News & Events
The 麻豆传媒 School of Journalism and Mass Communication invites applications for a tenure-track assistant or associate professor with multimedia journalism skills, teaching experience and the ability to help lead curricular change as our school evolves to meet the鈥
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Bruce Winges, editor of the Akron Beacon Journal and a member of the JMC Professional Advisory Board, spoke to a graduate-level media ethics class at Franklin Hall in early February. Winges is well-versed on the subject, after more than 30 years experience with paper, the last鈥
David Pilgrim, Ph.D., the founder and curator of the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University in Michigan, visited 麻豆传媒 on February 11 and 12 to engage students in a discussion about the effects of racist images embedded in popular鈥
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The 麻豆传媒 Chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) won three national awards at the PRSSA National Conference in San Francisco.
PRSSA Kent won the Teahan Award, the most prestigious PRSSA award, for its website, and the Star Chapter鈥
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Three JMC women are among 54 KSU women recognized for making a significant difference in the lives of students or colleagues as part of the annual 鈥淢others, Mentors and Muses鈥 recognition program sponsored by KSU鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Center.
Forty-seven students from Warren G. Harding High School in Warren, Ohio, visited JMC this week to learn more about undergraduate opportunities and our facility. The students, mostly seniors, and their instructor toured Franklin Hall, spending time in the newsroom, BSR, and TV2.
More than 2,000 young men from Portage County served in the Civil War.
Prof. Fred Endres is telling the stories of seven of them.
The first time was the charm for The Burr magazine.
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Three senior visual journalism students in Kent State鈥檚 School of Journalism and Mass Communication earned top honors during the 67th College Photographer of the Year Competition at the University of Missouri.
Brooke DiDonato took home a gold medal for Photo Illustration,鈥
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Hannah Potes, a senior pursuing dual degrees in photojournalism and Spanish, has become the first JMC student selected for a paid 10-week paid summer internship at the Orange County Register.
After completing internships at the Lexington Herald-Leader in Kentucky (2011) and鈥