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Presentations, Publications and Activities
This page highlights just some of the recent professional accomplishments and activities of
members of the MM&C community. Most of these news items are distributed on
the MM&C listserv as well.
To submit a news
item, please click here.
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A [ Top ]
Akdenizli has book published, works at PEJ, presents
papers, receives Dissertation Completion Award
A book by MM&C alum
Banu Akdenizli titled,"Toward
a Healthier Understanding of Internet Policy Development: The Case of Turkey," will
be published by VDM Verlag Dr. Muller in Germany; the book is based on Banu's
dissertation. Banu has been
working at the Project for Excellence in Journalism (PEJ)
within the Pew Research Center in Washington, D.C. since July
2006. She contributes to the NEWS Index Coverage Report that PEJ
puts out every week - the many interesting reports are available here.
Banu presented a poster titled "Towards a Healthier
Understanding of Internet Policy Development: An Application of the World
System Model to Telecommunications" at
the National Communication Association (NCA) conference
November 17-20, 2005, in Boston, Massachusetts. Banu also presented "Internet
Diffusion and Policy Development in Turkey: A Socio-Technical Analysis," at
the Internet
Research 6.0: Internet Generations conference of the Association
of Internet Researchers (AoIR),
October 5-9, 2005 in Chicago. She presented "Information and Communication
Technologies and the Nation-State: Internet Policy Development and Turkey" at
the AEJMC
Midwinter conference at
Rutgers University, February 27-29, 2004. Banu was granted an $8,000
Dissertation Completion Award from the Temple University Graduate School
to help her to complete her dissertation project, which is titled, "The
Impact of Information and Communication Technologies on the Nation-State:
Internet Policy and Turkey." The members of Banu's
dissertation committee are Concetta
Stewart (Chair),
Jan Fernback and Nancy
Morris.
Allan awarded NAB grant
MM&C alum Dave Allan and Assistant
Professor of marketing
at St. Joseph's University, is one of just five academic scholars awarded a
research grant by the
National Association of Broadcasters as part of its 2005 annual "Grants for
Research in Broadcasting Program." Each year, this highly competitive program
attracts research proposals from broadcast scholars throughout the country.
Dave's project is titled, "Comparative Effectiveness of 30- versus
60-Second Radio Commercials on Recall." More information is available
here.
Alnor moves to Cal State East Bay and is in the news for exposing potential mail fraud
In the fall of 2005
MM&C alum Bill Alnor, formerly an Assistant Professor of
journalism at Texas A&M-University-Kingsville,
became Assistant Professor and Director of Journalism in the
Department of Communication at
California State University East Bay (formerly Cal
State Hayward). While at Texas A&M Bill exposed the potential mail
fraud of a major evangelical ministry; the story has been reported in Christianity Today, the Los
Angeles Times, the Associated Press, and newspapers around the country; a news
release from the university is available here.
Avila-Saavedra accepts teaching position, has articles
published, presents papers at conferences
MM&C alum Guillermo
Avila-Saavedra
has accepted a full-time teaching position at Salem
State College
in Salem, MA, beginning in Fall 2008. An article by Guillermo titled, "Nothing
Queer about Queer Television: Televised Construction of Gay Masculinities," has
been accepted for publication in a forthcoming issue of Media, Culture &
Society. His paper, "The Ultimate American Dream: The Election
of
Matthew Santos on 'The West Wing,'" was presented at the "Nuestra
America in the U.S.?" Latino/a
Studies Conference, February 8-9, 2008 at the University of Kansas in
Lawrence. Guillermo presented his paper, "Latino Identity and Mainstream
American Humor: The Politics of Race in the Comedy of George Lopez and Carlos
Mencia," at
the 4th
International Language, Communication, Culture Conference at The Lusofona
University of Humanities and Technologies in Lisbon, Portugal, November 28-30,
2006. An article by Guillermo titled "New Discourses and Traditional Genres:
The Adaptation of a Feminist Novel into a Telenovela," has been accepted
for publication in a special issue of the Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic
Media on "Broadcasting and
Electronic Media of the Americas." Guillermo
presented two papers, "Nothing Queer about Queer Television: Mediated
Construction of Gay Male Identities," which received a Top Three Paper
award, and "The
Black Working-class Lesbian and other Absences: A Holistic Approach to Queer
Media Studies," in the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
division at the 2005 conference of the International Communication Association
(ICA),
May 26-30 in New York. Guillermo presented "Stonewall 25 and the Media's
Role in Shaping Collective Gay Memory and Identity (1969-1994)" at the
American Journalism Historians Association (AJHA)
/ Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
History Division Joint Spring Northeast Regional Meeting in New York City on
March 12, 2005. And Guillermo presented, "There are Things You Will Never
See: The Adaptation of a Feminist Latin-American Novel into a Telenovela," at Global
Fusion 2004: An International/Intercultural Communications Conference,
which took place October 29-31 in St. Louis, Missouri.
B [ Top ]
Berkowitz presents papers at AoIR, has book
chapter published, and more
MM&C student Irene Berkowitz presented "Testing H.A. Innis in the Age of
Information: How ICT's are Transposing Our Concepts of Time and Space and the
Political-Economic Implications for Academic Research," at the
A.o.I.R. Internet Research v4 Conference, 'Broadening the Band,' in Toronto in October
16-19 2003. Her paper titled, "The Effects of New Communication and Information
Technologies on Academic Research Paradigms," was included in the book, AoIR Research Annual 2003, published by Peter Lang.
And Irene has been appointed for a three-year term to an Advisory Oversight
Committee for cable services, high speed internet access provided via cable, and
the Government Access Channel for Lower Merion Township. This Committee serves
in policy advisory and community watchdog capacities for these services for the
Township. Irene is Program Director for Curricular Publications and Systems in
Temple University's Office of the Vice Provost.
Bishop has book published, presents paper at 2004 AEJMC
Midwinter conference
MM&C alum Ron Bishop,
an associate professor in the Department of Culture and Communication at
Drexel University, has had
his book, "Taking on the Pledge
of Allegiance: The News Media and Michael Newdow's Constitutional Challenge," published
by SUNY Press. The book "explores atheist Michael Newdow's constitutional
challenge and how the news media marginalized him from the moment the Ninth
Circuit handed down its controversial ruling that the Pledge of Allegiance
was unconstitutional." It "contains interviews with many of the parties
involved, including Newdow and journalists who covered the case. Ronald Bishop
examines how the news media marginalized Newdow...--acting as a "guard
dog" for the government and for the ideas supposedly at the ideological
heart of America--by framing the decision as an aberration, a radical act by
a hopelessly liberal federal circuit court. Bishop concludes that journalists
relegated Newdow to a rhetorical "protest zone"--he was heard, but
from a safe distance." More information is available at Amazon.com here.
Ron presented "I'm Your Biggest Fan: Use
of Fansites (and their Creators) by Journalists" at the AEJMC
Midwinter conference at Rutgers University, February 27-29, 2004.
Bracken organizes panel for ICA 2008, has article published,
presents papers at APSA, PRESENCE, NCA, ICA and BEA
MM&C alum Cheryl Bracken,
Associate Professor in the Department
of Communication at
Cleveland State University,
will chair a session titled, "Roundtable on (Tele)Presence
and Communication," at the 2008 conference of the
International Communication Association (ICA),
in Montreal, May 22-26. The discussion, which Cheryl organized and
will chair, is co-sponsored by the International Society for Presence Research
(ISPR) and will include panelists
Paul Skalski (Cleveland State University),
Ron Tamborini (Michigan State University),
Frank Biocca (Michigan State University),
Matthew Lombard (Temple University),
Wijnand IJsselsteijn (Eindhoven University of Technology) and
Percile Salvini (ARTSlab Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna). Cheryl presented
(with first author Ed Horowitz),"The
Media's Power
Over Young Adults: A Political Socialization Perspective of Efficacy and
Cynicism in the 2004 Campaign" in the Political Communication division
at the 2006 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association (APSA)
in Philadelphia August 31 - September 3. Cheryl also presented "Presence
and Video Games: The Impact of Image Quality and Skill Level" with second
author Paul Skalski, and "Predicting
Presence as a Trait, Not State," with first author Leo Jeffres, at PRESENCE
2006, the 9th Annual International Workshop on Presence, which will take place
August 24-26 in Cleveland, Ohio, sponsored by the International Society for
Presence Research (ISPR). Cheryl
presented "Feeling Like You Are Really There: The Impact of Presence
Sensations and Television Form on Audience Perceptions of Athleticism in
Televised Sports" on the panel "Studying Popular Media Through the
Lens of Presence" in the Communication & Social Cognition division
at the National Communication Association (NCA)
conference November 17-20, 2005, in Boston, Massachusetts. Cheryl is the first
author of an article that has been published: "Criticism or Praise? The
Impact of Verbal versus Text-Only Computer Feedback on Social Presence, Intrinsic
Motivation," with second
and third authors Leo Jeffres and Kimberly Neuendorf, appears in CyberPsychology
& Behavior (volume 7, number 3).
Cheryl also presented "Are we Persuaded by Feeling 'Part of the Action'?
Exploring the Similarities between the Transportation Imagery Model and
Presence" at PRESENCE 2005, September 21-23 in London. A paper by Cheryl
and student authors Karen Utt, James Denny, Michael Quillan,
and Ryan Lange was presented the
ISPR conference
PRESENCE 2003, the 6th Annual
International Workshop on Presence, at Aalborg University in Denmark,
October 6-8. The paper is "Sometimes I Really Hate Coming Back
to this World: Presence and On-line Video Game Playing." Cheryl
also presented, "Source Credibility and Presence: The Role of
Image Quality" at the International Communication Association (ICA)
conference, May 23-27, 2003, in San Diego, California. And Cheryl won the Top
Paper designation for
"Praise, Self-perception and Learning: Children's Social Responses to
Computers," a paper she presented to the Communication Technology
Division of the Broadcast Education Association (BEA)
April 5-7, 2003 in Las Vegas.
Bracken and Lombard co-chair conference, present
papers at PRESENCE 2004, have
article published, present at CSCA 2004
MM&C alum Cheryl Bracken, Associate
Professor in the Department of Communication at
Cleveland State University, and
Professor Matthew Lombard are co-chairs
of PRESENCE 2006, the 9th Annual International Workshop on
Presence, which took place August 24-26 in Cleveland, Ohio, sponsored by
the International Society for Presence Research (ISPR).
They presented "Do 3-D Movies Really Reach Out and Grab You? The Case of SpyKids
3-D," at PRESENCE 2004, the 7th Annual
International Workshop on Presence. The paper, was co-authored with Kimberly
Neuendorf and Cleveland State students James Denny and Michael Quillan, and the conference was held
October 13-15 in Valencia, Spain. An article by Cheryl and Matthew appears in the March 2004 issue of the Journal of Communication. The
article is titled, "Social Presence and Children: Praise, Intrinsic
Motivation, and Learning With Computers." Cheryl and Matthew also made
presentations as part of a panel titled, "The Role of Physical, Social, and
Co-Presence in Human Mediated Experiences and Interaction" at the 2004 Central
States Communication Association (CSCA)
conference in Cleveland, Ohio March 31-April 4.
Bradley has book published and gives Barnes
& Noble talk
MM&C and Department of Journalism emeritus professor Pat
Bradley is the author
of the recent book Women and the
Press: The Struggle for Equality (Northwestern University
Press, 2005). She spoke on how “breakthroughs” historically have
occurred for women in news, and at what cost in a talk titled “Why Katie Couric
Matters” at Barnes &
Noble in Center City, Philadelphia on Tuesday, September
26, 2005.
Brand has article published
An article by former MM&C student Keith
Brand, now an Assistant Professor of Radio Television Film at
Rowan University, was
published in the Winter 2005 edition of the Journal of Radio Studies.
The article, "The Rebirth of Low Power Broadcasting in the U.S.," is
about a research study of the first 250 Low Power FM radio stations licensed
by FCC.
C [ Top ]
Chang presents papers ICA and AEJMC
MM&C student Leanne
Chang presented her paper, "Efficacies and Social Influence: Implications
for Smoking Intervention in College Students," in the Health Communication
division at the 2005 conference of the International Communication Association (ICA)
in New York, May 26-30, 2005. Leanne also presented "The Liberalization of
Cellular Phone Services in Taiwan: A Political-Economic Perspective" in the
Communication Technology and Policy division at the 2004 conference of the
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
in Toronto, August 4-7.
Choi has articles pulbished,
wins Dissertation Completion Award, presents papers at ICA, PCA/ACA, BEA
and AEJMC Midwinter conferences, has MFA thesis featured in SCT event
MM&C alum Suhi Choi,
Assistant Professor in Communication and Diversity
in the Department
of Communication at the University
of Utah, has authored two articles that have been accepted for publication: "The
New History and the Old Present: Archival Images in PBS Documentary Battle
for Korea" will be published in Media Culture and
Society. "Silencing
Survivors' Narratives: Why are We Again Forgetting the No Gun Ri story?" will
appear in Rhetoric & Public Affairs. Suhi was granted a Dissertation
Completion Award from the Temple University Graduate School. The Award provided
$8000 over the six month period of January to June 2006 for her to complete
her dissertation project, which is titled, "Korean
War Caught in History and Memory: Examining U.S. Media Coverage of the No
Gun Ri Incident with the Comparison of Korean Survivors' Testimonies." The
members of Su Hi's dissertation committee were Carolyn Kitch (Chair),
Fabienne Darling-Wolf and John Lent. At the 2005 conference
of the International Communication Association (ICA),
May 26-30 in New York, Su Hi presented "History, Collective Memory, and
TV Documentary: Analysis of Battle for Korea (PBS, 2001)" in the Intercultural
and Development Communication division. Su Hi presented "The Rise of
the Korean Independent Documentary: An Analysis of Sang-Kye Dong Olympics" in
the Asian Popular Culture division at the 2005 Popular Culture Association
and American Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
national conference, March 23-26 in San Diego;
she was also
awarded the Peter Rollins/Michael Schoenecke Graduate Student Travel Grant
for travel to the conference. Su Hi presented another paper, "Can the
Global Market Create 'Visual
Esperanto?': A Content Analysis of Korean and US TV Commercials," at
the Broadcast Education Association (BEA)
conference, April 16-18, 2004, in Las Vegas, Nevada. The paper was awarded
first prize in the Student Research in Progress Competition. Su Hi also
presented "Visual Epistemology:
Self-reflexivity in Documentary" in the Memory and Representation area
of the 2004
Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) Joint
National Conference,
which was held April 7-10, 2004 in San Antonio, Texas. And she
presented, "The Analysis of Visual Strategies in Cross-Cultural Documentary:
'Sharing Authority' and 'Being Reflexive,'" at the
AEJMC
Midwinter conference at
Rutgers University, February 27-29, 2004. Su Hi completed her
MFA thesis at Brooklyn College. Her documentary film, "Two Aliens," is about
a union campaign that tries to organize Mexican workers who have been exploited
in greengrocery stores in New York City. The film was featured
in one of three SCT Latino Heritage Month events in October 2003. "Two
Aliens" was
also screened in New York on two different occasions in June 2002.
Cook and Lizie receive grant to develop online communication courses, 2003
MM&C alums Judi Puritz Cook (at
Salem State University in Massachusetts) and Arthur Lizie (at
Bridgewater State, also in Massachusetts), teamed up to apply for a Commonwealth Information Technology grant to develop online courses
for Massachusetts' eLearning Network; they received a grant for $10,500 to develop two online communications courses, set to run in
spring 2003.
D [ Top ]
D'Angelo co-edits books, guest
edits a journal colloquium, has review and articles published, presents papers
at ICA 2004 and 2003, and co-authors book chapter
MM&C alum Paul
D'Angelo,
Assistant Professor in the
Communication Studies
Program of the College
of New Jersey,
is editing (with Jim Kuypers at Virginia Tech) a new book titled Doing
News Framing Analysis: Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives. The
publisher is Routledge, and the expected date of publication is May 2009.
The book will contain 12 chapters from prominent framing scholars who will
reflect on their own framing research, specifically how they define frame
and framing, how they observe frames in news stories, and how they teach
students to do these things. Paul is also guest editing a colloquium in
the
Electronic
Journal of Communication called "News Framing in a
New Media Age." The issue, which will be available in late March or early
April 2008, will contain three articles that explore frame-building and framing
effects in the intersection of traditional journalism and online journalism.
An article by Paul was published in 2006 in the Harvard
International Journal of Press/Politics; the article, co-authored with
Paul's
colleague Frank Essers, is titled, "Framing the Press and the Publicity
Process in U.S, British, and German General Elections: A Comparative Study
of Metacoverage."
