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As ASU transitioned to an online learning environment, faculty and staff at the Cronkite School saw it as an opportunity to innovate.
Virtual learning hasn’t stopped Cronkite News students from getting the news out. From Arizona Election Day coverage to the impact of the novel coronavirus, reporters are continuing to relay information through their digital channels.
Cronkite Associate Dean Named Dean of Newhouse School.
Sonya Duhé will be the next dean of ASU's Cronkite School, the university announced today.
John Craft, the Cronkite School's longest-serving faculty member, is retiring after nearly five decades at the school.
The school will use a $225,000 investment from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation to match creators of cutting-edge tools with local newsrooms willing to test them.
Cronkite students earned honors in 18 different broadcast categories, including two entries that received the prestigious Best of Festival recognition.
The report reveals officer-involved shootings nationwide and high-risk tactics by federal agents with Homeland Security Investigations, a division of ICE with broad policing authority in the United States and little public accountability.
The Arizona Broadcaster Association, the official trade association for more than 200 radio and TV stations in Arizona, is moving into ASU's Cronkite School.
The grant will support a project that aims to improve digital media literacy among adults.
Pelley will discuss his award-winning career and his new book, “Truth Worth Telling: A Reporter’s Search for Meaning in the Stories of Our Times.”
The team of student journalists will investigate disparities in sentencing and jail time, conditions at juvenile detention facilities and the impact on families, communities and victims.
A SportsCenter anchor, Barrie also serves as studio host for ESPN's college football coverage.
About 320 students were recognized during convocation for the Cronkite School's newest graduates.
Terry Greene Sterling investigates how rural areas are impacted by a lack of mental health services as part of a collaborative reporting effort for the Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting.
On a cool and cloudy Thanksgiving day, 25 people gathered for “Thanksgiving with the Callahans,” one of the great unofficial traditions of ASU and the Cronkite School.
The World Press Photo Contest returns to downtown Phoenix with an upcoming exhibition at ASU's Cronkite School.
Christopher Callahan, who led the transformation of ASU's Cronkite School into one of the nation’s top programs, was announced today as the next president of University of the Pacific, the oldest chartered institution of higher education in California.
Lester Holt, the award-winning anchor of “NBC Nightly News” and “Dateline NBC,” accepted the 2019 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism today from ASU.
For the second consecutive year, the Carnegie-Knight News21, based at ASU's Cronkite School, has won the top investigative collegiate award from Editor & Publisher magazine.
ASU's Cronkite School is a recipient of Google News Initiative’s first North America Innovation Challenge, a program that funds innovative projects that focus on increasing audience engagement in local newsrooms.
News executives from around the country returned to the Cronkite School this week to create change and innovation in local television.
PBS NewsHour West, the new bureau of the “PBS NewsHour,” is producing its first broadcast on Monday, Oct. 14. In addition to producing news stories based in the western U.S., the Phoenix-based team will update PBS NewsHour’s 6 p.m. Eastern time zone broadcast for West Coast audiences.
Kaiser Health News and an investigative team of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), NBC News and The Associated Press won the top awards in the 13th annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Journalism, the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism announced today.
Cronkite School senior Nicholas Badders won the 2019 Greg Crowder Memorial Photojournalism Award for his stunning work in sports photography.
B. William Silcock, assistant dean of ASU's Cronkite School, is the 2019 recipient of the Larry Burkum Service Award, a prestigious honor presented by the Electronic News Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications.
Arizona PBS received 13 Emmy nominations from the Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, while ASU students from the Cronkite School dominated the intercollegiate contest with 26 nominations.
Shaya Tayefe Mohajer, an Associated Press veteran now teaching at USC, will join the Cronkite School in August as the Los Angeles bureau chief of Cronkite News.
An award-winning national editor for The Associated Press and a five-time Emmy Award-winning journalist are joining a Cronkite School effort to provide quality health news for underserved residents across the Southwest and to create a new cadre of health care journalists.
Thirty-two high school students from 17 states are coming to ASU's Cronkite School for two weeks of learning, discussions and hands-on experiences in sports journalism.
Two of the nation’s leading television executives and creative strategists are joining Arizona PBS.
A new book by two ASU professors chronicles the rise of women in America’s newsrooms and lessons about what it takes to lead in a traditionally male-dominated industry that has been rocked by the #MeToo movement.
Carnegie-Knight News21, the multi-university, in-depth journalism collaborative based at ASU's Cronkite School, has won the Student Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Digital Reporting for a third consecutive year.
ASU head football coach Herm Edwards, who spent nearly a decade at ESPN, is joining the faculty of the Cronkite School.
Lauren Mucciolo, an award-winning director and producer for PBS “Frontline,” will be the new executive producer at the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at ASU's Cronkite School.
