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For
further information contact:
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Office of Public Affairs
(212)207-6273
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
Larry Meyer, Vice President of Communications
(305) 804-7582
Trylon Communications
Lloyd Trufelman
(212) 725-2295
FIVE
OF AMERICA'S MOST RESPECTED RESEARCH UNIVERSITIES UNITE IN A MORE
THAN $6 MILLION EFFORT TO HELP REVITALIZE JOURNALISM EDUCATION
Schools
of Journalism at Columbia, Northwestern, Berkeley and USC, and the
Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy
at Harvard are part of the The Carnegie-Knight Initiative on the
Future of Journalism Education
The initiative responds to a McKinsey & Co. study on the economic
and technological challenges facing the news industry in the 21st
century
New York, NY--May 26, 2005. A national initiative led by
five of America's leading research universities with the support
of two major foundations will advance the U.S. news business by
helping revitalize schools of journalism.
The universities will take advantage of the riches of their institutions
by integrating the schools of journalism more closely with the entire
campus in an effort to better teach, challenge and prepare the next
generation of news industry leaders for an increasingly complex
world. The initiative will experiment with curriculum and hands-on
experience with the hope of creating a national conversation with
other schools across the country.
Carnegie Corporation of New York president Vartan Gregorian and
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation president Hodding Carter
III announced the formation of the Carnegie-Knight Initiative on
the Future of Journalism Education here together with representatives
of the University of California-Berkeley, Columbia University, John
F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Northwestern
University and the University of Southern California. Presidents
of the five schools have agreed to support this effort financially
and institutionally.
The Carnegie-Knight Initiative involves three distinct efforts:
- Curriculum
Enrichment that will integrate the schools of journalism
more deeply into the life of the university.
- News
21 Incubators: annual national investigative reporting
projects overseen by campus professors and distributed nationally
through both traditional and innovative media.
- The
Carnegie-Knight Task Force, focusing on research and creating
a platform for educators to speak on policy and journalism education
issues.
At
a time when technology's digital revolution is changing the news
industry, the Carnegie-Knight Initiative will focus on preparing
future media leaders to be analytic thinkers, clear writers and
communicators, armed with an in-depth understanding of the context
and complexity of issues facing the modern world.
A study based on interviews with 40 of the country's most prestigious
news leaders indicated a need for schools of journalism to help
reporters build specialized expertise that will enhance coverage
of complex beats ranging from medicine to economics to international
conflicts, and to understand the languages and cultures of distant
parts of the world.
The report, undertaken for the Corporation by McKinsey & Co., also
revealed a desire for journalism schools to help students understand
and appreciate the ethical dimensions of their work as well as prepare
them for the pressures they will face in a 24/7 competitive news
environment. The news leaders voiced a need for the profession to
depend on universities to channel the best writers, the most curious-minded
reporters and the finest analytic thinkers to the news business.
An executive summary is available at www.carnegie.org
and www.knightfdn.org.
"This is an explosively creative time to be in journalism--if you
are not in search of the past," said Hodding Carter, president of
the Knight Foundation. "These five institutions are proving this
by doing something they've never done before: agreeing to work collaboratively
on a major project for the greater benefit of all journalism educators."
"Journalism is too important to this nation and our democracy to
have the schools that educate its future leaders be anything but
central to the universities in which they reside," said Vartan Gregorian,
president of Carnegie Corporation of New York. "Our American universities,
which offer the most enriching, challenging and academically excellent
higher education in the world, can provide journalism schools with
an unparalleled opportunity to engage with ideas about subjects
such as history, philosophy, economics and culture that will help
their students develop a passion for learning and knowledge along
with the exemplary skills they will need to be at the forefront
of the journalism profession in the 21st century." Read
an expanded statement by Vartan Gregorian about the Carnegie-Knight
Initiative on the Future of Journalism Education.
In the first two years, Carnegie Corporation is pledging $2.4 million;
Knight Foundation $1.7 million. Henry Bienen, president of Northwestern;
Robert Birgeneau, chancellor of UC Berkeley; Lee Bollinger, president
of Columbia; Steven Sample, president of USC; and Harvard president
Lawrence Summers have all agreed to support the initiative in its
third year and there are clear indicators that the initiative is
making progress.
Carnegie Corporation and Knight Foundation see these five highly
respected universities as locations for experimentation, research
and change. They also expect the Carnegie-Knight Task Force to commission
research from other universities in order to spread to other journalism
educators at other colleges the innovations that arise from the
initiative.
This Carnegie-Knight Initiative on the Future of Journalism Education
was crafted by:
Geoffrey
Cowan, dean, Annenberg School for Communication, USC
Loren Ghiglione, dean, Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern
Alex Jones, director, The Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press,
Politics and Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government,
Harvard
Nicholas Lemann, dean, Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia
Orville Schell, dean, Graduate School of Journalism, UC Berkeley
As
part of the planning for the initiative, the five deans drafted
a vision for change that seeks to renew the mission of schools of
journalism much the same way that schools of business, medicine
and law have renewed themselves at different junctures in history.
The "deans' manifesto" clarifies goals for today's schools of journalism
and focuses on the centrality of the university in the preparation
of tomorrow's journalism leaders. That document is available in
its entirety at www.carnegie.org
and at www.knightfdn.org.
As part of this five-university journalism education launch, Carnegie
Corporation is sponsoring an ABC News Summer Institute that
will involve 10 students--two from each of the universities involved.
The students will have eight-week fellowships under the guidance
of ABC News and work with the award-winning ABC News Investigative
Unit on a specific project that takes advantage of the students'
experience, learning and research abilities. The students will be
trained in ethics, investigative reporting and digital journalism.
The summer's work will feature in a specific project underway at
ABC News to mark the anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade
Center. Nicole Gallagher, director, news practices, ABC News, will
head the summer institute. The names of the students involved in
this initiative can be found on both foundations' web sites.
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Information about Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Knight
Foundation and their work on journalism and media is attached. The
McKinsey study's executive summary is also attached. Further information
and these documents are also available at www.carnegie.org
and at www.knightfdn.org.
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