Paul reviewed the book "News Frames and News Narratives" by Karen
S. Johnson-Cartee (2005, Rowman and Littlefield) for Mass Communication
and Society (2006,
volume 9, number 2). He's also the lead author (with his students Matthew
Calderone and Anthony Territola) of an article published in
the Atlantic Journal of
Communication. The article is "Strategy and Issue Framing: An Exploratory
Analysis of Topics and Frames in Campaign 2004 Print News" and it appears
in the December 2005 issue (volume 13, number 4). Paul presented
a paper at the 2004
International Communication (ICA)
conference, held in New Orleans May 27-31. The paper, co-authored with Erik
Bucy, is "The Situational Nature of Media Evaluations: An
Investigation of Broadcast and Online News Credibility Before and After Election
Night 2000." Paul's article "Democratic Realism,
Neoconservatism, and the Normative Underpinnings of Political Communication
Research" was published in early
2004 in Mass Communication and Society (volume
7, number 1). Paul and a German
colleague, Frank Essert, presented a paper at the
International Communication Association (ICA)
conference in San Diego, California, May 23-27, 2003. The paper is titled, "Framing
the Press and the Publicity Process in German, British and U.S. General Election
Campaigns: A Comparative Study of Metacoverage." Paul is also
first author (with Frank Esser) of a book chapter titled, "Metacoverage of
the Press and Publicity
in Campaign 2000 Network News," which will appear in The Millennium Election: Communication in the 2000
Campaign, edited by Lynda Lee Kaid. And Paul's article, "Framing
the Press and the Publicity Process: A Content Analysis of Campaign 2000
Network Coverage," appears in a 2003 special issue of
American Behavioral Scientist in 2003 (volume
46, number 5).
D'Angelo and Lombard have article published, present
papers at ICA 2006
An article by MM&C alum Paul
D'Angelo,
Assistant Professor in the
Communication Studies
Program of the College of
New Jersey,
and Professor Matthew Lombard, will
appear in The Atlantic Journal of Communication; the article is titled,
""The
Power of the Press: The Effects of Press Frames in Political Campaign News on
Media Perceptions." Paul and Matthew presented "The Power of the Press:
The Effects of Press Frames in Political Campaign News on Media Perceptions" to
the Political Communication division at the 2006 conference of the International
Communication Association (ICA),
June 19-23 in Dresden, Germany.
Darling-Wolf has articles published, presents several
papers, is associate editor of journal
Professor Fabienne
Darling-Wolf's article, "Holier-than-thou:
News of Racial Tensions in a Trans-national Context," has been accepted
for publication in Journalism Studies. She presented an earlier
version at the Internationalising
Media Studies Conference in London September 15-16, 2006. Fabienne
has been invited to serve as associate editor of the new Journal of International
and Intercultural Communication. Another
article by Fabienne, "Getting
Over Our Illusion d'optique: From Globalization to Mondialisation (through
French Rap)," has been accepted
for publication in the journal Communication Theory. It previously
received the Outstanding Faculty Paper award at the 6th Annual
Global Fusion connference
in Chicago, Illinois, September 29 - October 1, 2006; the award for the peer
reviewed competition includes a cash prize and publication of the paper in
the official journal of the conference series.
A different work, "The Men and Women of
Non-no: Gender, Race and Hybridity in Two Japanese Magazines," is the
lead article in the Summer 2006 issue (volume 23, number 2) of Critical
Studies in Media Communication. Another article, "Sites of Attractiveness:
Japanese Women and Westernized Representations of Feminine Beauty," appears
in
Critical Studies in Media Communication (volume 21, number 4, 2004).
"Virtually Multicultural: Trans-Asian Identity and Gender in An International
Fan Community of a Japanese Star" was published in New Media and Society (volume
6, number 4, 2004). "SMAP, Sex, and Masculinity: Constructing the Perfect
Female Fantasy in Japanese Popular Music" appears in the October 2004 issue
(volume 27, number 3) of the journal Popular Music and
Society. "Male Bonding and
Female Pleasure: Refining Masculinity in Japanese Popular Cultural
Texts" appears in the May 2003 issue of Popular
Communication. "Media, Class and Western Influence in Japanese
Women's Conceptions of Attractiveness" appears in the June 2003
issue of Feminist Media Studies. Fabienne
presented "Surviving Soccer Fever: 2002 World
Cup Coverage and The (Re)definition of Japanese Cultural Identity,"
in the Visual Communication
division at the annual conference of the International Communication
Association (ICA) in San
Diego May 23-27, 2003.
Darling-Wolf and Mendelson have monograph published
A monograph by Professors Fabienne
Darling-Wolf and Andy
Mendelson titled "Seeing Themselves Through the Lens of the Other:
An Analysis of Japanese Readers' Negotiations of National Geographic's The
Samurai Way Story," has been accepted for publication in Journalism
and Communication Monographs. Fabienne and Andy previously presented
the paper at the 2005 conference of the International Communication
Association (ICA), May
26-30 in New York.
Dasgupta presents papers at IAMCR and NJCA 2008 and
PCA/ACA 2008 and 2007, has articles published in Asian Cinema
MM&C student Satarupa
Dasgupta will present her paper, "Sonagachi Project: Applying Principles
of Participation Oriented Development Communication to a Community based Peer
Outreach Project among Sex Workers in Calcutta," in the Participatory
Communication Research Section at the International Association for Media and
Communication Research (IAMCR) Scientific
Congress in Stockholm, Sweden July 20-25, 2008. Satarupa presented another
paper, "Relevance
of a Medical Anthropological Approach in Analyzing HIV/AIDS Awareness Campaigns
in India," at the 12th Annual New Jersey
Communication Association (NJCA) Conference at Marymount Manhattan College
on March 22, 2008. And she presented, "For the sake
of God: Religion, Militancy and Identity in Pakistani Cinema," in the
Asian Popular Culture division at the 2008 National Popular Culture & American
Culture Associations (PCA/ACA)
conference, March 19-22, 2008 in San Francisco. An article by Satarupa
titled, "Matribhoomi:
Gender Violence and the Motherland," appears in the December
2007 issue of the journal Asian Cinema (volume 18, number 2); Satarupa
presented the paper to the Asian Popular Culture division
at the 2007 Popular Culture Association and American Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
national conference in Boston April 4-7. Another paper by Satarupa has been
published in Asian Cinema (volume 17, number 1, the spring/summer
2006 edition); it is titled "The New Edge of Indian Cinema: An Analysis
of the Treatments of Gender, Sexuality, and Matrimony in the New Indian Cinema
in English."
Diaz receives ICA dissertation award
MM&C alum Mercedes
Diaz, now an Assistant Professor
in the Department of Communication at
Rider
University in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, has been selected by a committee
composed of three senior scholars in the field as dissertation winner by
the Intercultural & Development Communication division of the International
Communication Association (ICA)
for her work in international communication. The chair of the division, Karin
Wilkins, noted that, "This is indeed an honor, given the many applicants and
strong work reviewed." The award will be acknowledged at the division's
business meeting at the 2005 conference in New York.
E [ Top ]
F [ Top ]
Fernback has articles published, presents papers and
authors book chapter
An article by
Professor Jan
Fernback titled,"SELLING OURSELVES? Profitable
Surveillance and Online Communities," has been published in Critical
Discourse Studies (volume 4, number 3). Another of Jan's articles, "Information
Technology, Networks, and Community Voices: Social Inclusion for Urban Regeneration," has
been accepted for publication in the journal Information, Communication & Society.
Jan presented her paper, "Information Technology and Community Networking:
A Symbolic Interactionist Perspective on Urban Regeneration," at the
2005 conference of the International Communication Association (ICA)
in New York, May 26-30, 2005. Two other articles by Jan, "The Nature
of Knowledge in Web-Based Learning Environments"
and "Legends on the
Net: An Examination of Computer-Mediated Communication as a Locus of
Oral Culture," have been published recently in the journals
Academic Exchange Quarterly and New
Media & Society, respectively. Jan also has a refereed book
chapter,
"Internet Ritual: A Case Study in the Construction of
Computer-Mediated Neo-Pagan Religious Meaning," in the new book, Practicing
Religion in the Age of Media: Explorations in
Media, Religion and Culture, edited by S. Hoover and L. Clark
and published by Columbia University Press. Jan also presented "Profitable
Surveillance: Online Community as Commercial Exploitation" in the Communication
and Technology division at the ICA conference in San Diego, California, May
23-27, 2003.
Fernback and Papacharissi present paper at ICA, 2003
Professors Jan Fernback and
Zizi Papacharissi presented their paper, "Online Privacy as Legal Safeguard: The Relationship
Among Consumer, Online Portal, and Privacy Policies," in the Information Systems division at the annual
conference of the International Communication Association (ICA) in
San Diego May 23-27, 2003.
Fry has book published
A book by MM&C alum
Katherine Fry, Constructing the Heartland: Television News and Natural
Disaster was published by Hampton Press in the summer of 2003. The book
combines ideas from media ecology, television aesthetics, cultural geography and
critical theory to explore the quality and implications of natural disaster news
on television. The great Midwest floods of 1993 and 1997 are used as a case
study. Katherine is associate professor and deputy chair for graduate studies in
the Television and Radio
Department at Brooklyn College, City
University of New York.
G [ Top ]
Garyantes has chapter published and presents papers
at AEJMC, ECA, PCA, NJCA, and ICA conferences
MM&C student Dianne
Garyantes will present her paper, "News, Neighborhoods,
and the Need for Understanding: The Cultural Competence of Journalists," in
the Graduate Education Interest Group at the annual convention of the Association
for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication (AEJMC)
in Chicago, August 6-9, 2008. Diane presented, "When
Media Make a Difference: Expanding the Policy-Media Interaction Model," to
the Political Communication Interest Group of the Eastern Communication Association
(ECA) at its annual conference in Pittsburgh May 1-4,
2008. And she presented, "The Cultural
Competence of Journalists: News Coverage, the Internet, and Philadelphia's
Neighborhoods," at the Pennsylvania
Communication Association (PCA)
conference October 18-20, 2007 in State College, PA. Dianne also presented "Journalism,
Culture, and the Embodiment of Diverse Perspectives: Lessons from Anthropology" at
the 11th Annual New Jersey Communication Association (NJCA)
Conference on Saturday March 24, 2007, at Kean University. A chapter
by Dianne titled "Media and Politics:
Historical Perspectives" appears in the encyclopedia series "The
U.S. Political System: An Interdisciplinary Encyclopedia of American Political
Development" published by ABC-CLIO, Inc. Dianne
presented "Media
Coverage of the Iraqi National Elections: A Textual Analysis of Al-Jazeera
and the New York Times" to
the Journalism Studies interest group at the 2006
conference of the International Communication Association (ICA),
June 19-23 in Dresden, Germany. And she presented
"A Need for Understanding: Assessing the Cultural Competency of
U.S. International Journalists" at the
2006 AEJMC Mid-Winter
Conference (International Communication Division) at Bowling
Green State University February 24-26.
Garyantes and Murphy present paper at 2007 NCA Summer
conference
MM&C student Dianne
Garyantes and Professor Priscilla
Murphy will present their paper, "Success
or Chaos? A Study of Ideology and News Coverage of the Iraqi National Elections," at
a "Globalization
and the Media" seminar at the National Commuication Association (NCA)
Summer conference in Orono, Maine, on June 28-30 (details are available
here).
Gil-Egui receives Dissertation Completion Award and
2003 Graduate Student Teaching award from ICA
MM&C alum Gisela Gil-Egui,
now Assistant Professor in the
Department
of Communication at
Fairfield
University in Fairfield Connecticut,
was granted a Dissertation Completion Award from the
Temple University Graduate School. The Award provided funding for her to
complete her dissertation project, which is titled, "Framing the Internet as a
Global Public or Private Good: A Network Text Analysis of Competing Discourses
Within the United Nations' Information and Communication Technologies Task
Force." The members of Gisela's dissertation committee are
Concetta Stewart (Chair),
Priscilla Murphy and
Zizi Papacharissi. Gisela also received the 2003 Graduate Student Teaching Award from the
Instructional and Developmental Division of the International Communication
Association (ICA).
Aside from being able to put fact that she earned this award on her CV, she was honored, along with other winners,
at the Instructional/Developmental Division business meeting at the annual ICA convention in
San Diego in May, she received an award certificate, and her name was added to the
Division's permanent list of outstanding graduate student teachers.
Gil-Egui and Stewart present paper at IAMCR 2007
MM&C alum Gisela Gil-Egui and
Dean Concetta Stewart will present
their paper, "E-Government, Multiculturalism,
and Diversity: Assessing Recognition at the Nation-State Level," at the
50th anniversary conference of International Association for Media and Communication
Research (IAMCR) to be held in Paris on July 23-25, 2007.
Gil-Egui, Stewart and Popp present paper at ICA 2005
MM&C alum Gisela Gil-Egui, Dean
Concetta Stewart, and MM&C student Rick Popp presented
their paper,
"Pay-per- Find? Cyber-Trespass and the Future of Non Profit Search Engines," in
the Communication & Technology division at the 2005 conference of the
International Communication Association (ICA)
in New York, May 26-30, 2005.
Gil-Egui, Tian and Pileggi have article published
An article by Dean
Concetta Stewart and MM&C alums
Gisela Gil-Egui (Fairfield
University), Yan Tian (University of Missouri-St. Louis)
and Mairi Pileggi (Dominican
University of California) on the publication of "Framing the Digital
Divide: A Comparison of US and EU Policy Approaches." Their article will appear
in the journal New Media & Society (Volume 8, Number 5).
Gilpin accepts tenure track job, selected for Academy
of Management Doctoral Consortium and
NCA Honors Seminar; has article, review and interview published; presents
papers at Sunbelt XXVIII, ICA 2006, SCOS XXIII and Media in Transition 2005
MM&C alum Dawn Gilpin will
be joining the Walter
Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona
State University in Phoenix, Arizona as assistant professor in
Fall 2008. Dawn will
present her paper, "Mediated
Issue Networks as Complex Systems: A Look at Organic Foods Policymaking in
the United States," at Sunbelt XXVIII, the International
Sunbelt Social Network Conference, which is the official conference of the
International Network for Social Network Analysis (INSNA).
The conference will be held on the island of St Pete Beach, Florida, January
22-27, 2008. Dawn was
selected by the Organizational Communication and Information Systems (OCIS)
division of the Academy of Management to participate in the OCIS Doctoral Consortium
in Philadelphia on August 3-4, 2007. Supported by a grant from the National
Science Foundation, and headed by scholars from US and Canadian universities,
the Consortium is an opportunity for doctoral students in OCIS to network,
receive feedback on their research, and discuss career issues. In another honor,
Dawn's project, "Networks and Phenomenological Narrativity," was
selected from a highly competitive national pool of applicants for the National
Communication Assocation (NCA)
Doctoral Honors Seminar in the summer of 2006 at Purdue University. The seminars
bring together leading faculty and doctoral students to explore current topics
and trends in communication. An article by Dawn titled, "Mass
Agrarianism: Wal-Mart and Organic Foods," has been published
in the anthology Food, Eating and Culture: A
Cross-disciplinary Feast, edited by Lawrence Rubin and to be published
by McFarland. Dawn is
featured in a taped interview accompanying the textbook Public
Relations: The Practice and the Profession by
Dan Lattimore (McGraw Hill); Dawn addresses international public
relations and crisis communication. She presented her paper, "Complexity,
Culture and Political Economy," to
the Philosophy of Communication division at the 2006 conference
of the International Communication Association (ICA),
June 19-23 in Dresden, Germany. Dawn's review of "The
Paradox of Control in Organizations" by Phillip
J. Streatfield has been published in the journal Emergence:
Complexity and Organizations (vol. 7, no. 2). More information
about the journal is available here.
Dawn presented, "Crying
Over Spilled Milk: The Parmalat Debacle as a Complex Prism
of Organizational Excess," at the Standing Conference
on Organizational Symbolism (SCOS)
XXIII, at the Royal Institute of Technology, in Stockholm,
July 8-10, 2005. Dawn also presented "Parmalat:
A Study in Fractured Narrative" at
the Media
in Transition conference held at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology on May 6-8, 2005.
Gilpin, Lenos, Muse and Ryan present panel at NCA 2006
MM&C
students Dawn Gilpin, Melissa
Lenos, Heather Muse and Kelly Ryan presented
their panel, "My $.02: Exploring
Tensions of Identity, Power, and Community in Commercial Social Networking
Online," on November 18 at the 2006 National Communication
Association (NCA) conference
in San Antonio.
Gilpin and Murphy have book published
MM&C student Dawn Gilpin and Professor
Priscilla Murphy have signed
a contract with Oxford University Press to publish their book, Crisis
Management in a Complex World. The book is likely to appear in late 2007 or early 2008.