Thirty-seven top journalism students from 19 universities are ASU's Downtown Phoenix campus this summer conducting a major investigation into disaster recovery in the U.S. as part of the Carnegie-Knight News21 multimedia reporting initiative.
Bryce Newberry of the Cronkite School at ASU has won a prestigious broadcast news award in the Hearst Journalism Awards program this week in San Francisco.
Top high school students are spending the next two weeks at ASU's Cronkite School practicing multimedia journalism and experiencing what it’s like to be a college student.
Three recent graduates of the Cronkite School at ASU are recipients of prestigious Fulbright awards to study and work abroad.
Fourteen of the nation’s top sports journalism students are part of the weeklong Sports Journalism Institute at Arizona State University’s 线上网赌网址-手机版.
Journalists and media educators from 18 different countries will spend part of their summer at Arizona State University’s 线上网赌网址-手机版 studying entrepreneurship, media innovation and government and experiencing life in the U.S.
Top college journalism students from across the country are at ASU's Cronkite School for 10 days of in-depth training as part of a digital journalism internship program through the Dow Jones News Fund.
Gary Thorne, a lead play-by-play announcer for the Baltimore Orioles on the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network, will be joining Arizona State University as a visiting professor at the 线上网赌网址-手机版.
Andres Guerra Luz, a new graduate of the 线上网赌网址-手机版 at Arizona State University, will receive the top student business reporting award from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing.
Nancy C. Barnes, senior vice president for news at National Public Radio, told new journalism graduates of ASU Tuesday they need to be prepared to celebrate change, not resist it.
Students in the Carnegie-Knight News21 investigative reporting project at the Cronkite School are winners of the 2019 Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award.
The NCDJ at ASU's Cronkite School is now accepting entries for the 2019 Katherine Schneider Journalism Award for Excellence in Reporting on Disability, the only journalism contest devoted exclusively to disability coverage.
Lisa Schmidtke, an award-winning marketing, public relations and communications professional and alumna of Arizona State University’s 线上网赌网址-手机版, has joined the Cronkite School as its Public Relations Lab director.
ASU's Cronkite School has launched working partnerships with several technology businesses to introduce innovative tools and ideas to broadcast newsrooms in the U.S. and abroad.
Journalists interested in learning more about the changing world of medicine are encouraged to apply for a Mayo Clinic-Cronkite Fellowship at ASU's Cronkite School this summer.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Cronkite School at ASU are proud to announce the 53 fellows selected to participate in the Editorial Integrity and Leadership Initiative.
PBS NewsHour, the national nightly newscast known for its in-depth exploration of the day’s most critical issues, is opening a western news bureau at the Cronkite School under a new partnership with ASU.
The National Association of Broadcasters has invested in an innovative project at Arizona State University that will use augmented reality for television weather reports. The experiment, called “AR Stories,” will give viewers enhanced weather reports either through broadcast television or smartphones.
Journalism students at ASU's Cronkite School have won a top student innovation award for a program that follows students as they report the news.
ASU students once again won the most news awards in the Broadcast Education Association’s annual Festival of Media Arts national competition.
The National Center on Disability and Journalism at ASU has released its popular disability language style guide in Spanish.
College journalism professors interested in introducing entrepreneurial concepts and practices into their courses are encouraged to apply for the Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute at ASU's Cronkite School.
“Catalyst,” a program that explores cutting-edge research at ASU and its potential impact on the community, is back for its second season on Arizona PBS.
ASU's Cronkite School is inviting top-performing high school students to participate in summer camps focusing on broadcast and digital journalism, sports broadcasting and digital media innovation.
Walter V. Robinson, the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team investigations editor who led the newspaper’s Pulitzer Prize-winning report on the Roman Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal, is the inaugural Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Investigative Journalism at ASU.
Top journalism students from 19 universities are coming to ASU to conduct a major investigation into disaster recovery in the U.S. as part of the Carnegie-Knight News21 multimedia reporting initiative.
Top journalists and communicators from Bloomberg, CNBC, ESPN, Google and The Wall Street Journal are among those taking part in a spring lecture series at the Cronkite School at ASU.
ASU's Cronkite School is making several key changes in faculty roles as the school continues to expand its programs and offerings.
Maud Beelman, the award-winning U.S. investigations editor for The Associated Press, will be the founding executive editor of the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at ASU.
ESPN anchor Matt Barrie, a graduate of ASU's Cronkite School, challenged the school’s newest graduates to pursue their dreams, even when it’s fourth-and-long.
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is funding a new ASU initiative to provide in-depth healthcare news coverage about underserved communities across the Southwest.
