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Rutgers University President Jonathan Holloway said he shared this year’s awards announcement “with pride in the entire Rutgers faculty and with admiration and gratitude for the efforts of all our faculty members over the course of the academic year.”
Woo’s scholarship centers on exploring the intricate communication dynamics within organizational and vocational contexts. Paris is a critical informatics scholar.
SC&I faculty and doctoral students presented research examining effective communication during post-test genetic counseling and the readiness of adolescent and young adult cancer survivors to transition from parental to independent care.
Marking ICA’s 75th anniversary, this year’s conference centers on the theme “Disrupting and Consolidating Communication Research.” The theme encourages reflection on the evolution of communication studies and the association’s role in shaping its trajectory. Through panels and sessions, participants will explore how the field is adapting to technological advances, social transformation, and institutional challenges.
The Rutgers Board of Governors has announced the promotions of four Rutgers School of Communication and Information faculty members. Professors David Greenberg, Kathryn Greene, and John Pavlik have been promoted to Distinguished Professor, and Associate Professor Maria Venetis has been promoted to Professor. The promotions will be effective July 1, 2025.
The aim of Fu’s research on social impact organizing and communication is to help address grand societal challenges, such as public health challenges, environmental degradation, and social exclusion.
The Rutgers undergraduates were among the students invited by CNN to one of its studios in Manhattan to watch the live broadcast of the play and attend the follow-up panel presentation.
On October 23, 2024, Professors Mary D’Ambrosio and Regina Marchi hosted a study abroad mixer with a Turkish and Italian buffet to introduce their upcoming spring and summer 2025 programs in Istanbul, Turkey, and Bologna, Italy.
Faculty join in the American Library Association’s national conference and support local literacy action efforts.
Archivists, scholars and librarians working with a variety of British archives and collections provided the MI students with a variety of lectures and guided tours to enable them to think critically about cultural differences and similarities by learning about how British archivists and librarians develop, preserve, and provide access to physical and virtual collections.