Gilpin and Ryan present paper at AEJMC Midwinter 2005
conference
MM&C students Dawn Gilpin and
Kelly Ryan presented their paper,
"Old Media vs. New: Exploring the Use of Film in the Classroom," at
the AEJMC
Midwinter Conference in Kennesaw, Georgia on February 11-12, 2005.
Grabe has articles published
An article by MM&C alum
Betsi Grabe, associate professor in the
Department of
Telecommunications at
Indiana University, Bloomington,
and second author Rasha Kamhawi, has been published in Communication
Research. The article is titled, "Hard Wired for Negative News? Gender
Differences in Processing Broadcast News," and appears in the October 2006 issue
(volume 33, number 5). Another article, with second author Shuhua
Zhou) and titled "News as Aristotelian Drama: The Case of 60 Minutes,"
appears in Mass Communication & Society (volume 6 [2003], number 3).
And another article (with second and third
authors Annie Lang and Xiaoquan Zhao) appears in the August 2003 issue (volume 30, number 4) of
Communication Research; the title is "News Content and Form: Implications
for Memory and Audience Evaluations."
Greenwood presents paper at ICA 2003
MM&C student Linda
Greenwood's paper, "Presence and Flow: A Heuristic
Framework to Inform Theory and Design" was presented at the International
Communication Association (ICA)
conference, May 23-27, 2003, in San Diego, California.
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Hains begins tenure track position, has papers
published, wins NSF competition, presents papers at several conferences,
is elected to ICA Board
An article by MM&C alum Rebecca Hains,
assistant professor in the
Communications Department at
Salem State College in
Salem, Massachusetts, has been published
in Popular Communication (Volume 5, Issue 3); it's titled "Inventing
the Teenage Girl: The Construction of Female Identity in Nickelodeon's My Life
as a Teenage Robot" and more information about it is availables
here.
Rebecca's interview with the creators of Nick Jr's The Wonder Pets! appears
in the August 2007 issue of Televizion, an international publication
on the children's television industry. Rebecca will present her paper, "From
Orphans to Supergirls: Girl Heroes, Yesterday and Today," at the annual
conference of the National Communication Association (NCA),
November 15-18, 2007 in Chicago. Her paper is part of a panel called "Third
Wave Feminists Doing Girls' Studies: Current Scholarship and Future Directions," chaired
by Sharon Mazzarella and accepted by the Feminist & Women's Studies division.
"Beyond Infotainment: From South Park to Citizenship in the Age of Pop Politics," by
Rebecca and her colleague Robert Brown, was accepted for presentation in the
Journalism & Media Culture division at the Popular
Culture Association and American Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
2007 national conference in Boston, April 4-7. Rebecca
was awarded a scholarship from Wheelock College in Boston to
attend Wheelock's
summer institute on media literacy in a violent society from media literacy
scholars Gail Dines and Diane Levin, July 12-15, 2006. Her essay,
"Pretty Smart: Subversive Intelligence in Girl Power Cartoons," appears
in the 2007 anthology Geek
Chic: Smart Women in Popular Culture, edited by Sherrie A.
Inness and published by Palgrave Macmillan. Rebecca was chosen
to participate in "Beyond Barbie and Mortal Kombat: New Perspectives on
Girls and Games," a conference held at UCLA from May 7-10, 2006.
The conference organizers selected Rebecca as a winner of a graduate student
competition sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF). As a competition
winner, Rebecca took part in a workshop on May 8 in which scholars, industry
leaders, and six other graduate students "examine[d] new issues around
gender, games and computing and develop an agenda for the next generation
of research informed by current national and international issues and perspectives." The
workshop was followed by a conference with the public on May 9. The NSF
award included grant money to fund the trip, as well as admission to the
Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) in downtown Los Angeles on May 10. More
information on the conference, which was organized by UCLA's Department
of Design / Media Arts, is available here.
A paper by Rebecca,
"Conducting Qualitative Research with Children: Interdisciplinary and
Feminist Perspectives for Media Scholars," was presented to the Feminist
Scholarship division at the 2006 conference of the International Communication
Association (ICA),
June 19-23 in Dresden, Germany. Rebecca has also been elected to the Board
of Directors of ICA.
She is serving a two-year term as Student Board Member that began at the close
of the 2006 ICA conference in Dresden. Rebecca was nominated to this
position by ICA's Feminist Scholarship Division, where she currently serves
as graduate student liaison. Rebecca has written several entries for a two-volume
encyclopedia set titled
The
Women's Movement Today: An Encyclopedia of Third-Wave Feminism,
edited by Leslie Heywood and published by Greenwood Press. Rebecca contributed
the entries for "Family," "Girls Incorporated," "Marriage," and "The
Powerpuff Girls." An article by Rebecca has been published
in Femspec,
an interdisciplinary feminist journal. The article is "The Problematics
of Reclaiming the Girlish: The Powerpuff Girls and Girl Power," and
appears in a special issue on girl power (volume 5, number 2). Rebecca organized
a roundtable, called "Envisioning
Girls'
Studies: Recent Trends and Future Agendas," that took place
at the 2005 National Women's Studies Association (NWSA)
conference June 9-12 in Orlando, Florida. Rebecca presented two papers,
"Inventing the Teenage Girl: Constructing Female Identity in Nickelodeon's
My Life as a Teenage Robot" and "Reinscribing Compulsory Heterosexuality
in Buffy: Active Audiences, Fan Fiction, and the Subversion of Televised
Narratives," in
the Feminist Scholarship division at the 2005 conference of the International
Communication Association (ICA),
May 26-30 in New York. She presented, "Power(puff) Feminism:
The Powerpuff Girls as a Site of Strength and Collective Action in the
Third Wave,"
in the Feminist Scholarship division at the 2004 ICA conference, which was
held in New Orleans May 27-31. She also presented, "Lauren
Greenfield's Girl Culture: A
reception study," in the visual communication interest group at the AEJMC
Midwinter Conference, which was held February 27-29, 2004 at Rutgers
University, and "The American News Media and the
Archetypal Figures of September 11" in the Journalism and Media Culture
area of the 2004
Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) Joint
National Conference;
that conference was held April 7-10, 2004 in San Antonio, Texas.
Hains and Lenos present papers on panel at ICA 2005
MM&C student Rebecca Hains
and Melissa Lenos,
and School of Education student Rebekah
Buchanan organized a panel, "Teen Girls on Screen: Girl Power, Feminism,
and Teenage Angst," for presentation in the Feminist Scholarship division
at the 2005 conference of the International Communication Association (ICA), May 26-30 in New York.
The papers in the panel were "Girl Power Got Religion: The
Feminist Roles of Joan and Grace in Joan of Arcadia," by Rebekah Buchanan;
"Inventing the Teenage Girl: Constructing Female Identity in Nickelodeon's
My Life as a Teenage Robot," by Rebecca Hains; and "It's Not Easy
Being Mean: Girl Power and the "Socially Progressive" Mean Girls," by
Melissa Lenos; the respondent will be Batya Weinbaum, Editor of Femspec.
Hains, Polcari and Rakus present panel at NWSA 2004
MM&C students Rebecca Hains,
Tom Polcari and Margaret Rakus presented a panel of papers at the
National Women's Studies Association
2004 Conference. The panel was titled, "Gendered Readings and Meaning Making:
Negotiating Three Mediated Women-Centered Texts" and the papers were "Looks can
be deceiving: Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Third Wave Feminism in the Postmodern
Era" by Rebecca Hains, "Behind every Great Woman There Has to Be a Great Man: The
Structural Role of Boys, Men, and Masculine Beasts in Cartoon Network's The Powerpuff Girls" by Tom Polcari,
and "Rosie's Site of Inclusion: A Textual Analysis of Lesbian Mother Subtext in a National Women's
Magazine" by Margaret Rakus. The conference was held June 17-20 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Hains and Vacker present panel at Media Ecology 2005
MM&C student Rebecca
Hains
and BTMM
Professor Barry Vacker Their panel was
accepted for presentation at the 2005 Media Ecology Association (MEA)
Annual Convention, at Fordham University, in New York, June 22-26. In
conjunction with the conference theme of Media Bias (in all its forms), the
title of the panel is "Media Bias Toward 'Tomorrow'?". Rebecca
presented
"Feminism in the New Tomorrowland;" Elisa Durrette, online media investor
and former chief futurist for FedEx-Kinkos, presented "Full Streets, Empty
Meanings, and the Political Protests of Tomorrow;" and Barry will present, "The
'Zero' Tomorrow."
Haller co-edits journal
MM&C alum Beth Haller, an
associate professor in the
Department of Mass Communication & Communication Studies at
Towson University in Towson,
Maryland, has been named co-editor of Disability Studies
Quarterly, the journal
of the Society for Disability Studies. She and co-editor Corinne Kirchner of
the American Foundation for the Blind have purchased a new url (http://www.dsq-sds.org)
for the 23-year-old journal, which has been an online journal since 2000.
Hobbs wins 2007 Outstanding Media Educator Award, gives
many presentations and interviews, has articles published
Professor
Renee Hobbs has received
the 2007 "Outstanding Media Educator" award
from Common Sense
Media, "the nation's leading nonpartisan organization
dedicated to giving parents the tools and information they need to make sure
that they - and not the media - remain the primary influence on their kids'
lives" (more information is available here).
Renee was featured on the series "In the Spirit of Family," hosted
by Dr. Dan Gottlieb on WHYY radio (91FM); details are available here.
Renee presented a paper titled, "Critical Distancing and Participatory
Immersion in Online Learning for Media Literacy" at the 2007 ICA China
Communication Forum, "Harmonious Society, Civil Society and the Media," in
Beijing, China on October 20, 2007 and while in China she also gave an invited
lecture, "Media Literacy: Issues for the 21st Century," at Communication
University of China in Beijing. And Renee gave several other presentations
in 2007, including a keynote address titled "Theoretical and
Conceptual Frameworks Affecting the Development of Media Literacy Education" at
a 3-day symposium on Visual Competence at Jacobs University in Bremen, Germany
in July; "How Immersive Play Spaces Can Build Critical Thinking Skills
about Media and Popular Culture" at the Media in Transition Conference
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in April; a keynote titled "Popular
Culture in the Classroom: Teach, Think, Play" at Columbia University,
Teachers College in March; and "What's Fair about Fair Use for Media Literacy
Educators?" at the Northeast Media Literacy Conference at Storrs, Connecticut,
also in March. Renee spoke to 500 educational leaders from more than a dozen
countries in the Middle East in Doha, Qatar at a UNESCO sponsored conference
on global literacy on March 13, 2007.
The
Conference was part of a series of regional conferences organized
by UNESCO in the framework of United Nations Literacy Decade
(UNLD) and UNESCO's Literacy Initiative for Empowerment (LIFE). Renee was
interviewed regarding her
My Pop Studio media
literacy project in the blog of Henry Jenkins (Director of the MIT
Comparative Media Studies Program). She's had several
articles published. "Multiple Visions of Multimedia Literacy: Emerging
Areas of Synthesis," appears as Chapter 2 in Literacy and Technology,
Volume II (Erlbaum
Associates). "Development and Validation of a Smoking Media Literacy
Scale for Adolescents" by Renee and co-authors Brian Primack, Melanie
Gold, Galen Switzer, Stephanie Land and Michael Fine of the University of
Pittsburgh Medical School and Graduate School of Public Health) appears in
the Archives of Pediatric
and Adolescent Medicine (volume 160). "Non-Optimal Uses of Video
in the Classroom" appears in the
international scholarly journal, Learning, Media and Technology (volume 31,
number 1) and examines some instructional practices used in schools that
diminish or weaken the value of film and video viewing as a learning tool.
She reviews three books in "The State of Media Literacy Education," in
the December 2005 issue of the Journal of Communication. "What's
News?"
appears in the October 2005 issue of Educational Leadership, the
flagship publication of the Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development; the publication reaches 175,000 superintendents, principals,
professors of education, and curriculum specialists in the United States
and Canada. In the article Hobbs argues that broadening students' in-school
reading to include texts from news and entertainment media goes a long way
to improve adolescents' reading comprehension. "Strengthening
Media Education in the Twenty-first Century: Opportunities for the State
of Pennsylvania," appears in Arts Education Policy Review (volume
106, number 4). "A Review of
School-Based Initiatives in Media Literacy Education," appears in the
September 2004 issue of American Behavioral Scientist (volume
48, number 1).
"Learning to
Critically Analyze Advertising: A Quasi-Experimental Study" appears
in the May 2004 issue of Studies in Media and Information Literacy Education
(SIMILE, University of Toronto Press); the full article is available online
here. And "Measuring the Acquisition of Media-literacy Skills" (with
co-author Richard Frost of Babson College) appears in the summer 2003 issue
of Reading Research
Quarterly, a journal of the International
Reading Association. More information about many of Renee's
activities is available at the web site of the Media
Education Laboratory
at Temple, which Renee founded.
Holderman edits and she and Bracken, Franzini, Kahlenberg
and Thomas contribute to book
MM&C alum Lisa
Holderman (Associate Professor of Communications in the Department of
English, Communications, and Theater Arts at Arcadia
University) is
the editor and a contributor, and alums Cheryl
Campanella Bracken (Associate Professor in the School of Communication
at Cleveland State University), Amy
Franzini (Assistant Professor of Communication Studies at
Widener University), and Susan Kahlenberg (Assistant
Professor of Media and Communication at Muhlenberg
College), and former (and
founding) member of MM&C,
Sari Thomas (Director of the Center for Accuracy in Media Study in Los Angeles)
are all contrubutors to the 2008 book Common Sense: Intelligence
as Presented on Popular Television published by Lexington Books. The anthology "examines
the constructions of intelligence and intellectuality in popular television
and the social/cultural implications of those constructions. It considers the
complexity of popular television images, the influences of these images as
they both verify and vilify intelligence, and explores the representations
of inteeligence on television by looking at a variety of TV genres and through
a range of theoretical perspectives and methods." Details are available
here.
Horvath accepts Director of Institutional
Technology position, presents at Streaming Media
and New Media Consortium conferences
MM&C alum Karl
Horvath has accepted the position of Director of Institutional
Technology at Gwynedd-Mercy College
in Gwynedd Valley, Pennslyvania. Karl participated
in a panel as a speaker and to represent Temple University Computer Services
at the Streaming Media East 2006 Conference & Exhibition
in New York on May 23. The panel was titled, "Streaming
Strategies for Educators: Distance Learning". Details are available
here. Karl presented "Usable and Accessible System Design for
Web Services and Asset Management" at the 2005 New Media Consortium
(NMC) New England Regional Conference at Yale University (in New Haven,
Connecticut) October 5-7. The New Media Consortium is "an international
non-profit consortium of nearly 200 leading colleges, universities, museums,
corporations, and other learning-focused organizations dedicated to the
exploration, development and use of new media and new technologies." More
information about NMC and the conference is available
here. Karl was also featured in a February 2005
Temple
Times story.
Hwang presents papers at ICA and AEJMC
MM&C alum Ha
Sung Hwang presented "Predictors of Instant Messaging: Gratifications
Sought, Gratifications Obtained, and Social Presence" in the Communication and
Technology division at the 2005 conference of the International Communication
Association (ICA),
May 26-30 in New York. Ha Sung presented "Always in Touch: A Preliminary
Study of Instant Messaging," in the Mass Communication & Society division at the
2004 conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass
Communication (AEJMC),
which was held in Toronto, Canada, August 4-7. The paper was named 2nd place
winner in the Student Paper Competition. And Ha Sung presented "Why We Should be Concerned About Online
Interaction: An Evaluation of Research on Uses and Consequences of the
Internet," in the Communication and Technology division at the 2004
International Communication Association
conference, which was held in New Orleans May 27-31.
Hwang and Lombard present paper at PRESENCE 2006
MM&C alum Ha Sung
Hwang and Professor Matthew Lombard presented "Understanding Instant Messaging: Gratifications and Social Presence"
at PRESENCE 2006, the 9th Annual International Workshop on
Presence, which was held August 24-26 in Cleveland, Ohio, and sponsored by
the International Society for Presence Research (ISPR).
Hwang and Stewart have work published in two
encyclopedias
Two articles by MM&C alum Ha
Sung Hwang and Dean Concetta Stewart
are being published. "The Dot-Com Boom and Bust," has been accepted via a
double-blind peer review for publication in the Encyclopedia of E-Commerce,
E-Government and Mobile Commerce (click
here for information about the Encyclopedia). An article titled, "Instant Messaging Moves from the
Home to the Office," appears in the
Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, published in 2005 (click
here for details).