Award-winning ESPN anchor Matt Barrie, a graduate of the Cronkite School at ASU, will give the keynote convocation speech at the school’s graduation ceremony.
The Cronkite School at ASU today launched a new digital resource to help local TV news professionals spark innovation at their stations.
People with higher education levels and more positive attitudes about news can more easily spot fake headlines, according to a research report by the News Co/Lab at ASU's Cronkite School.
Laura Anderson, the top communications executive at Intel Corp., is the newest member of the Alumni Hall of Fame at ASU's Cronkite School.
For the fifth time in seven years, an in-depth journalism project produced by ASU's Cronkite School has won a prestigious EPPY Award from Editor & Publisher magazine.
Frank Mungeam, a top television news executive who has led content transformation at one of the nation’s largest media companies, is joining ASU as part of a John S. and James L. Knight Foundation initiative to innovate local TV news.
A major investigation by NPR into the hidden epidemic of sexual violence against people with intellectual disabilities won the top honor in the Ruderman Foundation Awards for Excellence in Reporting on Disability.
Andrew Leckey, president of the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU's Cronkite School, has been named a Fulbright Specialist to Taiwan.
Bloomberg News, The Wall Street Journal and ProPublica won gold, silver and bronze awards, respectively, in the 12th annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Journalism.
Students from ASU's Cronkite School dominated the regional Emmy Awards intercollegiate contest.
Two innovative multimedia reporting projects, produced by students at ASU's Cronkite School, took top honors at one of the nation’s leading digital journalism award contests.
The Cronkite School faculty includes five Pulitzer Prize winners, ranging from the former executive editor of The Washington Post to the former head of The Boston Globe’s “Spotlight” team, memorialized in the movie by that name.
The News Co/Lab at the Cronkite School released the results of the first batch of community surveys, designed to help newsrooms understand what their communities know about, think about and want from the news.
Leading local television news executives from across the country are at ASU's Cronkite School to take part in a new program designed to spark innovation and change at their stations.
Students from Arizona State University’s journalism school will soon be typing away in the Herald Examiner building in downtown Los Angeles.
Political journalists from The Washington Post, the religion editor of CNN and a top communications executive at Intel Corp. are among the headliners of a speaker series this fall at ASU's Cronkite School.
The Carnegie-Knight News21 program, a national multi-university reporting initiative headquartered at ASU's Cronkite School, released a major multimedia investigation today about the growing climate of hate in the United States.
Lori Todd, the senior social media editor for NPR, is joining ASU to lead the digital desk of Cronkite News, the student-operated, faculty-led news division of Arizona PBS at the the Cronkite School.
In a move to advance deeply-researched watchdog journalism, the Scripps Howard Foundation today announced a $6 million investment toward the creation of two centers for investigative journalism.
ASU’s Cronkite School is now offering new online degrees as well as an innovative professional immersion program to help students launch careers focused on digital strategy, audience engagement and social media.
A new national survey from the News Co/Lab at the Cronkite School shows that although nearly one in five Americans immediately associate the word “news” with the word “fake,” only a tiny number use that word to describe local news.
Carnegie-Knight News21, the multi-university in-depth journalism collaborative based at ASU's Cronkite School, won the Student Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Digital Reporting for a second consecutive year.
Twenty high school students from across Arizona are part of an intensive, two-week media innovation training camp.
News coverage of Native American issues, a top priority for ASU's Cronkite School, is being recognized nationally.
Twenty-eight high school students are at ASU's Cronkite School this week to receive in-depth training in multimedia journalism.
Top student journalists from across the country are at ASU's Cronkite School for intensive journalism training as part of a special internship program through Dow Jones News Fund.
Journalists from the The New York Times, CBS News, The Washington Post and Univision are among the participants of a new medical journalism program created by the Mayo Clinic and ASU's Cronkite School.
Andrew Heyward, a visiting scholar at the MIT Media Lab who served for nearly a decade as president of CBS News, is joining ASU's Cronkite School in an initiative designed to advance innovation in local television news.
The National Center on Disability and Journalism at ASU has received a $300,000 grant from the Ford Foundation to expand its mission of improving media coverage and public understanding of disability issues.
Margaret Brennan, moderator of “Face the Nation” and senior foreign affairs correspondent at CBS News, challenged the newest graduates of ASU's Cronkite School to grow the public’s trust of the news media.
ASU’s Downtown Phoenix campus is launching a new pilot program designed to promote healthy living by adding new snack and beverage options to its vending machines.
A group of college students are creating a new primetime series for Arizona PBS.
For Earth Day, two ASU students have developed a feature for Amazon’s line of Echo smart speakers that provides daily sustainability tips.
ASU's Cronkite School was featured as a question on the television game show Jeopardy!
