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Change happens quickly in information-intensive fields like journalism, communication, public relations, marketing, and media. Our Master of Communication and Media (MCM) puts you at the forefront of change so you can advance your career options.
Faculty, students, and alumni from SC&I’s Library and Information Science (LIS) Department will attend the annual New Jersey Librarian Association (NJLA) Conference. The theme for this year’s virtual conference, scheduled for June 3 and 4, is “All In,” with a focus on accessibility, equity, and inclusiveness.
Awarded by the Institute for Citizens & Scholars based in Princeton, N.J., the prestigious fellowship provides recipients with $25,000 to support their final year of dissertation research.
SC&I’s Events Intern and senior Erin McDonald coordinated four events to bring the SC&I community together virtually on Rutgers Day, even though we physically could not be together.
Change happens quickly in information-intensive fields like journalism, communication, public relations, marketing, and media. Our Master of Communication and Media (MCM) puts you at the forefront of change so you can advance your career options.
A symposium focused on Employing Technology to Improve Health Assessment, Health Communication, & Healthcare Delivery
JMS inducts two KTA cohorts this year. Twenty-three initiates in total!
Using examples from their own research, organizing, and media work, Todd Wolfson and Chenjerai Kumanyika will discuss how Black Lives Matter is a response to long-held racial disparities. They will also explore how the movement has critiqued systemic racism in criminal justice and consider how this fight intersects with historic and contemporary labor struggles.
Kumanyika, an assistant professor of Journalism and Media Studies, has been nominated for a third Peabody Award for his role as a collaborator on the podcast "The Land That Never Has Been Yet."
A Digital Imaging Technician at Princeton University Library, Master of Information student Jennifer Cabral-Pierce contributed to “The Charles Rogers Bird Journals Digitization Project,” and then proposed and helped complete the follow-up “Capturing Feathers” exhibition, which presents rare images of birds from collections across the entire university.