I [ Top ]
J [ Top ]
Jacobs presents papers at symposium and MAP/ACA 2006
Two papers by
MM&C student Eliza Jacobs have
been accepted for presentation at the
Girls and Women Rock: Celebrating 35 Years of Sport and Title IX symposium
in Cleveland March 28-31, 2007. The papers are, "The Modern Woman: 21st Century
Images of Female Athletes" and "Girls Gone Wild: Are Women's College Sports in
Crisis?" Eliza will also present, "Who's the Man?: Media Portrayals of Masculinity and
Sexuality at the 2006 Torino Olympics," at the 2006 Mid-Atlantic
Popular/American Culture Association (MAP/ACA)
conference in Baltimore October 27-29.
Jacobson participates in Workshop, presents at UNITAR/Yale
Conference on Environmental Governance and Democracy, co-organizes and chairs
IAMCR 2008 panel, gives invited presentations, presents at IAMCR
2007, has articles, book chapter published
Professor and SCT Senior Associate
Dean Tom Jacobson will be an Invited Participant
in the Workshop on "The Role of the News Media in the Governance Agenda:
Watch-dog, Agenda-setter, and Gate-keeper," at the John F. Kennedy School
of Government at Harvard University. The Workshop is being organized by the World
Bank Communication for Governance and Accountability Program (CommGAP) and the
Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Kennedy
School and will take place May 2931, 2008. A paper by Tom titled, "Citizen
Participation and the Democratic Legitimation of Environmental Policy Decisions:
A Communicative Action Assessment Model," has
been accepted for presentation at the UNITAR/Yale Conference on Environmental
Governance and Democracy at Yale University in New Haven, CT, May 10-11, 2008.
The conference will take place as an outcome of the 16th Session of the United
Nations Commission on Sustainable Development and will bring together about
90 academic experts and practitioners from governments, inter-governmental
organizations, civil society and the private sector to take stock of contemporary
research and knowledge gaps at the intersection of institutions, public participation
and environmental sustainability. Tom has co-organized a panel
titled "Media and Good Governance:
Does Media Matter?" for the International Association for Media and
Communication Research (IAMCR)
Scientific Congress, which will take place in Stockholm, Sweden July 20-25,
2008. The panel is co-sponsored by the Political Communication Research and
the Participatory Communication Research sections of IAMCR and Tom organized
it with Susan Abbott of the Center for Global Communication Studies at the
Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania. Tom will
co-chair the panel with Philippe J. Maarek of University Paris 12, Paris. Tom
gave an invited presentation titled, "Indicating Citizen Voice: Communicative
Action Measures for Media Development," at the Workshop on Measuring Press
Freedom and Democracy: Methodologies, Uses, and Impact at the University of
Pennsylvania Annenberg School of Communication, Center for Global Communication
Studies, on November 5, 2007. He was an invited member
of the panel titled, "The World Congress on Communication for Development:
Lessons, Challenges and the Way Forward," at a book launch event for the
World Congress on Communication for Development Proceedings. The event was
held at The World Bank in Washington D.C. on October 24, 2007; more information
is available here. Tom
presented his paper, "Participatory Communication: The Case for Quantitative
Assessment of Perceived Communicative Action Conditions," on a panel at
the 2007 conference of the International Association for Media and Communication
Research (IAMCR)
at UNESCO headquarters in Paris July 23-27. Tom organized the panel with the
UPENN Annenberg Center for Global Communications and its senior research director
Susan Abbott. Tom was also on a panel titled "History and Future of Participatory
Communication Research" with other previous heads of the Participatory
Communication Research Section of the IAMCR. Tom's article,"The Case
for Quantitative Assessment of Participatory Communication Processes," appears
in The Drum Beat (online issue #381), published by The Communication
Initiative. The article is available here.
Another of Tom's articles, "Media
Development and Speech in the Public Sphere," appears
in the 2006 report Media Matters: Perspectives on Advancing
Governance & Development
from the Global Forum for Media Development, published by Internews
Europe; it's available online here.
A book chapter by Tom and co-author Satish Kolluri of Pace University appears
in Communication for Social Change Anthology: Historical
and Contemporary Readings edited by Alfonso Gumucio-Dagron and Thomas
Tufte and published in 2006 by The Communication for Social Change Consortium.
The chapter is titled, "Participatory
Communication as Communicative Action"; more information is available here.
Jacobson and Chang present paper at ICA 2005
Professor and SCT Senior Associate
Dean Tom Jacobson and MM&C student Leanne
Chang presented
their paper,
"Measuring Community Change as Social Choice: Preference Structuration," in
the Intercultural/Development Communication division at the 2005 conference
of the International Communication Association (ICA)
in New York, May 26-30.
Jacobson and Pan present paper at ICA 2008
Professor and SCT Senior Associate Dean Tom Jacobson and
MM&C student Lingling Pan will present
their paper, "Indicating Citizen Voice: Communicative Action Measures
for Media
Development," in the Global Communication
for Social Change division at the 2008 conference of the International Communication
Association (ICA), in
Montreal, May 22-26.
Jacobson, Pan and Chang present paper at ICA 2008
Professor and SCT Senior Associate Dean Tom Jacobson,
MM&C student Lingling Pan, and MM&C
alum Leanne Chang will present (with
second author P.C. Chang), "The Case for a Discourse
Ethics Approach to International Rights," in the Philosophy of Communication
division at the 2008 conference of the International Communication Association
(ICA), in Montreal,
May 22-26.
Jones presents paper at PRESENCE 2007, has articles published
MM&C student Matthew T. Jones will
present his paper, "Understanding
Presence as External Versus Internal Experience," at PRESENCE 2007, the
10th Annual International Workshop on Presence, sponsored by the International
Society for Presence Research (ISPR)
and held in Barcelona, Spain October 25-27. Several of Matt's articles have
been published. "The
Creativity of Crumb: Research on the Effects of Psychedelic Drugs on the Comic
Art of Robert Crumb," has been accepted
for publication in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs. "The Impact
of Telepresence on Cultural Transmission through Bishoujo Games" appears
in volume 3 (number 3) of PsychNology Journal
(the article is available in .pdf format
here). "Ecofeminist Themes in Paolo Eleuteri Serpieri's Morbus
Gravis"
appears in volume 2 (number 2) of ImageText (the article is available
here).
"Reflexivity in Comic Art," appears in the spring 2005 issue (7(1))
of the
International Journal of Comic Art.
K [ Top ]
Kaynak awarded Fellowship for study in Singapore
MM&C alum
Mehpare Selcan Kaynak, an Assistant
Professor in the
Political Science and International Relations Department at
Bogazici University
in Istanbul, Turkey, has been awarded an Asian
Communication Resource Centre (ACRC) Fellowship for Communication and
Information Researchers at the
School of Comunication and
Information at Nanyang
Technological University in Singapore. ACRC is a regional centre that
assists academics, scholars, researchers and practitioners in their teaching and
research by providing access to a variety of information sources, particularly
produced in Asia and the Pacific. The Fellowship provides funding, access to the
ACRC resources, and interaction with diverse faculty for researchers studying
Asian communication and media. Selcan spent seven weeks late in summer 2005 at
NTU in Singapore studying political efficacy and media use.
Kaynak and Bracken present papers at APSA 2006 and PRESENCE 2006
MM&C alums
Mehpare Selcan Kaynak, an Assistant
Professor in the
Political Science and International Relations Department at
Bogazici University
in Istanbul, Turkey, and
Cheryl Bracken,
Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at
Cleveland State University,
presented their paper, "A Cultural Comparison of Political
Power at the Individual Level: Exploring Efficacy and Media Use among Turkish
and American College Students," in the Political Communication division at the
2006 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association (APSA)
in Philadelphia August 31 - September 3. They also presented, "Presence, Efficacy, and the Net:
Exploring Patterns in Political Participation from a Comparative Perspective" at
PRESENCE 2006, the 9th Annual International Workshop on Presence, which will
take place August 24-26 in Cleveland, Ohio, sponsored by the International
Society for Presence Research (ISPR).
Kern accepts tenure-track position, presents paper
at AEJMC 2008, has publication in anthology, presents work at AEJMC 2007
and 2006, NCA 2006 and Mid-Atlantic American Studies Association 2006
MM&C student Rebecca Kern has
accepted a tenure-track position in the Communication
Program at Manhattan
College,
beginning in Fall 2008. A paper by Rebecca titled, "Selling a Cultural
Phenomenon:
Political Economy and 'The L-Word'", was accepted for presentation
in the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender (GLBT) Interest Group at the 2008
conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication
(AEJMC) in Chicago, August
6-9. Rebecca spoke about her research on the television program The L-Word on
a panel titled "The State of Teaching
and Research in Queer Theory and Other Critical GLBT Issues" at the annual
conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication
(AEJMC)
August 9-12, 2007 in Washington, D.C. Rebecca is also writing the AEJMC
Gay, Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender Interest Group newsletter for the 2007-2008
academic year. Rebecca's paper "Structuring the Status Quo: The L-Word
and Queer Female Acceptability,"
has been accepted for publication in an anthology, the second edition of
Mediated Women: Representations in Popular Culture, edited by Marian
Meyers of Georgia State. The paper was previously presented to the GLBT Interest
Group at the 2006 conference of the Association for Education in Journalism
and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
in San Francisco. Another of Rebecca's papers, "Just How Groundbreaking
Is The L-Word? Lesbians and the Future of Television," has been accepted
for presentation to the GLBT Communication Studies Division at the 2006 National
Communication Association (NCA)
conference in San Antonio. Rebecca also presented "Can Massachusetts Serve
as a Model? A Case Study Analysis of Same-Sex Marriage Law" at the
Mid-Atlantic American Studies Association conference in March 2006 in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Kern and Hains present panel at ECA 2007
A panel proposed by MM&C students Rebecca
Kern and
Rebecca Hains (Assistant Professor in
the Communications
Department at Salem
State College in Salem, MA), and Rebekah Buchanan (Urban Studies), has been
accepted
for presentation at the 2007 Eastern Communication Association
(ECA) conference
in Providence, Rhode Island (April 25-29). The panel is titled, "Empowerful
Girls on Television: Consumerism, Sexuality, and Feminism," and titles
of individual papers include
"Totally Spies, Totally Commodified: The Empowerment and Consumption of
Girl Heroes" by Rebecca Hains and "All Puffed Out: From Powerful to
Passive - Images of Femininity and Sexuality in Young Adult Television" by
Rebecca Kern.
Kim accepts faculty position at Valdosta State
University
MM&C alum Heeman Kim
has accepted a tenure track Assistant Professor position in
the Department of
Communication Arts at
Valdosta State University in Valdosta, Georgia, beginning in fall 2005.
He'll teach international media, media criticism, and broadcast journalism.
Kim and Papacharissi have paper published
An article by
MM&C alum Heeman Kim and
Professor Zizi Papacharissi has been
published in the Asian Journal of Communication (volume 13, number 1).
The 2003 article, "Cross-cultural Differences in Online
Self-Presentation: A Content Analysis of Personal Korean and US Home
pages" was first presented in the Communication & Technology Division at the 52nd Annual
Conference of the International Communication Association (ICA) in July 2002 in Seoul, Korea.
Kitch speaks at symposium, has books and articles
published, wins research awards, presents papers, and is scholar in residence
Professor Carolyn Kitch will be
among the speakers in an all-day symposium titled, "The Changing Faces of
Journalism: Tradition, Tabloidization, Technology, and Truthiness," held at
the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School for Communication on Friday,
November 30, 2007. The event is sponsored by the Annenberg Scholars Program in
Culture and Communication. Carolyn will be speaking on "Tears and Trauma
in the News." More
details, including the program and registration information, are available
here.
Carolyn's most recent book, Journalism
in a Culture of Grief (New York: Routledge, 2008, with second author
Janice Hume), has been published; more details are available here.
Carolyn's article, "Mourning 'Men Joined in Peril and Purpose': Working-Class
Heroism in News Repair of the Sago Miners' Story," has been accepted for
publication in the journal Critical Studies in Media Communication.
An earlier version of the article received the James E. Murphy Memorial Award
for Best Faculty Research from the Cultural and Critical Studies division of
the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
at the 2006 annual conference in San Francisco. Carolyn's book, "Pages
from the Past: History and Memory in American Magazines," has been selected
as the winner of the 2006 James W. Carey Media Research Award of the Carl
Couch Center for Social and Internet Research. The award is particularly
poignant this year in light of Dr. Carey's recent death. The award committee
selected Carolyn's work "over a field of very strong entries submitted
by a long list of outstanding scholars." Carolyn will receive the Carey
Award plaque at the 2006 annual convention of the Association for Education
in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC),
August 2-5, 2006 in San Francisco. An article by Carolyn titled "'It
Takes a Sinner to Appreciate the Blinding Glare of Grace':
Rebellion and Redemption in the Life Story of the 'Dark' Celebrity," has
been accepted for publication in the scholarly journal Popular Communication.
Carolyn's second book, Pages from the Past, History & Memory in
American Magazines, was published in September 2005 by the University
of North Carolina Press. Carolyn's article, "'A Genuine, Vivid
Personality': Newspaper Coverage and
the Construction of a 'Real' Advertising Celebrity in a Pioneering
Publicity Campaign" has been accepted for publication in Journalism
History.
Another article, "'Useful Memory' in Time Inc Magazines: Summary
Journalism and the Popular Construction of History," has been accepted
for publication in
Journalism Studies. Carolyn presented "'A Grieving Army of Americans':
The Character of the Ordinary Citizen in News Coverage of Ronald Reagan's
Death"
to the Cultural and Critical Studies division at the 2005 national conference
of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
August 10-13 in San Antonio, Texas. She presented "Putting the Pieces
Back Together: The Intersection of History, Culture, and Commerce in an African
American Magazine" to the AEJMC Southeast
Colloquium, March 3-5, 2005 in Athens, Georgia. She also presented, "'A
Script of Roles and Models': Visual Testimony, Counter-Memory, and Black
History in Ebony" at the American
Journalism Historians Association in Cleveland in October 2004.
In the summer of 2004 Carolyn was a Scholar in Residence with the Pennsylvania
Historical and Museum Commission. She worked in the archives of the Railroad
Museum of Pennsylvania on a project called "On the Tracks of
Phoebe Snow: Issues of Gender, Race, and Class in a Pioneering Media Campaign."
At the AEJMC conference in Toronto in August 2004, Carolyn presented, "Nostalgia
Magazines as Gendered Communities of Memory," which won a faculty paper
award in the Magazine Division, and she spoke on a panel titled "Messages
Wrapped in the Flag." And at the 2004 conference of the International
Communication Association (ICA)
she presented, "'The
Magazine that Brings Back the Good Times': Nostalgia in Media Narratives
of an Idealized American Past," in the Popular Communication Division.
Another of Carolyn's articles, "Generational Memory and
Identity in American Newsmagazines," appears in the May 2003 issue of Journalism:
Theory, Practice and Criticism.
Kwon accepts assistant professor position; presents paper at PCA/ACA 2004
MM&C student Jae-Woong Kwon has
accepted an assistant professor position in the
Internet Media Track in the Mass Communication & Information Department at
Hallym University in
Chunchen, South Korea. He'll begin the appointment in spring 2006. Jae
presented his paper, "New Type of Popular Culture in the Internet Age: Focusing
on Personal Web Cartoons in Korea," at the
2004 Popular Culture
Association/American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) Joint National Conference,
April 7-10, 2004 in San Antonio, Texas.
L [ Top ]
Byron Lee presents at PSA, ICA and CWSA
2008, PSA 2007
MM&C student Byron Lee
will present his work at three upcoming conferences. At the Pacific Sociological
Association (PSA)
annual meeting in Portland, Oregon, April 10-13, Byron will present two papers
titled, "It's
a Question of Breeding: Examining Masculinities in Bareback Porn" and "I
Can Even Think Straight! Men Seeking Men in craigslist Personal Ads." At
the 2008 conference of the International Communication Association (ICA),
in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, May 22-26, he'll present "Reading GAM in
Craigslist Personals: Constructing Gay Asian Males during the Negotiation of
Anal Intercourse" in
the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Studies division. And at the Canadian
Women's Studies Association (CWSA)
annual meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 1-3, he'll present "Space
to Imagine and to Be: (Self)-Writing GAM Online." Byron also presented
"Redefining Transitions: The 'Trans' Moment in Body Enhancement”
at the Pacific Sociological Association (PSA)
Annual Meeting in Oakland, California, in March 2007.
Ki Jung Lee has article published, presents paper at
NCA 2004
An article by former MM&C student Ki Jung Lee and co-authors Byoungkwan
Lee and Karen M. Lancendorfer appears in the March 2005 issue of The Asian
Journal of Communication. The article is titled, "Agenda-setting of the
Internet: The Intermedia Influence of Internet Bulletin Boards on Newspaper
Coverage of the 2000 General Election in South Korea." Ki Jung also presented, "Exploring Motives Among College Students for Using the Internet: A
Qualitative Approach to the Uses and Gratifications Framework of the Internet"
(co-authored with Byoungkwan Lee and Donghun Chung) in the Human Communication
and Technology division at the 2004 conference of the National Communication
Association (NCA), in Chicago, November 11-14, 2004.
