Category Archives: Faculty News

Assistant Professor Feistman to receive PRSA education award

Assistant Professor Gregg Feistman, STRC, will be this year’s recipient of the Philadelphia Public Relations Society of America’s Anthony Fulginiti Award for Commitment to Education.

The award will be given the night of Dec. 7 at the Philadelphia chapter’s annual Pepperpot Awards for the best public relations campaigns of the year.

The award is named after Professor Tony Fulginiti who, in 1976, established a PRSSA chapter at Rowan University, wanting his public relations students to learn and grow in a professional setting and establish Rowan as a key institution in the public relations realm. This chapter is now one of the most successful in the country.
The Anthony Fulginiti Award was established to honor a public relations professional who shares Fulginiti’s commitment to the future of public relations. Each year, one person is honored who excels in education, either through their mentoring/teaching, their efforts to help shape the careers of future PR professionals, or their contributions to PRSSA.

SCT, Iraqi media experts connect for social media webinar

Approximately 50 students, as well as faculty and media professionals, participated in the webinar in Erbil, Iraq.

Three faculty members from the Department of Journalism spent the morning of Oct. 26 discussing the benefits of integrating social media into their classrooms.

What made the presentation special was their audience.

Half a world away, the images of Associate Professor Chris Harper, Assistant Professor Susan Jacobson and Assistant Professor Shenid Bhayroo were received by students, faculty and media professionals at the Institute of Technology in Erbil, Iraq, via Skype.

The project was led by Moustafa Ayad, a new media specialist working with the United Nations Development Program in Baghdad and the International Research and Exchanges Board on an initiative to connect universities throughout the Middle East and North Africa with institutions in America and the United Kingdom to discuss media development.

“People really want to learn how to use these tools,” Ayad said. “This project is about creating knowledge bases [of people in Iraq] who can then pass it along to other media professionals.”

(L-R): Associate Professor Chris Harper, Assistant Professor Susan Jacobson and Assistant Professor Shenid Bhayroo participate in a Skype discussion with professors and students in Iraq.

The Temple University professors touched on some of the ways social media has pervaded the School of Communications and Theater. Harper discussed how WordPress runs philadelphianeighborhoods.com, the capstone of the Journalism Department, and the Facebook and Twitter pages that support it.

“Although the students and professors are Iraqi citizens, they are Kurds, which is a rather independent group and geographical area in the country. It is good to see how the school is already using social media tools in the curriculum,” Harper said.

Bhayroo took a broader look at new media and how it’s used for research, while underscoring the importance of verifying and fact-checking every piece of information found on-line.

“The questions from our colleagues and students in Erbil highlighted their concerns about verifying identities and information obtained online. Their questions also highlighted security anxieties about publishing stories online, and the challenges they face in building transparent and representative media in the war-ravaged country,” he said.

Jacobson rounded out the webinar with a discussion on social media optimization: “how journalists are starting to use social media networks to increase their online audiences.”

“One of the professors told us that people in Erbil often use … social media sites to disseminate news when it was difficult to get information because of conflict,” Jacobson said.  “[A] professor asked why we would use social networks for news in the United States, when the flow of information is much freer.”

She replied with the notion that the trend toward social media is being driven by the young generation of media consumers.

Connecting people around the world through the Internet brings its fair share of challenges, especially in Iraq, where power outages are the norm. Ayad said they tested other technology, such as online streaming services and an open-source option that could be viewed by anyone. But he decided Skype proved to be the most reliable technology and would work the best for this project. The session at Temple, the first to connect with an Iraqi audience, was briefly impacted by a bandwidth issue, but it otherwise ran unhampered.

“We want to help media professionals and to create better media students and a better media environment through these collaborations,” Ayad said.

While discussions on this subject on Western college campuses aren’t out of the norm, Ayad said they’re vital to the future of Iraqi media. “This is a meaningful form of collaboration,” he said. “It’s a way to connect with viewpoints that you’re not otherwise going to have a chance to interact with.”

Ayad said many Iraqis are on Facebook, but the access to the Internet – and reliable electricity – can be tough to find. He said estimates on the percentage of Iraqis online ranges from 1 percent to 25 percent of the population. Active users, though, tend to see Facebook as solely a social entity

He hopes future webinars between Iraqi and Western universities can focus on issues such as curriculum development, media law and other subjects.

Oct. 20: Ogilvy & Mather recruiting

Wednesday, Oct. 20
5 p.m. to 6:15 p.m.
Tuttleman 300AB

Ogilvy & Mather will be on campus Oct. 20 from 5 p.m. to 6:15 p.m. to recruit students for its internship program in Tuttleman 300 AB.

