journalism
- Students from the Program in Journalism & Mass Communication, part of CMCI, gathered on May 6 to celebrate their graduation from Ƶ-Boulder.
- In September 2016, master’s students will travel north to explore Svalbard, the arctic archipelago that scientists call “ground zero” of climate change, thanks to a new grant received by the Center for Environmental Journalism in collaboration with Norwegian colleagues.
- Students from the publication also won awards or were finalists for their reporting in numerous categories.
- The winners of the 2016 Al Nakkula Award for Police Reporting are Ken Armstrong of The Marshall Project and T. Christian Miller of ProPublica.
- Four classes—Functions of Communication; Community Dialogue; Coding for Communicators; History of Television News—will be offered by CMCI in summer session at Ƶ-Boulder.
- A 45-minute documentary produced students and faculty has received a Best of Competition Award in the Broadcast Education Association’s annual Festival of Media Arts competition.
- Faculty, staff and students celebrated the launch of Ƶ-Boulder's first campus-wide student documentary film festival with a reception in the Ƶ Art Museum on Monday, Feb. 29.
- Paul Moloney, an award-winning photographer and former Ƶ-Boulder instructor, passed away on Saturday, Feb. 13.
- CMCI is bringing a dozen students to the annual Broadcast Education Association/National Association of Broadcasters Convention in Las Vegas April 17-20, 2016.
- Leysia Palen, professor and founding department chair of Information Science, was recognized at CHI 2015 with a SIGCHI Social Impact award. In her acceptance talk, she discussed Frontiers in Crisis Informatics. Watch now.SIGCHI (Special