Flu and technology

Student Reporting: COVID-19

Last spring, as the coronavirus outbreak swept the nation and the globe, students in Writing for the Media jumped into action. From conducting interviews with residents in their communities to combing through government-funded reports, students contributed local and national reporting on a range of pandemic-related topics, from education to business to relationships.

Machuu Pichu

Strength in Numbers

As an activist and recent graduate from CMCI鈥檚 Media and Public Engagement master鈥檚 program, Katy Fetters (MMediaSt鈥19) is harnessing the power of social media to redefine what it means to have a disability.

Images by Megan Lange and Julia Muell  for their 鈥淚nspired World鈥 campaign

Ad Students Deliver

When challenged to draw attention to a new website for the company Avery Dennison, which specializes in packaging and labeling design, sophomores Megan Lange and Julia Muell knew what to do: Handle with care.

Photo by Marshall McKinley for the 鈥淥tterbox X Target鈥 campaign

Courting Success

For Marshall McKinley (StratComm'19), photographing a campaign for Otterbox was a formative opportunity to turn his passion into professional work.

Necklaces

Shifting the Lens

Abby Siegel (CritMedia鈥19) is compelled to do something that鈥檚 usually ill advised in polite culture: Approach strangers to ask about their race and religion.

Pat Finn teaches

"Yes, and..."

In Improv for Strategic Communication, taught by actor and improv aficionado Pat Finn, students learn the same games that he and other comedians鈥攊ncluding Saturday Night Live alumni going back decades鈥攑lay to prepare for the stage.

NOAA

New Spin on Narrative Arc

鈥淭here鈥檚 something special about moving around a 3-D space, or seeing it move around you, that makes it seem more real,鈥 says Will Brewer, a critical media practices student whose classwork was displayed on a room-sized global display system through NOAA's Science on a Sphere program.

Serene speaks at CU 麻豆影院 NEXT in Denver.

Supreme Dreams

This year, Serene Singh became the first woman in university history and the first CU 麻豆影院 student in 25 years to earn a Rhodes Scholarship. In the fall, she'll head to Oxford University in England as part of a path she hopes could one day lead to a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court.

Ashley Hopko and Tessa Diestel

Hate in America

As students in the Carnegie-Knight News21 fellowship program, Tessa Diestel (Jour'18) and Ashley Hopko (Jour'19) traveled the country investigating intolerance, racism and hate crimes. Their project, Hate in America, won the 2018 Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Digital Reporting.

Students pose for a selfie after attending a theatre outing with Willis.

Willis-in-residence

Assistant Professor Erin Willis is faculty in residence for CMCI鈥檚 Communication and Society Residential Academic Program, known as CommRAP, which is based in Buckingham. The unique position allows her to connect with students outside of the classroom or office hours.

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