Struck on Evolution of Local News for The Christian Science Monitor
Senior Journalist-in-Residence Doug Struck provided an in-depth feature article in The Christian Science Monitor about how local news organizations are staying afloat.
Senior Journalist-in-Residence Doug Struck provided an in-depth feature article in The Christian Science Monitor about how local news organizations are staying afloat.
Japan’s largest media conglomerate, Yomiuri Shimbun — which has the largest newspaper circulation in the world — recently partnered with Emerson College to train some of its most promising rising journalists in data journalism and digital techniques.
Emerson College’s Global Pathways programs are more than just study abroad programs. Case in point – Emerson’s annual Salzburg: Global Media Academy, a three-week program in the summer where students focus on media literacy, and global networks for innovation and engagement in digital culture.
It’s a new academic year, with new buildings, new students, and naturally, new faculty. Here’s a little guide to help you get to know the School of Communication’s newest full-time instructors.
Associate Professor of Journalism Roger House provided analysis of the change in Georgian politics.
We all had classes that changed the way we thought, changed how we viewed life, or changed what profession we wanted to work in.
Students can learn about Spanish art and culture, get dance lessons from Bollywood performers, and more, through Global Pathways programs.
Seasoned journalist and lifelong crusader for diversity and equality Cheryl Jackson, an Emerson Journalism Department faculty member, worked to empower an international group of future female leaders during the Women2Women (W2W) International Leadership Conference in Boston earlier this month, where she led a workshop on Digital Storytelling.
Journalism professor Roger House’s column on MVTimes.com expanded upon the history of Afro-Americans in the whaling industry.
Associate professor of journalism Tim Riley reviewed Pulitzer-Prize winning New Yorker author Emily Nussbaum’s new book I Like to Watch: Arguing My Way Through the TV Revolution for Truthdig.