Lenos has book chapters published, presents paper at ICA, awarded Peter Agris Memorial Scholarship
MM&C student Melissa Lenos is the
author of chapters that will appear in two books: "'I may be a bitch...': The
Mise-en-Scene of Female Power in the Roughie," about a subgenre of
sex-exploitation cinema in the late 1950s and early 1960s, will appear in a 2008
anthology on trash cinema, and "Stacking the Deck: Mythic Structure and The Manchurian Candidate(s)"
will appear in an anthology on
contemporary remakes. The latter work previously won third place at the
2006 SCT Graduate Research Forum. Melissa presented her paper, ?It?s Not Easy Being Mean: Girl Power and the ?Socially
Progressive? Mean Girls,? at the 2005 conference of the International
Communication Association (ICA),
May 26-30 in New York. She was also awarded the Peter Agris Memorial Scholarship by the
Alpha Omega
Council. This award is designated specifically for Greek-Americans pursuing
higher education in journalism and/or communication. Melissa is one of four 2005
recipients. In addition to a $5000 stipend for summer study, the award included
dinner with Olympia Dukakis on June 11, 2005.
Lin has article published in Journal of Media
Economics
An article by MM&C alum Mu
Lin titled, "Change or Continuity: China's Television Market
after WTO Entry," was published in 2004 in the Journal of Media
Economics.
Liu accepts position at UNC-Pembroke, presents paper at ECA 2005
MM&C alum Dandan Liu has
accepted a tenure track position Assistant Professor position in the
Department of Mass
Communications at the
University of North Carolina at Pembroke beginning in fall 2005. Dandan presented, "No Stadium in Chinatown: A Cross-Cultural
Comparison of the U.S. Mainstream And Chinese Immigrant News Coverage," at the
2005 convention of the Eastern Communication Association (ECA),
April 27-May 1 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Lizie promoted to Associate Professor at Bridgewater
State College
MM&C alum Arthur Lizie
has earned promotion to the rank of Associate Professor (he was already tenured)
in the Department of Communication Studies at Bridgewater State College in Bridgewater,
Massachussetts. Arthur has also been named to the College's new Sustainability
Center.
Lombard presents at PRESENCE and TelePresenceWorld
conferences; organizes, moderates and presents paper on panels
at ICA 2004, 2003; creates and manages presence-l listserv; co-founds ISPR
and creates ISPR web site
Professor Matthew Lombard will be a
keynote speaker at a conference titled "When
Media Environments Become Real" that will be held in the Division of Media
Psychology at the University of Berne, Switzerland, February 4-6, 2008. More
information about the conference is available here.
Matthew presented the opening talk at the PRESENCE 2007 conference in
Barcelona with colleague Wijnand IJsselsteijn; the talk was titled, "10
Years of Presence Conferences: Impressions, Anecdotes and Lessons Learnt." More
information about that conference is available at the web site of the sponsoring
organization, the International Society for Presence Research (ISPR),
which Matthew heads. Matthew gave an invited talk, titled "Telepresence
Phenomena and Research: The Big(ger) Picture," at
TelePresenceWorld 2007, "A landmark summit on the emerging technologies
of Telepresence, Presence, and Unified Communications" at the University
of San Diego June 4-6. Major sponsors of the event included Polycom, Teleris,
Cisco and Telanetix. The International Society for Presence Research (ISPR),
was a supporting sponsor; details about the event are
available
here. Matthew
presented, with first author Jack Klotz,
then Assistant Chair of the BTMM Department, "Presence
Considerations in Music Production," at PRESENCE 2006, the 9th Annual
International Workshop on Presence; the conference took place August 24-26
in Cleveland, Ohio, and was sponsored by the International Society for Presence
Research (ISPR).
Matthew organized and moderated a double panel titled "(Tele)Presence:
Theory and Measurement" at the 2004 International Communication Association
(ICA)
conference in New Orleans, Louisiana, May 27-31. Matthew presented
"Introduction: Defining and Theorizing About Presence" on the first
(theory) panel. Proceedings of the event, which was co-sponsored by the Information
Systems division of ICA, the International Society for Presence Research (ISPR),
and the Media Interface & Network Design (M.I.N.D.) are available here.
Matthew also organized and moderated a panel, "(Tele)Presence: An Introduction
to the State of the Art" at the 2003 ICA
conference in San Diego, California, May 23-27, and presented "(Tele)Presence:
Where Have We Been and Where Are We Now." He also
created and manages the presence-l
listserv
and co-founded and established the web site for the ISPR for those who study
presence.
Lombard and Bracken attend presence workshop, co-edit
journal issues
Professor Matthew Lombard and
MM&C alum Cheryl Bracken will
attend an invitation-only workshop hosted by the University of Southern California's
Centers for Creative Technologies titled "Online, Offline & The Concept
of Presence: When Games and VR Collide" in Los Angeles, October 25-27,
2006. Details about the workshop are available here.
Cheryl and Matthew will also co-edit a special issue of the MIT Press journal
Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments featuring papers
presented at the recent PRESENCE 2006 conference which was held at Cleveland
State University where Cheryl is an associate professor. They previously served
as co-editors for two special issues (August and October, 2003) of the same
journal based on work first presented at PRESENCE
2001, the 4th Annual International Workshop on Presence, which Temple hosted
(details, photos, and more are on the Conference
Proceedings
web site).
Lombard and Jones have article published, present papers
at PRESENCE 2006, NCA 2005, PRESENCE 2004
An article by Professor Matthew Lombard and
MM&C student Matthew Jones has
been published in the online journal PsychNology; the article is titled "Identifying
the (Tele)Presence Literature," and appears in volume
5, number 2. Matthew and Matt
presented "Defining Presence: A Framework" at
PRESENCE 2006, the 9th Annual International Workshop on Presence, which took
place August 24-26 in Cleveland, Ohio, sponsored by the International Society
for Presence Research (ISPR).
They also presented "The Big Picture: Gaining Perspective
by Examining Patterns in the (Tele)Presence Literature" at PRESENCE 2005,
September 21-23 in London and "(Tele)presence Theory and Research: What
the Literature Tells Us"
on the panel "Studying Popular Media Through the Lens of Presence" in
the Communication & Social Cognition division at the National Communication
Association (NCA)
conference November 17-20, 2005, in Boston, Massachusetts. And they presented
"Presence and Sexuality" at
PRESENCE 2004: The 7th Annual International Workshop on Presence, which was
held October 13-15 in Valencia, Spain.
Lombard and Selverian have article published, present
paper at PRESENCE 2006
An article by Professor Matthew Lombard and
MM&C alum Melissa
Selverian titled, "Telepresence after Death," appears
in the June 2008 issue of the MIT Press journal Presence (volume 17,
number 3). The paper, inspired by portraits of Matthew's dog Sidra, "examines
some of the increasingly sophisticated attempts by humans to evoke the presence
of themselves or others after death and considers these efforts in the context
of telepresence theory and research." They previously presented the paper
at PRESENCE 2006, the 9th Annual International Workshop
on Presence, which took place August 24-26 in Cleveland, Ohio, sponsored
by the International Society for Presence Research (ISPR).
Lombard, Snyder-Duch and Bracken publish online
resource for content analysts
Professor Matthew
Lombard and MM&C alums Jennifer
Snyder-Duch and Cheryl Bracken
have published and maintain an online resource, "Practical
Resources for Assessing and Reporting Intercoder Reliability in Content Analysis
Research Projects." The site, located
here, is a
supplement to their 2002
Human Communication Research
article, "Content Analyses in Mass Communication: Assessment and
Reporting of Intercoder Reliability."
M [ Top ]
Madia now Marketing Strategy Analyst
MM&C alum Sherrie Madia is a Marketing Strategy Analyst at Cendant
Corporation in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey. She's responsible for growing the
internal marketing and public relations operations within the company, as well as positioning the various "brands" that Cendant powers
(e.g., Merrill Lynch, Century 21, etc.). Cendant's business units
include hospitality services, real estate services, travel, vehicles,
and financial services. Sherrie still keeps her hand in the
academy, though, teaching courses at Drexel University and through the
University of Phoenix Online.
Marshall anchors at WRLB-TV, named "Best Outside
Agitator," consults for government on medial literacy projects
MM&C alum David Marshall has
accepted the position of chair of the
Department of Mass Communication at
McNeese State University
in Lake Charles, Louisiana. In May 2004 Dave assumed the anchor chair for the Morning Show at CBS
affiliate WRLB-TV in
Columbus, Georgia (his bio on the station's web site is
here). Before that Dave was on the faculty at the
College of Charleston in
Charleston, South Carolina, as a Visiting Assistant Professor in media studies. The
Charleston City Paper named
him the 'Best Outside Agitator' for 2004 after he encouraged the College of
Charleston's faculty senate to adopt a more diverse approach to hiring; the
paper said "Marshall's candid concern ... quickly instigated some much-needed
change. Dave has also been tapped by the U.S. Department of Labor, Youth
Services Division to serve as a consultant to an ongoing Media Literacy Project
that includes, among other things, working with the government on programs that
connect youth and media. In the immediate future, this means helping to
coordinate a national film contest involving teens in urban areas around the
country at federally funded sites. Later it will include more training and
workshop development activities for federal staff working at these centers.
Maynard has articles and book chapters published
Professor Michael Maynard has
had several articles and book chapters published recently: "From
Global to Glocal: How Gillette's SensorExcel Accommodates to Japan"
appears in Keio Communication Review;
"Friendly Fantasies in Japanese Advertising: Persuading Japanese Teens
through Cartoonish Art" appears in the International
Journal of Comic Art (which was created and is edited by
Professor John Lent);
"Projecting Peer Approval in Advertising: Japan versus U.S. Seventeen
Magazines" is a chapter in a book edited by Ray T. Donahue called
Exploring Japaneseness: On Japanese Enactments of
Culture and Consciousness from Ablex Publishing; and "Beating
Technology at its Own Game: E-mailing Super Bowl Ad Critiques Before
the Media Blitz" appeared in the Journal of
Advertising Education.
Maynard and Scala have article published in Journal of Popular Culture
An article by
Professor Michael Maynard and
MM&C student Megan Scala has
been published by the Journal of Popular Culture. The
2005 article is titled, "Unpaid Advertising: A Case of Wilson the
Volleyball in Cast Away." Michael and Megan first presented the paper in the Advertising Division at the August
7-10, 2002 conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication (AEJMC) in
Miami Beach, Florida.
Maynard and Tian have article published in Public
Relations Review
An article by Professor Michael Maynard and
MM&C alum Yan Tian, an Assistant Professor
in the
Department of Communication at the
University of Missouri - St. Louis, appears in the fall 2004 issue of Public Relations Review. The
article is titled, "Between Global and Glocal: A Content Analysis of the Chinese
Web Sites of the 100 Top Global Brands."
McClain presents paper at PCA/ACA 2007
MM&C student Jordan McClain will
present his paper, "How objects Convey Information:
An Information Theory Model of Material Culture Research," at the Popular
Culture Association and American Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
2007 national
conference in Boston, April 4-7.
Mendelson quoted in NY Times, has article published,
presents papers at ICA
Professor Andy Mendelson is quoted
extensively in a December 26, 2007 article in The New
York Times titled, "Photographing the Life That Rockwell Depicted" about
Norman Rockewell and his impact on photojournalism. The article is available here.
Andy presented
"Image is Everything: Celebrities, the Paparazzi and the Practice of Journalism"
at the 2005 conference of the International Communication Association (ICA),
May 26-30 in New York. An article by Andy, "For Whom Is a Picture Worth
a Thousand Words? Effects of the Visualizing Cognitive Style and Attention
on Processing of News Photos," was published
in the Spring 2004 issue (volume 24, number 1) of the Journal of Visual
Literacy. An earlier version of the article was one of three papers
Andy presented at the annual conference of
the International Communication Association (ICA)
in San Diego May 23-27, 2003. It was presented in the Visual Communication
interest group while the other two papers were presented in the Information
Systems division; one is by Andy and Paul Bolls from Washington State University
and is titled "Emotional Effects of Advertising on Young Adults of Lower
Socio-economic Status," and the other is by Paul and Andy, and is titled "Fear
on the Radio: Cognitive and Emotional Responses to High-fear High-imagery Messages."
Mendelson and Kitch present paper at AJHA 2003
A paper by professors Andy
Mendelson and Carolyn
Kitch, "Slice-of-Life Moments as Visual 'Truth': Norman Rockwell,
Feature Photography, and American Values in Pictorial Journalism," was presented at the
at the American Journalism Historians Association (AJHA)
/ Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
History Division Joint Spring Northeast Regional Meeting at New York University on March 22, 2003.
Mendelson and Papacharissi have article published
An article by professors Andy Mendelson and
Zizi Papacharissi, "Reality
vs. Fiction: How Defined Realness Affects Cognitive &
Emotional Responses to Photographs," has been published in the December
2007 issue (Volume 14, Number 4) of Visual Communication
Quarterly.
Mendoza wins research award, presents papers at SCMS,
WSCA, NCA
MM&C student Kelly Mendoza's paper, "Mapping
Parental Mediation and Making Connections with Media Literacy," has been
selected as the winner of the 2007 Media
Smart Research Award from Cable
in the Classroom, sponsored by the National Cable Telecommunications
Association (NCTA). The
paper provides an extensive literature review of the scholarship in parental
mediation and analyzes it in relation to key theoretical frameworks of media
literacy. As the winner of the paper competition, Kelly receives a $2,000 cash
award and will present a summary of her findings at a meeting of education
leaders in Washington D.C. in early December. Kelly will present another paper, "Rollergirls:
Skating the Lines of Identity by Embracing Contradiction," at the Society
for Cinema & Media
Studies (SCMS) conference
in Chicago, March 8-11, 2007. Kelly also presented (with Dr. Katia Campbell
from the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center) a session
entitled, "How
Media Literacy can Promote Social Justice Education in the K-12 Classroom" at
the annual Western States Communication Association (WSCA)
conference, February 17-20 in Seattle, Washington. And she presented
"Media Literacy in Practice: Applying Invitational Rhetoric
to the Inquiry Approach" in the Applied Communication division at the
2006 National Communication Association (NCA)
conference in San Antonio, Texas, November 16-19; the paper was part
of the panel titled "An Invitation to Connect: Applying Invitational Rhetoric
to a Variety of Communication Sites."
Mendoza and Yoon present paper at NWSA 2006
MM&C students Kelly Mendoza and
Jiwon Yoon presented their paper, "My Pop
Studio: An Online Media Literacy Learning Experience for Girls," at the National
Women's Studies Association (NWSA)
conference in Oakland, California, June 15-18, 2006.
Mishra presents at International Conference on Critical
Literacy in Visual Culture
MM&C student Suman Mishra will present
her paper titled "On
Thin Ice: Gendered Images of Men and Women Figure Skaters in the 2006 Winter
Olympics" at
the first International Conference on Critical Literacy in Visual Culture at
the University of North Texas, in Dallas June 6-7, 2008. Details
about the conference are available here.
Mishra and Kern win poster award
MM&C students Suman Mishra and Rebecca
Kern won
the Best Poster award in the Cultural
and Critical Studies division at
the 2007 annual conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication (AEJMC)
in Washington, D.C., August 9-12. Their project was titled "Representing
Katie: The Media Commodification of the First Female Network News Anchor."
Moore maintains Columbia Journalism Review's Who
Owns What web guide
"Media companies continue to grow, and a shrinking number of them
shape what we view and read. What does that mean for journalists --
and for the nation?" MM&C alum Aaron Moore maintains the
Columbia Journalism Review's Who
Owns What web guide to what the major media companies own.
Morris has article and book entries published, speaks
at UNESCO event, has book chapter published, works on project during Fall
2005 study leave, presents at Communication and Cultural Diversity 2004,
Global Fusion 2003 and has article published
An article by Professor Nancy
Morris titled, "Transmitting Identity: Radio in Barcelona," has
been published in the International Journal of Communication. The
article is available online here. Nancy has written the entry on cultural
imperialism that appears in the book Battleground: The Media, published
by Greenwood Press and edited by Robin Andersen and Jonathan Gray; more
information is available here.
Nancy also wrote the cultural imperialism entry for the forthcoming ICA/Blackwell
Encyclopedia of Communication, edited by Wolfgang Donsbach; more information
is here.
