news
- The Mimesis Documentary Festival will bring filmmakers together for an immersive week of film screenings and discussions. The virtual presentation––free to all ¶¶Ňő¶ĚĘÓƵ Boulder students, faculty and staff––will be held Aug. 12 through 18.
- University of Colorado at Boulder faculty and students from the College of Media, Communication and Information will accept seven top-paper awards at this year’s Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication conference.
- Researchers behind the new study, “Advertising Primed: How Professional Identity Affects Moral Reasoning,” found that today’s practitioners are engaging in a significantly higher rate of moral reasoning than those previously tested.
- The Center for Environmental Journalism is proud to welcome its 24th class of Ted Scripps Fellows, who will spend nine months at the University of Colorado Boulder’s College of Media, Communication and Information working on long-term, in-depth journalistic projects and reflecting on critical questions.
- “You’re seeing these online communities explore what works and what doesn’t work when it comes to different ways of doing governance,” said Brian Keegan, an assistant professor in the Department of Information Science.
- Is your voice underrepresented in public conversation? If so, you’re encouraged to apply for a spot in “Write to Change the World,” a workshop created by the OpEd Project and brought to campus by the College of Media, Communication and Information (CMCI).
- CMCI unequivocally supports our DACA and LGBTQIA+ community members. We applaud these Supreme Court decisions that affect our students and community and will continue to work together to address issues of inequality, racism and discrimination. Read Dean Bergen's full statement.
- To call Steven Frost a master weaver may seem like stating the obvious. One need only see his work—including his piece, “The Mile High Pride Flag,” created for Denver’s 2020 Pridefest celebration—to recognize his virtuosic technique with textiles.
- As the coronavirus has shut down the nation and moved schools online, the importance of internet and technological devices continues to grow.