Archive for the “Alumni News” Category

– Bobby Schrader, ’13

101cropEvery semester, COMM 309 Introduction to Public Relations completes a media release project, where students practice their media relations skills with a local organization or company, who serves as the class “client.” For the 2012-2013 academic year, the Food Bank of Delaware has served as the client. Kim Turner, a 2006 graduate of the Department of Communication, serves as the food bank’s communications director.

Turner manages all media relations for the organization. Anytime the organization wants to pitch a story to a newspaper or to a media outlet, it falls under Turner’s department. She also manages the food bank’s numerous social media outlets and the organization’s website, including updates, writing blogs and anything that involves communicating their message to the public, she says.

“It’s different every day,” Turner says. “You think you’re going to go in and you’re just gonna have an easy day or you’re going to go by the schedule of the day, and then a reporter calls and wants to do a story.”

When Turner first started at the Food Bank of Delaware in 2008, she says food banking was popular within the media. A lot of families were experiencing hunger for the first time, she says, so there was a lot of media attention surrounding the issue. In her first few days, she says she was getting multiple interview requests.

Turner says her favorite part of her job involves knowing that she works in an organization where they know they make an impact in the community. The food bank helps one in four Delawareans.

“It’s nice to make the community aware of the need and that ultimately helps people who don’t have the resources to purchase enough food for their family,” Turner says.

In high school, Turner worked on the school yearbook, which she says added to her interest in working in the communications field. Turner says since some of her strongest skills included writing and speaking, communications seemed to fit.

Before her position as communications director, Turner served as the programs and communications specialist at the Delaware State Chamber of Commerce. She started at the Food Bank of Delaware as the community relations manager, and last May, the organization made the communications department an individual entity. Turner became director of the one-person department.

As a Department of Communication graduate, Turner remembers the engaging professors and interesting classes. She says Dr. Caplan and Dr. Mortenson were two professors that taught her to think of things in a different way. Turner wrote for The Review, was a member of Alpha Lambda Delta and a member of PRSSA.

“Try to make as many contacts as possible,” Turner says. “Don’t be afraid to reach out to people who are currently in the field.”

Turner’s most recent intern reached out to her in Professor Bartoo’s Introduction to Public Relations class. She encourages students to reach out to alumni and other professionals because she knows most would be willing to sit down and talk about what it is they’re doing.

“And I always stress the importance of good writing,” Turner says. “I think it’s important for all communication students to be both excellent speakers and excellent writers.”

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Political talk on TV hits a fever pitch this fall as the national elections approaches.  The Center for Political Communication AGAIN hosts prestigious speakers who dissect national and regional political issues, and then fold them into insightful media analysis. It’s happening many Wednesday nights right here in little ol’ Newark in the National Agenda Speaker Series

Karl Rove, David Plouffe, Steve Schmidt or Robert Gibbbs take a break from the little stage of Meet the Press and head to UD’s Mitchell Hall or the Bob this fall to call ‘em like they see ‘em.

Join us for any of these free and open to the public events, or check out the podcasts of these and all the National Agenda VIPs.

 

 

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While you’re watching coverage of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) either live tonight for

President Obama’s big speech, or streaming it later via youtube.com, look for a few familiar COMM faces!  Dr. Lindsay Hoffman and Dr. Tracey Holden are there through UD’s Center for Political C
ommunication.

 

Follow Dr. Holden’s live tweets from their perch in the VIP box above (Delaware’s own) Vice President Joe Biden’s ( UD ’65)  balcony box at @tqholden. Or check out Dr. Hoffman’s take @lhhoff or her fantastic Huffington Post blog at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lindsay-hoffman/.

 

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Another UD COMM recent alumna is reaching for the stars.

Jungmin Julia Oh has been (and will be) doing some amazing things….I put this little paragraph together:

After graduating from UD in May 2011 with a degree in mass communication, Jungmin Julia Ohwent to DC to complete an internship with the Korea Economic Institute, then with NK News.  During the summer (2012) she completed a highly selective internship as a political affairs intern with the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs.

In that role, she participated in the United Nations conference on ‘Arms Trade Treaty 2012’ and provided research support, political analysis, and data collection for high representatives.  After five years in the U.S., Julia departed in August for two weeks at home in South Korea, after which she will cross the world yet again to attend King’s College in London to complete a Master’s program in International Relations.  We are so proud of her!

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Jennifer Fry, MA ’12

 

Teaching & Learning

As my two years in the UD-MA-COMM program came to a close this spring, I began looking forward to life beyond campus, confident that my time here has provided me with a unique set of experiences.

Leaving UD with “MA” in hand, I plan to move into social media coordination and similar public relations work at a small agency or organization, and while plenty of PR students-turned-pros have had internship experience, how many can say they created and maintained complete social media strategies for two organizations on their own? Both the Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition (DBCC) and Careerminds have minimal staffing, and because of that, I was trusted with to responsibility of working alone, without much direct instruction from superiors and without any assistance from fellow interns. I have these internships to thank for my passion for social media. After being totally immersed in the strategies and platforms, I really found my direction.

How many can say they’ve independently taught a total of nine sections of a college-level course? As a teaching assistant in the COMM department, I was tossed into this exact position head-first, and coming out of the experience, I found I’ve gained presentation and leadership qualities that I didn’t have before.

And lastly, how many can say they’ve graduated from the UD-MA-COMM program? Not having gone to UD as an undergraduate, I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect from the faculty and the other students, but I was delighted to find a small group of fellow graduate students and a welcoming faculty and staff. The size of the department is enough to make a student feel at ease; even coming from a fairly small undergraduate institution, it’s nice to walk into the COMM hallway and know the people in the offices.

The reason I decided to return to school after having earned my Bachelor’s degree in 2008 was to add useful skills and knowledge to my repertoire, not to start over, and even after only two years, I feel as though I’ve gained so much that I could never have found elsewhere.

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Aylssa Murray, COMM Major & Miss Delaware 2012

We’ve had a string of exciting updates from both our fabulous alumni and our exciting faculty. Here’s the latest dish:

  • Dr. John Courtright has hit a yet another home run in national communication academic circles.  He had been named the Editor of Human Communication Research, quite an honor for John and our department.
  • Joy Stephenson, one of our recent grads, was featured in a UDaily story about Odyssey of the Mind – their team did really well in the world finals! Why to go “Weird Scientist”!
  • UD’s COMM 425 class (Advanced Politics and Broadcast Journalism) of Spring 2011 won a national award for their documentary. “The Quiet Riot: Apathy and Activism” won an Honorable Mention in the National Federation of Press Women’s 2012 Communications Contest. The student conceived and produced documentary explores stereotypes of college students as apathetic, instead presenting a view of UD’s engaged and caring student community. The students were Communication and Political Science majors.
  • Talent flows around here, we’ve got yet another COMM major, Maria Cahill from Newark,  claiming the Miss Delaware crown! You KNOW she did will know how to promote her “Drive Safe Drive Smart” campaign!
  • Two wonderful COMM undergraduates presented their own research this May, and a tiny little paper called “the New York Times” picked it up! What a “hit”!
Keep us posted on your successes, email them to bartoo@udel.edu! We love to hear about your adventures!

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