Nancy was an invited speaker on the roundtable "Communication,
Globalization and Cultural Diversity," at the "Communication Dialogues" of
the Universal
Forum of Cultures held in Monterrey Mexico from September
20 to December 8, 2007. The Forum is a UNESCO-endorsed event whose purpose
is "to
promote civic dialogue, creativity, and development that is just, humane, sustainable
and peaceful." It includes academic and civic conferences and seminars,
as well as entertainment, exhibitions, and workshops. A book chapter by Nancy
about the experiences of the late
Chilean poet and protest singer Osvaldo "Gypsy" Rodriguez has been
published in the book on Chilean exile titled Exiliados, emigrados y retornados:
Chilenos en America y Europa, 1973-2004 (Exiles, Emigrants, and
Returnees: Chileans in America and Europe, 1973-2004) edited by Jose
del Pozo Artigas and published by Ril Publishers in Santiago. The chapter
is titled "Las
peregrinaciones del Gitano exiliado: La correspondencia de Osvaldo Rodríguez" ("The
Wanderings of the Exiled Gypsy: The Correspondence of Osvaldo Rodriguez").
Nancy was awarded a study leave for the fall 2005 semester, during
which she worked on the data analysis and write-up of the project "Interpretations
of Health Messages among North Philadelphia Latinos", also called the "Speaking
of Health/Hablando de Salud 2005" project. This research, which began
in summer 2004, is funded through Temple University's portion of the Pennsylvania
Department of Health tobacco settlement formula funds. The purpose is to examine
how messages about smoking and tobacco are interpreted by North Philadelphia
Latino residents of all ages and to develop and test a model for examining
how communications messages affect health decision-making among members of
different social groups, particularly underserved ethnic minorities.
Renee Hobbs is the other principal investigator on the study. MM&C
students Pamela Poe and
Tom Polcari have also participated
in this project. Nancy presented
her paper, "Institutional Barriers to the Representation of Cultural
Diversity in the Media," at one of the four plenary sessions of the
Communication and Cultural Diversity Conference in Barcelona,
Spain, May 24-27, 2004. The conference was part of the 4 1/2-month long
Universal Cultural
Forum Barcelona 2004, an international cultural, academic and media
encounter which will include conferences, debates, seminars, public dialogues,
workshops, an arts festival, expositions, open-air activities and media
presentations on topics related to the Forum's themes of peace, cultural
diversity and sustainable development. Nancy's paper, "The Myth
of Unadulterated Culture Meets the Threat of Imported Media" was
selected for inclusion in the introductory plenary panel "New Directions
for International Communication Theory" at the
Global
Fusion 2003 conference, which took place October 24-26 in Austin,
Texas. An article by Nancy titled "A Comparative Analysis of the Diffusion
and Participatory Models in Development Communication" appears in the
May 2003 issue (volume 13, number 2) of Communication Theory.
Murphy, Oliveira and Dsagupta present at ICA 2008
Professor Priscilla Murphy and MM&C
students Maria
Oliveira and Satarupa
Dasgupta will present their paper, "The Ideology of Choice:
The Worldview of Tobacco Industry Issues Management in the 1990s,"
in a Public Relations division session at the 2008 annual conference of the
International Communication Association (ICA)
in Montreal, Quebec, May 22-26.
Muse presents papers at mid-winter AEJMC and PCA/ACA
2007 and other conferences
MM&C student Heather Muse will present
"Send
Me an Angel: The Politics of Celebrity and Oprah's Response to Hurricane Katrina," in
the Critical and Cultural Studies division of the Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) Mid-Winter conference in
Reno, Nevada, February 23-24, 2007. She'll also present "Blue Collars,
White Collars and Red Sox: Class Issues in Newspaper Coverage of the Boston Red
Sox," in the Local Culture of Boston
division of the Popular Culture Association and American Culture Association
(PCA/ACA) 2007
national conference in Boston, April 4-7. Heather presented
"You're Living in the Past, It's a New Generation: Music as a
Memory Device in Nostalgia Television Shows" to the AEJMC
Midwinter Conference in Kennesaw, Georgia February 11-12, 2005 and "'What's
That I Hear?': The Use of Popular Music in Teenage Television Drama" to
the Popular Communication Division of the International Communication Association
(ICA)
May 26-30 in New York.
N [ Top ]
Noh presents paper at PCA/ACA 2008, presents dissertation
work, has article and chapter published, presents other conference papers
MM&C student
Sueen Noh will present "'To Be or Not to Be, That Is the Question':
What Is Happening with Korean Comics (Manhwa) Today?" in the Asian Popular
Culture division at the 2008 Popular Culture Association and American Culture
Association (PCA/ACA) national
conference, March 19 - 22 in San Francisco; the same paper was published in
the Fall 2007 issue of the International Journal of Comic
Art. Sueen also has
won a 2008 Michael Schoenecke Travel Grant For Graduate Students,
a competitive award that provides $300 for graduate students in accredited
programs to attend the PCA/ACA conference (details about the award are here.).
Sueen was invited to present her dissertation
research at the Korea Workshop at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
on September 24, 2007. The title of her presentation is "Negotiating
Gender and Culture: What Korean Women Do with Japanese Girls' Comics?"
The Korea Workshop is co-sponsored by the Center for East Asian and Pacific
Studies, the Department of Anthropology, the Department of East Asian Languages
and Cultures, the Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities, and International
Programs and Studies at the University of Illinois. Sueen's article, "Intersecting
Gender and Race in Globalization: Beyond the Evolution from Cultural Imperialism
to Cultural Hybridity," appears in the Spring 2007
issue of Global Media Journal; the article is available here. Sueen
presented an earlier version at the 6th Annual Global
Fusion
Conference, in Chicago, Illinois, September 29 - October 1, 2006. She also
presented "Science,
Technology, and Women Represented in Korean Sci-Fi Girls' Comics" in
the Feminist Scholarship division at the 2005 conference of the International
Communication Associationn
(ICA), May 26-30 in
New York. A paper Sueen presented at the 2004 SCT Graduate Student Research
Forum titled, "'In the
Name of Love': Adolescent
Heterosexuality in Korean and Japanese Comics for Girls," was selected
as a Top Student Paper at a panel jointly sponsored by the Japan-U.S.
Communication Association (JUCA)
and the National Communication Association (NCA)
at the NCA conference in
Chicago, November 11-14, 2004. Sueen also
presented "The Gendered Comic Market in Korea:
An Overview of Korean Girls Comics, Soonjung Manhwa," at the 2004
Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
Joint National Conference, April
7-10, 2004 in San Antonio, Texas and "Science,
Technology, & Women Represented in Korean Sci-Fi Girls' Comics," at
the AEJMC
Midwinter conference at Rutgers University, February 27-29,
2004. And Sueen is the
author of "Korean Girls' Comics and Women," a chapter
in the 2003 textbook Gender and Image of Media, edited
by E. Han & D. Lee
and published by Nanam; Sueen is the only student among the authors
of the 14 chapters in the book.
O [ Top ]
Oliveira has article and book chapter published
An article by MM&C student Maria
de Fatima Oliveira titled "Fighting
a Smoky Fire: An Analysis of Philip Morris' CEO Speeches According to Image
Restoration Strategies" has been accepted for a special issue of
the European journal Social Responsibility. The theme of the special
issue is "Ethics
and Morality in the Business Practice." The article will be published
early in 2008. Maria previously presented the paper in the Organizational
Communication division at the November 2006 conference of the National
Communication Association (NCA) in
San Antonio, Texas. A book chapter by Maria titled "Creating
a Dream, Changing Reality: A Brazilian Web Site as a Public Relations Tool
for Social Change," appears in
the 2007 book
New Media & Public Relations, edited by Dr. Sandra C. Duhe.
Oliveira and Murphy present paper at CSCA 2007
MM&C student Maria de Fatima Oliveira and
Professor Priscilla Murphy presented
"The Leader as the Face of a Crisis: Philip Morris' CEO's Speeches during the
1990s" at
the 2007 annual Central States Communication Association (CSCA)
conference, March 27 - April 1 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The paper was designated
a Top Paper in the Public Relations division.
P [ Top ]
Papacharissi on editorial board of JOBEM, presents paper at BEA 2003
Professor Zizi Papacharissi has been
asked, and has agreed, to serve on the editorial board of the Journal of
Broadcasting and Electronic Media. Zizi presented "Understanding Individual Differences and Internet Use"
on the panel, "Uses and Gratifications in the Newer Media Environment"
at the annual conference of the Broadcast Education Association (BEA) in Las
Vegas in April, 2003.
Papacharissi, Darling-Wolf, Fernback, Mendelson and
Stewart present panel at NCA 2004
MM&C Professors Zizi Papacharissi,
Fabienne Darling-Wolf,
Jan Fernback,
Andy Mendelson, and
Concetta Stewart, proposed and
presented a panel, "Investigating the Reality of Reality TV," in
the Mass Communication division at the annual conference of the National
Communication Association (NCA)
in Chicago, November 11-14, 2004. The panel included these papers: "The
Reality Appeal: Uses and Gratifications of Reality Shows" (Papacharissi),
"Global Reality (or, the Reality of Globalization)" (Darling-Wolf), "Narratives
of Community in Reality Television: Survivor and the Status Quo" (Fernback),
and
"Reality vs. Fiction: How Viewer Perceptions of Realness Affect Emotional
Responses to Mediated Content" (Mendelson); Concetta Stewart was the panel
respondent.
Papacharissi and Fernback have article published in
JOBEM, lead study funded by Junior Faculty Grant
An article by Professors Zizi Papacharissi
and Jan Fernback, "Online Privacy
and Consumer Protection: An analysis of Portal Privacy Statements," has
been accepted for publication in the Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic
Media.
They originally presented the paper at Internet Research 3.0, the international
conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (A.o.I.R.)
in Maastricht, the Netherlands, October 13-16, 2002. Zizi and Jan are
also co-Principal Investigators on a grant to study "Urban Regeneration
through Information Technology: A Redevelopment Strategy for North
Philadelphia." The grant is funded by Temple's Junior Faculty Grant
Program, part of the Return of Overhead Research Incentive Grant
Program. Matthew Davis, an Assistant Professor in Tyler's Architecture
program is the PI for the project, and Samantha Simpson, also a Tyler
Assistant Professor, is a co-PI. The group will "develop a strategy
for urban regeneration through the use of Information and
Communication Technologies (ICT) specifically focused on distressed communities
in North Philadelphia," with the goal of receiving significant external
funding to carry out ensuing projects.
Papacharissi and Oliveira have article published
An article by Professor Zizi Papacharissi and
MM&C student Maria de Fatima Oliveira titled, "Frames
on Terrorism: A Comparative Analysis of Terrorism Coverage in UK and US Newspapers,"
will be published in the February 2008 issue (volume 13, number
1) of the Harvard International Journal of Press and Politics. The
study was presented earlier at the 2007 conference
of the International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR)
in Paris.
Park and Hwang present paper at IVSA 2004
MM&C alums Sung Bok Park and
Ha Sung Hwang presented their paper,
"Ideological Effects of Korean Documentary: Toward Social Consensus," at the
2004 conference of the International Visual Sociology Association (IVSA).
The conference was held in San Francisco, August 11-13.
Peterson named Graduate Associate, presents paper at
PCA/ACA 2008, has article published
MM&C student Tina Peterson
has been named by Temple University's Center for the Humanities (CHAT)
as a Graduate Associate for 2008-2009; she'll receive a $500 research award
and participate in bi-monthly workshops with the other Associates and with
CHAT faculty. Details about the CHAT GA program are here.
Tina's paper titled, "You Are
What Your Avatar Eats: Food as Accessory in Second Life (and First Life)," was
accepted for a panel on
Food and Popular Culture at the 2008 National Popular Culture & American
Culture Associations (PCA/ACA)
conference, March 19-22, 2008 in San Francisco. An article by Tina, "Bringing
up Baby (Carrots)," has
been accepted for publication by the journal Gastronomica (published
by the University of California Press). The article, which will appear sometime
in 2008, examines the success of baby carrots as a product of agricultural
innovation and shrewd marketing.
Pileggi becomes program director
MM&C alum
Mairi Pileggi, a member of the faculty in the
Department
of Communications at Dominican
University of California, has been appointed Director of the
Women and Gender Studies Program. She will also be responsible for the
Women's Resource Center at DU, which is connected to the
Marin County Women's Commission.
Pileggi, Stewart, and Tian present paper at ICA/IAMCR
conference 2003
MM&C alum
Mairi Pileggi, Dean Concetta Stewart, and MM&C student
Yan Tian, presented, "The Digital
Divide as an Effect of Neo-liberalism," at the ICA/IAMCR 'Digital Dynamics:
Control, Participation and Exclusion' Conference held at Loughborough
University, UK, November 6-9, 2003.
Poe accepts tenure track position; presents at conferences
and workshop, contributes book chapter, teaches at Presidential Classroom,
awarded Fellowship, serves on board of NJ Communication Association
MM&C alum Pamela
Poe has accepted a full-time, tenure-track teaching position
as Assistant Professor of Communication starting this fall at Manhattan
College in Riverdale, New York, located in the Bronx. Pam will be teaching
in the new Department of Communication in the School of Arts. Pam was
invited as a Research Scientist to attend a Scientific Advisory Board meeting
at the University of Washington's Health
Promotion Research Center in Seattle,
Washington during May 2008. Pam presented research at two sessions of the American
Public Health Association (APHA)
conference in Washington, DC in November 2007, including a presentation for
the "Gerontological
Health" section
on drug ads and older audiences, and a round table session to discuss her
HHS fellowship research on older adults and health information-seeking online, "E-Health
for Seniors and Caregivers" (more
information is available here).
At the 2007 National Communication Association (NCA)
conference in Chicago in November, Pam presented "Using Symbolic
Interactionism to Understand How Older Women Perceived, Interpreted and Used
Prescription Drug Ads," which was selected as one of the "Top
3 Papers in Communication and Aging" (more information is available here).
She was quoted in a July 2007 article in
the Columbia (Missouri) Daily Tribune. Pam was invited
to contribute a chapter about communicating public health information to a
new textbook titled Essentials
of Public Health Biology: A Companion Guide for the Study of Pathophysiology;
Pam has invited Gary Kreps, Chair of George Mason University's Department of
Communication, to co-author the chapter. The book is part of an eight-part
series, The Essential Public Health Series, aimed at introductory undergraduate
and graduate students in public health. Pam returned as a volunteer
instructor at Presidential
Classroom on July 15-21, 2007 in the newly redesigned
Communications and Journalism Program for gifted high school students interested
in federal policy (more information is here).
Pam presented her dissertation work, "'Health-Media
Literacy' for the Elderly: A Symbolic Interactionist Analysis of How Older
Persons Perceive Health Information and Marketing in Prescription Drug Advertisements" at
the Alliance for a Media Literate America (AMLA)
Research Summit in St. Louis, Missouri on June 23-24, 2007. Pam
was awarded a
Health
Communication Fellowship for 2006-2007,
co-sponsored by the federal Department of Health and Human Services and the
Association for Prevention
Teaching and Research. Two Fellowships are awarded annually, with the
possibility of a one-year renewal, and they focus on health communication
and health literacy; benefits include salary and funds for travel to conferences.
Pam made two presentations at the American
Public Health Association (APHA)
conference in
New Orleans, LA November 5-9, 2005. The presentations, in the Public Health
Education and Health Promotion section, were
"Agenda Setting and Smallpox Messages: A Comparative Analysis of Risk
Communications and Perceptions in Low and High Vaccination States" by
Pam and Sheryl Ruzek, S. B. Bass, and Tom Gordon, and "Analysis of
State Smallpox Vaccination Rates: Relationship to State Guidelines and
Risk Communication Messages" by S. B. Bass, Pam, Tom Gordon, and Sheryl
Ruzek. Pam presented two sessions of a health media literacy workshop on
May 7, 2005 to teens grades 8-11 at the "Quest
to be the Best" Youth
Development Leadership Summit which
was coordinated by the Center for Schools and Communities, funded by a
grant from the Pennsylvania Department of Health, and held in Lancaster,
Pennsylvania. The workshop covered both critical media analysis of drug
advertisements and media production strategies to create targeted community-based
public health PSAs. Pam was a co-author of a poster presentation for
the Women's
Health Interdisciplinary Research Symposium at Temple on
March 15, 2005. The presentation, "Roles of Women's Health Advocates
in Developing and Disseminating Evidence-Based Decision Aids," was
co-authored with Dr. Sheryl Ruzek and Dr. Sarah Bass of Temple's College
of Health Professions. Pam presented,
"Health Media Literacy for the Elderly: A Proposed Antidote to Media
Agenda-Setting in Public Health," at the New Jersey Communication
Association (NJCA)
conference on April 1, 2005 in Trenton at the New Jersey Statehouse. Pam
served a fourth year as Volunteer Instructor at the Presidential
Classroom program on June 19-26, 2004 for Science and Technology
Week, covering key health and technology issues. The program attracts
gifted high school juniors and seniors from all over the world for an
intensive one-week experience in Washington, D.C. to study government
issues and federal policy-making in depth. Pam presented a media literacy
workshop entitled "The Arts and
Health Ed: Making the Connection with Media Production" at the Philadelphia
Arts in Education Partnership conference, "Technology and the
Arts in Education." The
Partnership is a collaborative organization of more than 70 leading non-profit
arts resource organizations and institutions in the five-county area of
Philadelphia. The conference was held on January 10-11, 2004 at The University
of the Arts. Pam also served as a Graduate Student Representative on
the Board of the New
Jersey Communication Association for
2003-2004.
