCormick About Annual Address for RU-tv
Journalism and Media Studies major Marianne DePadua interviewed Rutgers President Richard L. McCormick the morning before his Annual Address for the Wake Up Rutgers program on RU-tv.
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Complex Info Environment Calls for More Media Literacy Education for Children, Center Director Says
Professor Robert Kubey, who also directs the Center for Media Studies at the School of Communication and Information, calls for more media literacy education for children as news and society grows more complex.
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Professor Nicholas Belkin Receives Distinguished Lectureship Award from NJ/ASIS&T
The New Jersey Chapter of the American Society for Information Science & Technology (NJ/ASIS&T) is pleased to honor Dr. Nicholas J. Belkin with its Distinguished Lectureship Award.
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MLIS Students Explore Italian Libraries and Meet Scholars from around the World
Returning to campus in the fall takes some time to adjust, especially if you’re coming back six hours ahead of everyone because you spent August in Milan, Italy. Ten students in the Master of Library and Information Science program traveled to Milan to attend the International Federation of Library Associations conference from August 23 to 27. They spent a few weeks before their sojourn in a course called “International Librarianship,” that focused on library and information service in a global society.
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James E. Katz Named Editor-in-Chief of Eminent Communication Journal
One of the communication field’s most prestigious journals is now led by School of Communication and Information senior faculty member Professor James E. Katz. For more than 30 years, Human Communication Research, a peer-reviewed publication of the International Communication Association, has published some of the most influential empirical work in field. Katz, who is also chair of the Department of Communication and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, was named as the new editor-in-chief at the Association’s annual meeting in May.
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School of Communication and Information Welcomes Four New Faculty Members
It’s a new year at the School of Communication and Information, and the School welcomes four new faculty members this year: Vikki Katz and Jennifer Warren in the Department of Communication; Todd Wolfson in the Department of Journalism and Media Studies; and Joe Sanchez in the Department of Library and Information Science.
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Doctoral Alumna Wins Prestigious Teaching Award at Syracuse University's iSchool
Barbara Kwasnik, a professor at the School of Information Studies at Syracuse University, was named the 2009 University Scholar / Teacher of the Year at the university in New York State. An expert in classification research, Kwasnik earned her Ph.D. from the School of Communication and Information at Rutgers in 1989. Her dissertation was titled “The Influence of Context on Classificatory Behavior” and her adviser was James D. Anderson.
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Dean's Message to SC&I Alumni: Staying Informed and Connected
Dean Jorge Reina Schement sent a message to alumni of the School of Communication and Information, the first of a regular series of communications designed to keep alumni informed of news at SC&I and help them stay engaged with the community.
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New J&J Fellow and Rutgers Grad Has A Penchant for Philanthropy
When she returned to the United States from South Africa, Imani Davis knew she wanted to work in corporate America, but not necessarily in the name of profit. She wanted to continue the type of work she started in South Africa—helping people improve their lives. But she also wanted to make a significant impact.
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HP Award Enables Greater Classroom Interaction, Sheds Light on Laptop Use
An award from HP is demonstrating the power of technology to improve classroom interaction between students and teachers, and moving the School of Communication and Information toward a dynamic approach to mobile computing.
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What is Knowledge Management? New Video Illuminates an Increasingly Important Field
What is knowledge, and what do specialists in the field of knowledge management do? The answer to that question can be somewhat elusive and hard to grasp. But the researchers and students at the Knowledge Institute at Rutgers University provide some answers in a new YouTube video.
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whereRU: Convocation Captured Using New Imaging Technology
Approximately 950 students from the School of Communication, Information and Library Studies received bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees at the school's convocation ceremony, held at the College Avenue Gym in New Brunswick. SCILS Assistant Professor Anselm Spoerri captured a wide view of the ceremony using robotic cameras, creating Gigapan images of convocation. These images allow viewers to zoom in and view the entire ceremony in impressive detail.
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SC&I Hosts First Alumni Event During Rutgers Reunion Weekend
About 30 people gathered at the Red Lion Cafe at the Rutgers Student Center to celebrate alumni at the first-ever Reunion Weekend event held especially for graduates of the School of Communication, Information and Library Studies and the various academic programs that predate the school's establishment in 1982.
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Graduate Students and Faculty Receive Awards at First Ever Honors Day
Faculty, staff, and graduate students celebrated the school's first ever Honors Day. The event took place at the Brower Commons Faculty Dining Room. In addition to a meal catered by Rutgers Dining Services, the more than 100 attendees enjoyed a digital slide show and the presentation of many end-of-year departmental and program awards.
