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Columbia University. Graduate School of Journalism. (48)
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BIOGHIST REQUIRED The School of Journalism was established through monies left to Columbia University in the will of Joseph Pulitzer who died in 1911. As he wrote in his will, “There are now special schools for instruction for lawyers, physicians, clergymen, military and naval officers, engineers, architects and artists, but none for the instruction of journalists. That all other professions and not journalism should have the advantage of special training seems to me contrary to...
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Medill school of journalism (22)
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University of Michigan. Department of journalism (26)
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The study of journalism at the University of Michigan began in 1890/91 when Fred Newton Scott, assistant professor of rhetoric, started a course on rapid writing. This course was dropped in 1893/94, and no further journalistic instruction was offered until 1903 when Scott brought together various courses to form a Rhetoric Department. One of these courses was Rhetoric 13 (Newspaper writing), which continued with modest additions until 1916 when a special program in journalism was...
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Columbia University. School of Journalism (7)
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E.W. Scripps School of Journalism (5)
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The WOUB Center for Public Media (WOUB) is a non-academic unit of the E. W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University. In 2005, its name was changed from the Ohio University Telecommunications Center. WOUB is a full-service media facility which operates two public television stations, a public radio network, a cable station and other advanced telecommunications technologies such as distance learning and videoconferencing services. The Department of Journalism in th...
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Association for Education in Journalism. (5)
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Pew Center for Civic Journalism (4)
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University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Department of Journalism (9)
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The University began instruction in journalism in 1902 with a course in business writing offered under the English Department's program in rhetoric and oratory. 1 In 1915, the Trustees provided funds for a Department of Journalism and in 1927 it became a separate administrative unit, the School of Journalism. 2 In 1950, its name was changed to the School of Journalism and Communications, with divisions of journalism, radio, and advertising, 3 and it became part of the Division of...
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Oregon State University. Dept. of Journalism. (4)
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Journalism courses were first offered at Oregon Agricultural College during the 1914/15 school year, and the Department of Industrial Journalism was created in 1918. The department's purpose was to train students "who wish to take positions on farm and trade journals, newspapers, and other publications, especially where writing on industrial subjects such as Agriculture, Home Economics, and Engineering is required" (1919/20 OAC Catalogue). On three occasions during the 1920s, the State Board...
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Indiana University, Bloomington. School of Journalism (4)
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The School of Journalism had its beginnings at Indiana University when the first journalism course was offered in 1891. A Department of Journalism was established in the College of Arts and Sciences in 1911, and in 1974 the department became the School of Journalism. The School of Journalism has had many well-known and successful graduates, including the famous World War II journalist Ernie Pyle. The School of Journalism was established in 1911 as the Depart...
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