A Day in the Life During COVID-19: Lauren Giselle Musni
A SC&I junior explains what a typical day is like for her as a remote student during COVID-19
A SC&I junior explains what a typical day is like for her as a remote student during COVID-19
Many Rutgers students considering journalism as a major sometimes assume the only skill they will learn is news writing, and thus the only career open to them will be working as a journalist and writing full-time for a newspaper or other news publication.
Through this fellowship, SC&I's Assistant Professor Khadijah Costley White will explore media coverage of school shootings and the human consequences of lockdown culture.
The grants will support the work of Associate Professor Todd Wolfson, who is co-founder and co-director of the Media, Inequality & Change Center (MIC) and a member of the MMP's Board of Directors.
In his new book, Professor John Pavlik “argues that a new form of mediated communication has emerged: experiential news.” Read Pavlik’s Q&A with journalist Youran Wang of the Social Sciences in China Press.
Researchers analyze how Google, Facebook and Instagram repeatedly change boundaries between smart visibility strategies and ‘cheating the system.'
NJ Spark, a social justice journalism lab that enables students to report on local underserved communities, has received additional funding from the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation.
Sophomore Mia Boccher, as well as several other Rutgers students, recently traveled to Reading, Pennsylvania to interview and report on the lives of LGBTQ individuals to tell the story of an otherwise marginalized community.
Deputy Director of the Nevada Film Office, Harran, who majored in Journalism and Media Studies at SC&I, said, “The instructors/professors and the environment they created at Rutgers cleared the way for me to grow up in an environment that challenged me to learn while giving me the support and tools I would need to ultimately be successful.”
In an award-winning report, SC&I’s Doctoral Candidate Qun Wang and her co-authors shared their findings based on an analysis of 16,000 news stories from 100 local communities in 34 states.