WASHINGTON —
Editors, media executives, educators and MTSU alumni gathered Thursday evening
at the Newseum, the interactive museum of news and journalism located in the
nation’s capital, to welcome the new dean of the MTSU College of Mass
Communication.
Ken Paulson, who joined the university July 1, outlined his
plans for the college at the event that highlighted the partnership between
MTSU and the Freedom Forum, which operates the Newseum, as well as the First
Amendment Center in Nashville.
Paulson was also recognized Friday by the Association for
Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) for the advocacy work by
Paulson and others with the First Amendment Center. AEJMC, the accrediting
organization for journalism education, presented its First Amendment Award
during the group’s annual conference in Washington.
“We intend to be the most innovative college of mass
communication in America,” Paulson said at the Newseum event. “It is important
that we give our young people who graduate from MTSU the skills they need to be
competitive — to get a job, to engage on every possible platform: video, audio
and platforms still to be invented.”
Thursday night’s event included executives and MTSU alumni
from major news and journalism organizations, such as the Gannett Co., the
McClatchy Co., CNN, The Travel Channel, USA Today, as well as MTSU President
Sidney A. McPhee and journalism educators from universities attending the AEJMC
conference.
“I am so pleased that we have a person of Ken’s caliber,
experience, background and tenacity to lead our world-class College of Mass
Communication,” McPhee told the group. “We want you to be a part of this new
level of excellence.”
Gene Policinski, chief operating officer of the Newseum
Institute, noted the “special relationship” between the Freedom Forum and MTSU
and said that with Paulson’s hiring, “it can only grow and prosper.”
During Friday’s AEJMC conference, Paulson also narrated a
performance of Freedom Sings, a multimedia musical he authored that tells the
story of free speech through music. Freedom Sings has toured America's campuses
since 2003.
MTSU boasts the fifth-largest mass-communication college in
the nation and is the only one that features departments of recording industry,
journalism and electronic media communication. It also is home to the Center
for Popular Music, which maintains a large research library and archive and
interprets various aspects of American vernacular music, and the new Center for
Innovation in Media.
No comments:
Post a Comment