Don’t miss this important opportunity to learn about career opportunities within a global ad agency. After the information session, Ogilvy recruiters will accept resumes until Dec. 1. They will return to campus in January to hold one-on-one interviews.

Professor Postigo awarded National Science Foundation grant

Broadcasting, Telecommuncations and Mass Media Professor Hector Postigo and Professor Tarleton Gillespie of Cornell University’s Department of Communication were awarded a $237,000 grant from the National Science Foundation for the project titled “Cultural Production in the Digital Age: Defining a New Research Agenda.”

For the research project, Postigo and Tarleton are convening an international research group composed of 15 to 20 leading scholars and graduate students from communication, science and technology studies, sociology and anthropology in order to advance inquiry in the field of cultural production and digital media. With the generous support of the Science, Technology and Society division of the National Science Foundation, they will hold two workshops (one at Cornell and one at Temple), support graduate student research assistants and maintain an online research database. At the first workshop, invitees will develop a yearlong research agenda addressing issues of technological design and participatory practices among media consumers.

Specific questions they seek to answer include:

• Will the traditional concerns for media concentration diminish as the diverse blogosphere and a “see for yourself” mindset among information consumers challenge the journalistic “authoritative voice?”

• Is the structure of the public sphere changing, given the rise of wikis, blogs and social network sites that allow users to participate in discourse?

• Will alternative voices from groups typically marginalized in media find a place within the unlimited spectrum of the Internet?

• How does technology facilitate, impede or enforce these emerging cultural dynamics?

• In the age of open source and networked collaboration, can users build their own systems of production to “circumvent” obstacles to unfettered user-centered cultural production?

• Will the public discourse taking shape online come to resemble these venues, for better or for worse?

Throughout the year, between the first and second workshop, participants will contribute to ongoing discussions via an online public knowledge project, where their developing thinking and research on the issues central to project will take shape and accept feedback from the larger academic and practitioner community. At the second workshop, participants will convene to present the findings of the yearlong collaboration, compiling these into book format for publication or research proposals for further funding.

Professor Peter d’Agostino, FMA, featured in exhibition and book

coming & going: San Francisco (BART), 1978

Professor Peter d’Agostino, FMA, is featured in the exhibition “Radical Light: Alternative Film and Video in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1945–2000,” which runs Oct. 6 to April 3, 2011, in the Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive at the University of California, Berkeley.

The University of California Press book includes works by d’Agostino ranging from “The Walk Series” (1973-74) to “TRACES” (1995), videos are distributed by Electronic Arts Intermix, New York. For more information about the book, click here.

StratComm’s Deborah Cai to serve as director of Temple London in summer 2011

Deborah Cai, professor and chair of the Strategic Communication Department, will serve as director of the Temple London program in summer 2011.

An expert in intercultural communication, Cai will teach a course that looks at communication through the study of London neighborhoods, including African London, Arabic London, East Asian London,  Chinese London,  Irish London and Turkish London. Through films, museums, historical exploration and face-to-face visits, students will explore how culture — their own and that of others — influences the way they communicate.

Sept. 23: FMA professor to screen documentary

Thursday, Sept. 23
7 p.m.
Franklin Institute of Philadelphia
222 North 20th Street

Associate Professor LeAnn Erickson, Film and Media Arts, will screen her new documentary, Top Secret Rosies: The Female Computers of WWII, Sept. 23 at the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia’s Franklin Theater.

The film shares the little-known story of a group of female mathematicians who did secret ballistics research for the U.S. Army during WWII, Erickson says. A few of these women later were integral in the programming of the first electronic computer.

The screening begins at 7 p.m. and doors open at 6:30 p.m.

Erickson will be on-hand for a question and answer session following the screening.

Free reservations can be made by calling 215-448-1254.

Click here for more information about the film

MMC announces program director change

Professor Matthew Lombard has been elected to a two-year term as director of the Mass Media & Communication (MMC) program. The MMC community owes a great debt of thanks to Professor Carolyn Kitch, who has served the program so well in that role for the last five years, and is now director of SCT’s Study Away programs.

Next ABC News president to face big challenges — Los Angeles Times

The next president of ABC News may be forced to make some major decisions about the direction and future of World News Tonight.

According to a Los Angeles Times article, the network news audience is shrinking and aging, which means they need to find ways to attract a new, younger audience in order to survive.

“My students do not watch the evening news,” said Associate Professor Christopher Harper, JOUR, a former foreign correspondent and investigative producer for ABC News . “The evening news has become the province of old guys like me.”

Click here to read the full story.