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Caitlin Smits, a current Master of Information student who’s completing the program online from her home in Minnesota, has been on a journey to find a career that’s the right fit.
Carol Ann Farino was murdered in Maplewood, N.J. in 1966 and her killer has still not been caught. In his new book about the case, Joe Strupp, a reporter for the Asbury Park Press and SC&I part time lecturer, explores the murder and its aftermath, and describes the challenges involved in reporting on true crime.
The newly published “Excellence in Higher Education-Renewal (EHE-R) Framework,” specifically designed to assist U.S. colleges and universities recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, was written by Distinguished Professor of Communication Brent Ruben with input from colleagues from Rutgers.
Rutgers Today spoke with some of the university’s experts in health care, environmental science and engineering, education, labor and business to discuss what we have learned since the onset of COVID-19 and what we might expect in the future.
Senior and Journalism and Media Studies major Madison McGay credits the JMS program for helping prepare her for her role as the Managing Editor of The Daily Targum, her current internship at WNBC, and an exciting career after graduation.
By Megan Schumann, Rutgers University Office of Communications
Ph.D. student Nikhila Natarajan is a multilingual journalist (and the planet’s first #StudioInASuitcase media “researcher”) and part of the founding team of Observer Research Foundation America. She recently assisted journalist and author Chidanand Rajgjatta with his book “Kamala Harris, Phenomenal Woman.”
Master of Information (MI) student Ian Dykstra, a library-loving artist and musician.
Read about his experiences in the program in our SC&I profile.
During the inauguration ceremony for Rutgers President Jonathan Holloway, Jon Oliver, who is assistant dean of information technology at SC&I and chair of the Rutgers University Senate, lead the procession to the stage while carrying the Rutgers Gonfalon, an honor bestowed upon him as chair of the senate.
A new study by Professor John Pavlik and Ph.D. student Shravan Regret Iyer explores how cultural, social, religious, and scientific developments during the Victorian era helped shape modern Virtual Reality.