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Five New Universities Asked to Submit Proposals for Curriculum

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  • Five New Universities Asked to Submit Proposals for Curriculum

    Fri Aug 12 08:08:18 2005 Pacific Time

    Five New Universities Asked to Submit Proposals for Curriculum
    Enrichment as Part of Carnegie Corporation's Initiative on Journalism

    New York, Aug. 12 (AScribe Newswire) -- Vartan Gregorian, president of
    Carnegie Corporation of New York announced today that five additional
    journalism schools at major research universities have been asked to
    submit proposals for curriculum enrichment and to join an initiative
    begun this year to revitalize journalism education. The five schools,
    which will present proposals for the approval of the Corporation's
    board, are the College of Journalism and Communications, University of
    Florida; Philip Merrill College of Journalism, University of Maryland;
    Missouri School of Journalism, University of Missouri; S.I. Newhouse
    School of Public Communications, Syracuse University; and the School
    of Communication, University of Texas at Austin.

    At the launch of the Carnegie-Knight Initiative on the Future of
    Journalism Education in May 2005, the deans of leading journalism
    schools at four of America's top research universities-Berkeley,
    Columbia, Northwestern and USC-in partnership with Carnegie
    Corporation of New York, laid a foundation for developing their vision
    of what a journalism school can be at an exemplary institution of
    higher education. The goal of this curriculum enrichment is to
    encourage experimentation within the journalism school and to forge a
    greater integration with other departments in order to offer students
    the riches of the larger university community. While training
    tomorrow's reporters, editors, writers and producers, the initiative
    is focused on attracting and preparing top students to become the
    journalism leaders of tomorrow, prepared for a more complex and
    intellectually challenging world and news business.

    "Schools of journalism at exemplary American research universities,
    where the academic disciplines still coexist, are positioned to draw
    upon the full intellectual and educational resources of the university
    environment to help produce the skilled, responsible, expert,
    knowledgeable and highly proficient journalism leaders that our
    society-indeed the world-has need of, especially in these complex and
    challenging times," said Vartan Gregorian, president of Carnegie
    Corporation. "Our democracy depends on journalism to keep its
    institutions challenged and responsive to the public's needs, and the
    quality of the profession demands the best a university can offer."

    The Corporation, under Gregorian's leadership, has made journalism
    education, one of its key priorities and it will invest in the
    initiative over the next three years. Schools invited to become part
    of the initiative must reflect the following criteria: - Freestanding
    journalism programs at research universities. - Schools with graduate
    programs. - Schools with established deans. - Universities that have
    the institutional and financial commitment of the president to support
    this project.

    The initiative is expected to include more journalism schools in
    curriculum enrichment efforts by the fall of 2006. The five schools
    currently submitting proposals for consideration will be able to
    receive up to $250,000 for two years for expanding, and developing
    specific courses that offer students a deeper understanding of issues,
    content and context. The university must agree to underwrite the third
    year of the enrichment program.

    "A key feature of this curriculum enrichment focus is to offer
    students a deep and multi-layered exploration of complex subjects like
    history, politics, classics and philosophy that will undergird their
    journalistic skills," said Susan King, vice president, public affairs
    at the Corporation and national director of the Carnegie- Knight
    Initiative on the Future of Journalism Education. "The Corporation
    hopes to encourages journalism schools to go beyond their current
    boundaries-to be expansive about the kind of courses and information
    their students should absorb while attempting to raise the profile of
    journalism education and its place within the university."

    The five universities announced today will not be part of a second
    element of the Carnegie-Knight Initiative on the Future of Journalism
    Education: News 21 Incubators, which are annual national investigative
    reporting projects overseen by campus professors and distributed
    nationally through both traditional and innovative media. The
    invitation to submit curriculum enrichment proposals likewise does not
    convey immediate membership in the third part of the Initiative: The
    Carnegie-Knight Task Force, which is focusing on research and creating
    a platform for educators to speak on policy and journalism education
    issues. The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation is partnering with
    Carnegie Corporation of New York in supporting both News 21 and The
    Carnegie-Knight Task Force. Information about the Initiative can be
    found on the Corporation's web site, www.carnegie.org and on the
    Knight Foundation's web site, www.knightfdn.org.

    Carnegie Corporation of New York was created by Andrew Carnegie in
    1911 to promote "the advancement and diffusion of knowledge and
    understanding." As a grantmaking foundation, the corporation seeks to
    carry out Carnegie's vision of philanthropy, which he said should aim
    "to do real and permanent good in the world." The Corporation's
    capital fund, originally donated at a value of about $135 million, had
    a market value of $1.9 billion on September 30, 2004.

    The Corporation awards grants totaling more than $80 million a year in
    the areas of education, international peace and security,
    international development and strengthening U.S. democracy.

    Contact Information:
    Carnegie Corporation of New York Office of Public Affairs 212-207-6273
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