Pompper has articles published, presents several
papers, co-edits book, co-authors book chapters, receives awards
An article by Professor Donnalyn Pompper titled "Advertising
in the Age of TiVo: Targeting Teens and Young Adults with Film, Television Product
Placements," has been published in
The Atlantic Journal of Communication (volume 16, number 1); her co-author,
Yih-Farn Choo, was Donnalyn's graduate student at Florida State University.
Another article, "Corporation
Bashing in Documentary Film: A Case Study of News Coverage & Organizational
Response," has
been published in Public Relations Review (volume 33, number 4). The
second author, Layla Higgins, is another former graduate student of Donnalyn's
at Florida State University; she now works in NASA's PR department. The
paper was also presented at the 2007 National Communication Association (NCA)
conference in Chicago. Another article, The
Gender-Ethnicity Construct in Public Relations Organizations: Using Feminist
Standpoint Theory to Discover Latinas' Realities," has been published
in the Howard Journal of Communications (volume 18, number 4). Donnalyn
won the Caroline Dow Faculty Research Prize for Top Faculty Paper in the Magazine
division at the 2007 conference of the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass
Communication (AEJMC)
in August in Washington, D.C. The paper's co-authors are Jorge
Soto (a Flordia State U graduate student) and Lauren Piel (an FSU undergraduate
student). The paper, "Male Body Image and Magazine Standards: Considering
Dimensions of Age and Ethnicity," also has been accepted for publication
in Journalism & Mass
Communication Quarterly. Donnalyn was recently nominated by the Public
Relations division of the International Communication Association for ICA's
Young Scholar Award. The award "honors a scholar
no more than seven years past receipt of the Ph.D. ... for a body of work that
has contributed to knowledge of the field of communication and shows promise
for continued development" (more details here).
Donnalyn's recent publications include "Linking
Ethnic Diversity &
Two-Way Symmetry: Modeling Female African-American Practitioners' Roles" in Journal
of Public Relations Research (volume 16, number 3) and "At the 20th
Century's Close: Framing the Public Policy Issue of Environmental Risk" in Environmental
Communication Yearbook (volume
1). She won two top faculty paper distinctions for papers presented at the
annual conference of the Association for Education in Journalism & Mass
Communication (AEJMC)
in August 2004 in Toronto, Canada: "Female African-American Practitioners'
Perceptions of College Public Relations Curricula" and
"Cross-Cultural-Generational Perceptions of Ideal Body Image: Hispanic
Women &
Magazine Standards," co-written with Jesica Koenig, a master's student
in public administration; the paper appears in Journalism & Mass Communication
Quarterly (volume
81, number 1) and is available (free) online
here. And Donnalyn presented an invited paper, "Polling as News
Value," and
a refereed poster, "Writing in the Public Relations Curriculum: Practitioner
Perceptions Versus Pedagogy" co-written with Marie Hardin of Penn State
U., at the AEJMC conference. She also won a Great Ideas for Teachers (GIFT)
Award, sponsored by AEJMC, for "'One-Page Wonders' Save the
Day: How to Get Students to Read for Class." Donnalyn presented a refereed
paper, "'New News' in a Global
Age: Evolution of Journalistic Conventions & Routines," at the International
Conference on New Directions in the Humanities, July 2004 at Monash University
Centre, Prato, Tuscany, Italy. She presented two refereed papers at the annual
conference of the International Communication Association (ICA),
in May 2004 in New Orleans: "'Difference' in Public Relations
Research: A Case for Introducing Critical Race Theory" and "The
Gender-Ethnicity Construct in Public Relations Organizations: Using Feminist
Standpoint Theory to Discover Latina Practitioners' Realities." With
FSU colleague Jay Rayburn and masters student Mary Lee Walker, she won a Top
Three Paper Award in the Communication Sciences Division of the Educators
Academy, Public Relations Society of America for the paper, "Relationships
Between Gender & Behavioral Roles of Fund Raising
Practitioners," at the annual Miami conference in January 2004. "Reconciling
Multiple Roles: Toward a Model of the African-American Public Relations Practitioner" was
the Top Faculty Paper in the Public Relations division at the August 2002
conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication
(AEJMC) in Miami, Florida,
and appears in the Journal of Public Relations
Research. Another paper, "Stormy Weather: Testing 'Stealing
Thunder' as a Crisis Communication Strategy to Improve Communication
Flow between Organizations & Journalists," by Laura Arpan and
Donnalyn, was awarded a Top Faculty Paper designation, this
one in the Public Relations Division of the International
Communication Association (ICA)
for its May 23-27, 2003 conference in San Diego; this paper has been accepted
for publication by Public Relations
Review. A book that Donnalyn co-edited (with Andy Opel),
Representing Resistance: Media, Civil Disobedience & the
Global Justice Movement is being published by Greenwood
Publishing Company - and has received this high praise from Robert
W. McChesney: "Andy Opel's and Donnalyn Pompper's Representing
Resistance is one of the most important collections on globalization,
culture and politics that has ever been published"). And two book
chapters Donnalyn has authored are in press: "Blurring of Place &
Space: Representations of Patriotism in an 'All-America City'" will
appear in Communication and Terrorism from
Hampton Press, and "On The West Wing: White House Narratives That
Journalism Cannot Tell" will appear in West Wing Anthology from
Syracuse University Press. And in her free time (!), Donnalyn
recently passed the APR (Accredited Public Relations) exam.
Popp accepts tenure track position, has articles published,
presents papers at ICA, AEJMC and more
MM&C student Rick
Popp has accepted a tenure-track assistant
professor position, beginning in Fall 2008, at the Manship
School of Mass Communication at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, LA. Two articles
by Rick have been accepted for publication. "History
in Discursive Limbo: Ritual and Conspiratorial Narratives on the History Channel" will
appear in the scholarly journal Popular Communication and "Mass
Media and the Linguistic Marketplace: Media, Language, and Distinction" will
appear in the Journal of Communication Inquiry. Rick
presented "Incessant Replay: Advertising Messages, Highlights, and Sports
News" to the Popular
Communication division at the 2006 conference of the International Communication
Association (ICA),
June 19-23 in Dresden, Germany. Rick presented "Mass Media and the
Linguistic Marketplace: Media, Ways of Speaking, and Distinction" to
the
AEJMC
Midwinter Conference in Kennesaw, Georgia, February 11-12, 2005; "Gentlemen,
Start Your Ideologies: NASCAR Telecasts and New Right Ideology"
to the Popular Communication division of the International Communication
Association (ICA) during
its 2004 conference May 26-30 in New York; and "Anticipating
Armageddon: Dispensational Media, Social Construction, and Ritual," at
the 2004
Conference of the New Jersey Communication Association at Rutgers
University on Saturday, March 27, 2004.
Popp and Mendelson present
paper at AEJMC 2007
MM&C student Rick
Popp and Professor Andy Mendelson will
present their paper, "'X'-ing
Out Enemies: Time Magazine, Visual Rhetoric, and the War in Iraq," to
the Visual Communication division at the 2007 conference of the Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
in Washington, D.C. August 7-12. The paper won the 2nd Place award for faculty
papers in the division.
Q [ Top ]
R [ Top ]
Radosh presents papers at 2004 BEA and AEJMC Midwinter
conferences
MM&C alum Jodi Linder
Radosh, Assistant
Professor at Alvernia College in
Reading, Pennsylvania, presented "Defining Sensationalism" at the
Broadcast Education Association (BEA)
conference, April 16-18, 2004, in Las Vegas, Nevada. The paper, co-authored
with Matthew Lombard, was
named as a winner of the news division's paper competition. Jodi also presented
the paper at the
AEJMC
Midwinter conference at Rutgers University, February 27-29, 2004.
Rakus accepts tenure track position
MM&C student Margaret
Rakus has accepted a full-time, tenure track position as Assistant
Professor of Ccommunications at Albright
College in
Reading, Pennsylvania.
Ray presents papers at AEJMC 2008, PCA/ACA 2008 and
2007, ICA 2007
MM&C student Mary
Beth Ray will present her paper, "The Digitization
of Consumption: A Case Study of Lily Allen,"
in the Entertainment Studies Interest Group at the 2008 conference of the
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) in
Chicago, August 6-9. She presented "'From all the Junks
the One I Need More is Music': iPods in Everyday Life," in the Music
division at the 2008 conference of the National Popular Culture & American
Culture Associations (PCA/ACA),
March 19-22, 2008 in San Francisco. She also won
a 2008 Michael Schoenecke Travel Grant For Graduate Students, a competitive
award that provides $300 for graduate students in accredited programs to
attend the conference. Mary Beth presented "Needs,
Motives, and Behaviors in Computer-Mediated Communication: An Inductive Exploration
of Social Networking Websites"
at the 57th Annual Conference of the International Communication Association
(ICA) in San Francisco,
May 24-28, 2007. And she presented "National
or Local Politics: An Inductive look at Dischord Records and the DC Punk
Community," at
the Popular Culture Association and American Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
2007 national conference in Boston, April 4-7.
Retano named Instructor of the Quarter, presents paper at 2004 AEJMC Midwinter conference
MM&C student Melissa Garrison
Retano has been named Instructor of the Quarter for Spring 2005 at
Katharine
Gibbs School in Norristown, Pennsylvania, where she teaches Verbal
Communications and Basic College Writing in the General Education Department.
It's a school-wide award decided on by the President, the Vice President,
and department chairs. The award includes a free dinner and her own parking
space for the next quarter. Melissa
presented "Celebrating Consumption: Encouraging Material Spending in Us Weekly" at
the AEJMC Midwinter
conference at Rutgers University, February 27-29, 2004.
Robinson has articles
published, wins ICA award, accepts position, presents
papers at 2005 AEJMC and 2004 AEJMC Midwinter conferences
An article by MM&C student Sue Robinson titled, "'Someone's
Gotta Be in Control Here:' The Institutionalization of Online News and the
Creation of a Shared Journalistic Authority," has been accepted for publication
in Journalism Studies, a new international journal published by Routledge.
Sue received
the 2006 Graduate Student Teaching Award from the Instructional and
Developmental Division of the International Communication Association (ICA).
She receives an award certificate, and her name will be added to the Division's
permanent list of outstanding graduate student teachers. Sue has accepted a
tenure-track job as an assistant professor in the School
of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison, to begin in January 2007. Sue's paper
"Gateway or Gatekeeper: The Institutionalization of Online News in Creating
an Altered Technological Authority? (which won the second-place paper award
in our Graduate Research Forum) has been accepted by and has won the Top Paper
award from the 7th International Symposium on Online Journalism, to be held
April 2006 in Austin, Texas. An article by Sue titled "Vietnam and Iraq:
Memory vs History during the 2004 Presidential Campaign Coverage" has
been accepted for publication in the international scholarly journal Journalism
Studies. A paper by Sue
titled, "Vietnam and Iraq: Memory versus History during the 2004 Presidential
Campaign Coverage," was ranked 2nd in the Guido H. Stempel III Research
Paper Competition of the Graduate Education Interest Group of the Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
for the 2005 national conference August 10-13 in San Antonio,
Texas. It is one of two papers she presented at the conference; the other
is
"Experiencing Journalism: A New Model in Online Newspapers," which
she presented to the Communication Technology and Policy division. Sue also
presented "Bringing an Old Model into the 21st Century: The Uses and
Dependency Model and the Internet" at the
AEJMC
Midwinter conference at Rutgers University, February 27-29, 2004.
Ruggierri has papers published and presents at many
venues
An article by MM&C student Dominique
Ruggieri titled "Situation Comedies Imitate Life:
Jewish and Italian-American Women on Prime Time," has been accepted
for publication in the Journal of Popular Culture. Dominique was
a co-author of four papers presented in November 2006 at the American Public
Health Association (APHA)
conference in Boston: "Public Health Workers
and First Responders as Social Marketers: Understanding Attitudes and Levels
of Self-efficacy to Improve Communication During Emergency Events," with
Bauerle Bass, Seals, and Leebron; "Communicating in a Crisis: Building
Skills for Message Delivery," with Seals, Bauerle Bass, Segal, and Cunningham; "Anybody
There? Development and Testing of 1-800 Number Call Scripts," with Seals,
Bauerle Bass, and Cunningham; and "First Responders and Media Readiness
in the Event of Terrorism: Results of a Self-efficacy Study," with Bauerle
Bass, Seals, and Leebron. In April 2006 Dominique presented "The Picture
of AIDS in America: A Historical Overview," at the Eastern Communication
Association (ECA) conference
in Philadelphia. She travelled to Sweden in March for two presentations at
the Media Management and Transformation Centre Seminar on Entrepreneurship
and Media at the Jonkoping International Business School: "Emerging
Technologies Influence on New Venture Growth in Media Businesses: A Case Study
of Banyan Productions," with
Betsy Leebron, and "Gender Differences in Local Media: Coverage of Male
and Female Sources and Business Leaders in Philadelphia Area Newspapers," with
Zizi Papacharissi and Betsy Leebron. At the April 2005 Broadcast Education
Association (BEA) conference in Las Vegas, Dominique and co-author Betsy Leebron
presented "Prime Time TV's Mirror:
Reflections of Ethnic Characters." Dominique has also made several recent
professional presentations, including "Don't
Stress! Healthy Eating Can Help You Operate at Peak Performance and Manage
Stress Effectively" at the Temple University Stress Workshop in July as
sole presenter, and several others with second presenter Jay Segal in the School
of Public Health at Temple: "How Doctors Can Improve Patient Care Through
a Public Health and Communication Perspective of Obesity Prevention," at
the Temple University School of Medicine in January; "A Public Health
Perspective and Agenda for Obesity Research and Communication," at the
Temple University College of Health Professionals Interdisciplinary Lecture
Series in November 2005; "Teaching Children to Lead Healthier Lives: Getting
Involved to Help Fight Pediatric Obesity, A Program to Teach Senior Citizens
How to Mentor Young Girls with Weight Problems," at the Full Circle Theater & The
Center for International Learning in Philadelphia in October 2005; and "What
the Philadelphia Police Need to Know to Operate at Peak Performance: How Healthy
Eating Can Make a Difference, A Curriculum Component for the Philadelphia Police
Major Incident Response Team (MIRT) Training, at the Philadelphia Police Department,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in October 2005.
Ryan presents paper at ICA 2007 and PCA/ACA 2007
MM&C student Kelly
Ryan will present her paper, "Bump Watch 2006: The
Representation of Pregnancy in American Celebrity Magazines,"
at the 57th Annual Conference of the International Communication Association
(ICA) in
San Francisco, May 24-28, 2007. She'll also present "The World According
to Jack Bauer: Surveillance and Power in 24" in the Film, Television
and Radio Culture Division at the 2007 Popular Culture Association and American
Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
national conference in Boston April 4-7.
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Scala presents paper at PCA/ACA 2004
MM&C student Megan Scala
presented a paper co-authored with Sondra Cappuccio titled,
"The intersection of Italianness and Mafia identity
in The Sopranos," in the Television area of the 2004 Popular Culture
Association/American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) Joint National Conference.
The conference was held April 7-10, 2004 in San Antonio, Texas.
Scheiner presents paper at AEJMC 2008, wins travel
grant and presents paper at PCA/ACA 2008, and presents papers at AEJMC and
PCA/ACA 2007, Global Fusion 2006
MM&C student Amanda Scheiner
will present her paper,
"Singing Celebrities: American Idol Winner Narratives," in the
Entertainment Studies Interest Group at the 2008 conference of the Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
in Chicago, August 6-9. She presented "American Idol: Stereotypes
and Collective Identities" at the 2008
National Popular Culture & American Culture Associations (PCA/ACA)
conference, March
19-22, 2008 in San Francisco. Amanda won a 2008 Michael
Schoenecke Travel Grant For Graduate Students, a competitive award that provides
$300 for graduate students in accredited programs to attend the PCA/ACA conference
(details about the award are here.).
Amanda presented Katie Couric: Liberal and Radical Feminist Perspectives
of Press Coverage Themes" at the 2007
annual conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication
(AEJMC) August
9-12 in Washington, D.C. Amanda presented "The Television Set in 1953:
A Material Culture Approach" in the Material Culture division
at the 2007 Popular Culture Association and American Culture Association (PCA/ACA)
national conference in Boston, April 4-7. She also presented "Globalization
Ideology within The New York Times: 1990 and 2000" at the 2006
Global Fusion Conference in Chicago September 29 - October 1.