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Student Project Allows Anyone to See Rutgers Up Close and Personal
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Library and Information Science Again Receives Top Rankings from US News and World Report
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. -- The School of Communication, Information and Library Studies has once again been ranked No. 1 in the school library media specialty by US News and World Report.
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NBC "Today" Anchor and SCILS Grad Natalie Morales Nominated to Rutgers' Hall of Distinguished Alumni
Natalie Morales, co-anchor of NBC's Today show and a 1994 graduate of the School of Communication, Information and Library Studies, is being inducted into Rutgers' Hall of Distinguished Alumni Saturday, May 2, at the Heldrich Hotel in New Brunswick.
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Researchers Win Google Award to Study Search Process
In 2008, the number of unique URLs topped 1 trillion. Several billion pages are added each day. And many people aren’t finding the best information possible. How do people go about finding what they need, trawling through such an unfathomable mass of information? That’s what Nina Wacholder and Catherine L. Smith want to know – and they want to understand better the behavior and thoughts of information seekers.
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First Social Media Class at Rutgers Open for Registration
The first course in using social media is open for registration. "Understanding and Building Social Media: An Interdisciplinary Approach" will be taught to graduate students by faculty members in the communication department and the library and information science department.
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Communication Professor Advises Rutgers Community on Research Approval Process
SCILS Associate Professor of Communication Kathryn Greene is Rutgers' IRB Advisor. She commits time and expertise to helping colleagues conduct responsible research and successfully navigate the approval process.
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Five Books by SCILS Professors Honored in Celebration of Rutgers Faculty Authors
SCILS faculty from all three academic departments were honored at the Rutgers University Libraries Sixth Annual Celebration of Faculty Authors. In 2008, James E. Katz, Brent D. Ruben, Laurie K. Lewis, Jack Z. Bratich, Marie L. Radford, and John V. Pavlik all authored important books in communication, journalism and media studies, and library and information science. They have made great contributions to the world of knowledge and scholarship as well as to faculty productivity at Rutgers University.
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Political Expert Dissects 2010 New Jersey Fiscal Battle
How will the current economic and budgetary strains in New Jersey -- and the protracted battles and debates in Trenton over the state budget -- affect New Jersey's gubernatorial election later this year? Richard Lee, a SCILS Ph.D. student and a communication professional with more than 30 years experience in journalism, politics, and public relations, examined the forces at work in Trenton and at kitchen tables across New Jersey in an Op-Ed piece for The Record of Bergen County, N.J.
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SCILS Alumnus Tim Pernetti Named Rutgers Director of Intercollegiate Athletics
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. – Former Rutgers football player Tim Pernetti, executive vice president of CBS College Sports Network and familiar to Rutgers fans for his radio commentary, was named director of intercollegiate athletics at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, at today’s meeting of the Rutgers Board of Governors. The appointment, following a national search, is effective April 1.
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The Rise of Online Dating: Communication Professor Appears on WNYC's "The Leonard Lopate Show"
Jennifer Gibbs, assistant professor of communication, explained on the day before Valentine's Day why online dating has grown so popular and how cyber dating differs from dating "IRL" (in real life).
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SCILS Hires First Pulitzer Prize Winning Instructor
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Visiting Faculty Member Salutes New Jersey in Wall Street Journal
Lee Siegel, a visiting professor in the Department of Journalism and Media Studies, penned a January 24 article in the Wall Street Journal saluting the beauty, diversity, and artistic abundance of--yes--New Jersey. In "The Hidden State of Culture," Siegel calls New Jersey's stark contrasts and diversity "the source of Jersey's remarkable harvest of talent." Siegel peers beyond common notions of the state as littered with industry, gangsters, and suburban sprawl and celebrates Jersey's "fractured personality" along with the numerous artistic talents who call the Garden State home.
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James E. Katz Elected as Fellow of AAAS, a Top National Science Association
Professor James E. Katz has been elected as a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the pre-eminent national scientific organization that recognizes scholars whose efforts are scientifically or socially distinguished.
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Ice Cream Social Marks End of Fall Semester at SCILS
SCILS opened up its doors December 10 for the first Ice Cream Social, where nearly 200 students, faculty, and staff took the opportunity to relax and mingle with one another before digging into final papers and exams.
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