Selverian presents paper at ICA 2003
MM&C alum Melissa
Selverian presented her paper, "Presence, the Ultimate
'Teacher': Examining the Power of Spatial and Social Illusions to
Enhance Learning in the VLE" at the International Communication
Association (ICA) conference,
May 23-27, 2003, in San Diego, California.
Shaffer presents papers at ICA 2008, participates in
NCA Honors Seminar, presents work at AEJMC 2007, has article published
MM&C student Gwen Shaffer will present
two papers at the 2008 conference
of the International Communication Association (ICA)
in Montreal May
22-26. She'll present "Code Blue: A Proposed Code
of Conduct for Bloggers in the Context of Media Self-regulation" during
a panel sponsored by the Communication and Technology division and
“Peer Pressure: An Examination of How Start-up Companies are Capitalizing on
the Grassroots Peer-to-Peer Networking Movement" during
a pre-conference workshop titled, "The
Global and Globalizing Dimensions of Mobile Communication: Developing or Developed?" (Temple
University is co-sponsoring the workshop along with the University of Michigan
and Telenor). Gwen was selected
as a fellow for the National Communication Association (NCA)
Doctoral Honors Seminar, held July 6-8, 2007 at the University of Colorado-Boulder.
The seminars bring together leading faculty and doctoral students to explore
current topics and trends in communication. Gwen presented her paper, "Broadening
the Debate: An Analysis of Emerging Models for a National Broadband Network," at
the annual conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass
Communication (AEJMC) August
9-12, 2007 in Washington, D.C. During the conference she also participated
on a panel sponsored by the Community Journalism Interest Group. Gwen's article,
titled
"Frame-up: An Analysis of Arguments For and Against Municipal Wireless
Initiatives," was published in the January 2007 issue of the journal
Public Works Management and Policy.
Shiau co-edits journal issue
MM&C alum Hong-Chi Shiau, now
at Shih-Hsin University in
Taiwan, is co-editor of an upcoming special issue of the International Journal
of Chinese Culture and Management (IJCCM) The issue will be on the Chinese
Recording Industry and Music Culture and examine the instituional processes
surrounding Chinese popular music in the global age; the call for papers and
additional details are available here.
Simone has article published, presents several conference
papers and receives 2004 ICA Graduate Student Teaching award
MM&C alum Maria Simone's article,
"CODE PINK Alert: Mediated Citizenship in the Public Sphere," has
been published in the journal Social Semiotics (16(2), pp. 345-364) and
will also be published in 2007 by Routledge as a chapter in an anthology
titled "Mediated
Citizenship." Maria will present "Inherited Tensions: The Semantic
Struggle for the Public Interest in Media Policy" at the Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC)
conference in San Francisco August 2-5, 2006;
it was named second place faculty paper in the Law division. And in November
she'll
present "Give Me Liberty and Give Me Surveillance: A Case Study
of the U.S. Government's Discourse of Surveillance" at the
National Communication Association (NCA)
conference in San Antonio, Texas, November 16-19.
Maria presented two papers at the 2005 conference of the International
Communication Association (ICA),
May 26-30 in New York. She'll present "Processes, Principles and
Policies: The Public Interest Standard in U.S. Media Regulation" in
the Communication Law and Policy division, and "Speaking of Discipline:
A Framework for Analyzing the Discourse of State Surveillance" in
the Philosophy division. Maria presented a paper in the Mass Communication
division at the Eastern Communication Association (ECA)
conference, April 27 - May 1, 2005 in Pittsburgh. The paper is titled, "U.S.
Media's 'Neoliberalization' of
Social Policy: The Case of Poverty and Welfare." Maria received the
2004 Graduate Student Teaching Award from the Instructional and
Developmental Division of the International Communication Association
(ICA).
Aside from being able to put fact that she earned this award on her CV,
she was honored, along with other winners, at the Instructional and Developmental
Division business meeting at the annual ICA convention in New Orleans,
she received an award certificate, and her name was added to the Division's
permanent list of outstanding graduate student teachers. And Maria presented
her paper, "Envy of the Perfect Body: Consumption of Image Through
Fitness Infomercials," in the Advertising area of the 2004
Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) Joint
National Conference.
The conference was held April 7-10, 2004 in San Antonio, Texas.
Simone and Fernback have article published
An article by MM&C alum Maria
Simone and Professor Jan
Fernback titled,
"Invisible Hands or Public Spheres? Theoretical Foundations for U.S.
Broadcast Policy," has been published in the Winter 2006 issue of Communication
Law & Policy.
Simone, Fernback and Mendelson present paper
at AEJMC Midwinter conference 2004
MM&C alum Maria Simone,
Professor Jan
Fernback, and Professor Andy
Mendelson presented
their paper, "Preparing a Face: An Exploration
of Identity Presentation in Online and Offline Contexts," at the
AEJMC
Midwinter conference at Rutgers University, February 27-29, 2004.
Snyder-Duch earns tenure and promotion
In early 2008 MM&C alum Jennifer
Snyder-Duch earned
tenure and promotion to Associate Professor of Communication Studies
at Carlow
University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Snyder-Duch and others present panel at NCA 2005
MM&C alum Jennifer Snyder-Duch,
then Assistant Professor of Communication Studies at Carlow
University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania organized a panel in the Peace
and Conflict division for presentation at the 2005 annual conference of
the National Communication Association (NCA)
in Boston November 17-20. Temple/SCT faculty members Karen Turner and Tom Eveslage
were among those on the panel, which was titled, "Conflict and
Diversity: Advancing from 'Dis-ease' to Social Wellness through Public
Dialogue"; the participants and paper titles were:
J. Kevin Barge, Ph.D., University of Georgia,
Dialogue and the Construction of Healthy Communities.
Karen Turner, J.D., Temple University,
Stepping Outside of Our Comfort Zone: Creating a Safe
Environment to Talk about Race and Class.
Michael Balmert, Ph.D., Chrys Gabrich, Ph.D., and Jennifer
Snyder-Duch, Ph.D., Carlow University,
The Racial Divide: Encouraging Deeper Understanding through
Inclusive Dialogue.
Tom Eveslage, Ph.D., Temple University,
Encouraging Student Media to Value and Reflect Diversity.
Nancy Hoar, Ed.D., Western New England College,
A Diverse Approach to Promoting Diversity.
Susan Holton, Ph.D., Bridgewater State College,
Making the Campus Culture Healthier for All.
Stewart leads panel sessions at ICA 2003
Dean Concetta Stewart's panel
session, "Seen but Not Heard: Usage Patterns & Implications of Short
Text Messaging," was presented in the
Communication and Technology division at the International
Communication Association (ICA)
conference in San Diego, California, May 23-27, 2003. A theme panel
she proposed with Leah Lievrouw (UCLA), titled, "The Borderlands of
the Digital Divide: Reassessing the Concept," was also presented at the ICA conference.
Stewart and Gil-Egui present paper at A.o.I.R. 2003
Dean Concetta
Stewart and MM&C student Gisela
Gil-Egui presented their paper, "Applying the Public Trust Doctrine
to the Governance of Content-related Internet Resources," at the A.o.I.R.
Internet Research v4 Conference, 'Broadening the Band,' in
Toronto in October 16-19, 2003.
Stewart, Gil-Egui, and Pileggi have two 2004 articles
published
An article by Dean Concetta
Stewart,
MM&C student Gisela Gil-Egui and
MM&C alum Mairi Pileggi titled,
"Applying the Public Trust Doctrine to the Governance of Content-Related
Internet Resources," has been published in Gazette, the International
Journal for Communication Studies (the article appears in
volume 66, number 6 in December). Another article by the same three authors, "The
City Park as a Public Good Reference for Internet Policy Making," appears
in the August 2004 issue of Information, Communication and Society.
Stewart and Pileggi have book chapter
published
A chapter by Dean Concetta
Stewart and MM&C alum Mairi
Pileggi titled "Conceptualizing
Community: Implications for Policymaking in the Cyberage" appears in
the 2007 book, Community Media: International Perspectives, edited
by Linda K. Fuller and published by Palgrave Macmillan.
Stewart, Schifter and Selverian edit journal issue
Dean Concetta Stewart, Catherine Schifter
(College of Education) and MM&C alum Melissa
Selverian have served as guest editors of a special
issue (volume 16, numbers 1 & 2) of the Electronic
Journal of Communication.
The issue, titled "New Media in Education," is available here.
Stiles presents paper at PCA/ACA 2008
MM&C student Siobahn Stiles will
present her paper titled "Using her
Body Heat to Kill Bill: The Femme Fatale of Neo-noir," in a Film Area session
at the 2008 joint conference of the Popular Culture Association and the
American Culture Association (PCA/ACA).
The meeting will take place in San Francisco, March 19-22, 2008.
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Tian accepts tenure track position, presents paper
at ICA 2003
MM&C alum Yan Tian has accepted a tenure
track Assistant Professor position in the Department of Communication at the
University of Missouri-St. Louis.
Yan presented "The Effects of Internet Use on Social Trust" in the Communication
and Technology Division of the International Communication Association (ICA)
at its annual conference in San Diego, California, May 23-27, 2003.
Tian and Stewart publish article and encyclopedia entry,
present papers at NCA 2005, 2004
An article by MM&C alum Yan Tian,
Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at the
University of Missouri-St. Louis,
and Dean
Concetta Stewart has been published
in the October 2005 special issue of the Asian Journal of Communication. The
special issue is "Media, Crisis, and SARS" and their article is
titled, "Framing
the SARS Crisis: A Computer-Assisted Text Analysis of CNN and BBC Online News
Reports of SARS"; they previously presented it in the International
and Intercultural Communication Division at the 2004 NCA
conference in Chicago, November 11-14.
Another article by Yan and Concetta has been accepted for
publication in the Encyclopedia of E-Commerce, E-Government and Mobile
Commerce (formerly the Encyclopedia of E-Technologies and Applications);
the article is titled, "History of E-commerce." Yan and Concetta
also presented "Power Distance on Corporate Web Sites: A Comparison
of U.S. and Chinese Corporate Web Sites" at the National Communication
Association (NCA)
conference November 17-20, 2005, in Boston, Massachusetts.
Timmins appointed state coordinator for RTNDA and
receives media awards
MM&C student Lydia Reeves
Timmins has been named State Coordinator for Pennsylvania
for the Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA).
State coordinators monitor important Freedom Of Information news and assist
regional directors and the association in numerous activities, including
production of regional conferences and RTNDA@NAB sessions. Lydia received
two media awards in 2003. She was honored on
Friday June 13 with the 2003 Media Award from the Pennsylvania Arc, and
on June 19 with the 2003 Media Award from the Montgomery County Arc. The
Arc of the United States is
"the national organization of and for people with mental retardation and
related developmental disabilities and their families." Lydia and the
program 10! which she produced at WCAU
NBC 10 were honored for their outstanding leadership
and dedication on behalf of people with mental retardation.
Timmins and Lombard have article published, present
paper at PRESENCE 2003
An article by MM&C student Lydia Reeves
Timmins and
Professor Matthew Lombard has
been published in the journal Presence: Teleoperators and
Virtual Environments. "When 'Real' Seems Mediated:
Inverse Presence"
was originally presented at PRESENCE
2003, the
6th Annual International Workshop on Presence, at Aalborg University in Denmark,
October 8.
Tunc earns tenure and promotion, appointed Vice Dean,
presents paper at 2004 Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities,
contributes to book and has article published
MM&C alum Asli Tunc has earned
tenure and promotion to the rank of associate professor in the
Department
of Media and Communication Systems at Istanbul
Bilgi University
in Turkey. The tenure process lasts 1 year in Turkey, beginning with an
evaluation of the candidate's publications and ending with an oral examination
by a 5-member jury appointed by the National Board of Higher Education, which
Asli passed on October 9, 2006. Asli was previously appointed to the post
of Vice Dean of the
School
of Communications, one of the
most prestigious communication schools in the region. Asli presented "A
Pre-Analysis and Prediction Modeling Approach: Cover Page News Photographs
on Turkish Dailies in the Pre-Election Period 2002" at the
2004 Hawaii International
Conference on Arts and Humanities, January 8-11, 2004. She is also a
contributing author for the book New Media In South East Europe, part of a
larger project titled, "The Media in South East Europe." Asli is
writing a section on the Internet in Turkey. Click
here to
check out the project, the content of the book and the participants (click
on
"The Media in Southeast Europe" and then "Opening Stage (2002)").
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Vilceanu take new position at Temple, presents papers
at NCA and POD
MM&C alum Olga
Vilceanu has assumed the position of Director of International
Programs and Career Services at Temple University (in the Dean's Office of
the College of Science and Technology). Her primary areas of responsibility
include building and running the Dual Bachelor's Master's Degree Program, which
offers the opportunity for early admission in graduate school to (primarily)
international students; and enriching career opportunities and career preparedness
for graduate and undergraduate students in the College of Science and Technology.
For the previous six years, Olga focused on building the services and infrastructure
of the Teaching and Learning Center (TLC) at
Temple University, which offers vaulable support and resources for faculty
and teaching assistants. Olga
had three papers and panels accepted at conferences for fall 2006: At the
National Communication Association (NCA)
conference in San Antonio November 16-19, she will present "Making
Sense of Student Assignments: Strategies for Designing Course Assignments
that Help Students Connect Classroom and Professional Experiences." Also
at NCA, Olga will chair a panel titled "Active Learning for Results-Oriented
Faculty: Designing, Implementing and Evaluating Communication Strategies
that Help Students Connect Classroom and Professional Experiences." And
at the 31st annual conference of the Professional and Organizational Development
Network in Higher Education (POD)
in Portland, Oregon, October 25-29, Olga will present a paper co-authored
with Angela R. Linse, Director of TLC, titled "Designated Volunteers:
Leveraging Faculty Push-Back to Improve Teaching and Learning." Olga
presented "Old vs. New:
The Case of Genetically Modified Foods in US and French Newspapers (1998-2002)" in
the International and Intercultural Communication Division at the 2004 conference
of the NCA, which was held in Chicago, November 11-14.
Vilceanu, Liu and Gil-Egui present panel at NCA
2007
A panel proposal by MM&C alums Olga
Vilceanu,
Dandan Liu, and Gisela
Gil-Egui has been accepted for presentation
at the 2007 National Communication Association (NCA)
conference, November 15-18 in Chicago. The panel is titled, "Beyond
the 'US vs. THEM': Using Reflective Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning
in Diverse Classrooms." The
panel presentations are "Was it Something I Said? A Case Study of Using
Reflective Practices to Induce Change in Faculty-Student Interaction in Diverse
Classrooms" by
Olga Vilceanu (Temple University, Teaching and Learning Center), "Reflecting
about the Big World in a Small Classroom: A Study of Interpersonal and Intercultural
Strategies that Improved Student-Teacher Interaction" by
Dandan Liu (University of North Carolina at Pembroke), "The Accent of
Perception: Reflecting on Characterizations of Foreign Faculty in Unofficial
Teaching Evaluation Web Sites" by Gisela Gil-Egui
(Fairfield University) and "Foreign Accents and Foreign Teaching Practices:
Critical Reflections of Indian ITAs Teaching Undergraduate Engineering Courses" by
Shubhada Menon (Ph.D. student, Temple University).
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Yoon has book chapter published, presents at ICA, ECA
and BEA 2008, has article published, presents at Global Fusion 2006
A book chapter by MM&C student Jiwon
Yoon titled "The
Development of Media Literacy in Russia: Efforts from the Inside and Outside
of the Country" will appear in the book Information and Media
Literacy: Criticism, Histories and Policies, to be published by Informing
Science Press in 2008. Jiwon will present a paper, Video Production
as a Bridge between the University and the Community: Going beyond a Client-Based
Model," in the Instructional & Developmental
Communication division at the 2008 conference of the International Communication
Association (ICA),
in Montreal, May 22-26. Another paper, "Public Discourse
on TV News for Deliberative Democracy," was accepted for presentation
in the Political Communication Interest Group at the 2008 conference of the
Eastern Communication Association (ECA) in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, May 1-4. "Why Individuals
Predisposed to Suicide Gather in Online Suicide Communities in South Korea," not
only was accepted for presentation at 2008's annual conference of
the Broadcast Education Association (BEA)
in Las Vegas April 16-19, but received a first place prize. And Jiwon's article, "South
Korean Scholars Studying North Korean Movies," has been published in the
Fall/Winter 2007 issue (volume 18, number 2) of Asian
Cinema. Jiwon presented "The Transnational Reach of Korean
Popular Culture in Asia: Influences of the Korean Wave on Understanding of
Korea and Pan-Asian Identity," at
the 6th Annual
Global Fusion conference
in Chicago, Illinois, September 29 - October 1, 2006.
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