ASU students at the Cronkite School were part of a groundbreaking USA Today Network project that won a Pulitzer Prize in Explanatory Reporting today.
ASU's Cronkite School launches GlobalSport Matters, a new website that looks at the intersection of sport and society across the globe.
Margaret Brennan, moderator of CBS News' "Face the Nation" and CBS News' senior foreign affairs correspondent, will deliver the keynote speech at the spring 2018 convocation of ASU's Cronkite School.
The owners of RIESTER, one of the region’s leading advertising and digital marketing firms, today made a six-figure gift to support students and programs at ASU's Cronkite School.
ASU students took first place in the Society of American Business Editors and Writers Best in Business contest for an investigation into tax liens that have cost hundreds of Arizona residents their homes.
The Cronkite School hosted special discussions at ASU's new Barrett & O'Connor Washington Center, including a talk featuring leading Washington journalists.
The News Co/Lab at the Cronkite School, a collaborative lab aimed at helping people find new ways of understanding and engaging with news and information, has named Kristy Roschke as its first managing director.
Anita Luera, an award-winning journalist who has played a pivotal role in the advancement of Latinos in the news industry, was inducted into the Alumni Hall of Fame at ASU's Cronkite School today.
Cronkite students took home major honors at the Broadcast Education Association’s annual Festival of Media Arts competition, which included the top news award.
Journalism students from 19 universities will conduct a major national investigation into hate crimes in the U.S. as part of the 2017 Carnegie-Knight News21 multimedia reporting initiative.
Top-performing high school students interested in journalism can receive hands-on training in broadcast and digital journalism at a two-week summer camp at the Cronkite School.
High school students interested in sports journalism are invited to apply for a two-week summer camp at Arizona State University, where they can report on professional sports teams such as the Arizona Diamondbacks and Phoenix Mercury as part of the Cronkite Sports Broadcast Boot Camp.
High school students interested in learning how to develop news games using the latest technology are invited to apply for a two-week innovation training camp this summer at the Cronkite School.
Nicole Carroll, editor of the Arizona Republic and Cronkite School alumna, is set to take the helm of USA Today, the most-circulated newspaper in the United States. Her position will be effective in March.
Mayo Clinic and ASU's Cronkite School have established a new fellowship program in which medical journalists from across the country will receive intensive training to cover medicine.
The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation today announced a $1.9 million grant to ASU's Cronkite School to advance digital and broadcast innovation in local television news.
ASU's Cronkite School is hosting a large-scale public expo featuring cutting-edge technologies for journalists.
Karen Bordeleau, former executive editor of The Providence Journal in Rhode Island, has joined ASU's Cronkite School as the Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics.
Kathy Kudravi, a veteran award-winning sports journalist who has led news teams at ESPN and CNN, has been named the executive editor of a new international sports research and knowledge lab at ASU.
ASU's Cronkite School is expanding its pioneering digital audiences programs with the addition of two award-winning scholars in audience behavior, engagement and analytics.
The Ruderman Family Foundation announced today a major new journalism awards program to recognize the best disability reporting produced each year by media organizations around the world.
Paola Boivin, the award-winning sports columnist who worked for The Arizona Republic for more than 20 years and now teaches at ASU's Cronkite School, has been appointed to the selection committee of the College Football Playoff.
ASU's Cronkite School has created a new speaker series focusing on the critical workplace issues impacting women in the media.
Journalists and media professionals from around the globe will share their perspectives on major international issues as part of an annual speaker series at ASU's Cronkite School.
Thirteen journalism professors from eight states and two countries are at ASU's Cronkite School for the annual Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute, a rigorous five-day seminar that focuses on the concepts and practices of entrepreneurship within journalism.
Arizona Republic Publisher Mi-Ai Parrish, an award-winning journalist and media executive, will be the inaugural Sue Clark-Johnson Professor in Media Innovation and Leadership at the Cronkite School, ASU announced today.
Kevin Merida, the former Washington Post managing editor who now leads ESPN’s “The Undefeated,” rallied the newest graduates of ASU's Cronkite School to be a driving force of change in journalism.
Adelaida Severson, who leads one of the nation’s top satellite communications companies, was inducted into the Alumni Hall of Fame at ASU's Cronkite School today.
ASU’s Cronkite School today announced new support from Democracy Fund for Cronkite’s pioneering News Co/Lab, a collaborative lab working to improve how all of us understand and engage with news and information.
Kevin Merida, the former Washington Post managing editor who now leads ESPN’s “The Undefeated,” will give the keynote convocation speech to the fall 2017 graduates of ASU's Cronkite School.
Cronkite School Dean Christopher Callahan issues a statement regarding the 2015 Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.
Univision Arizona, the state’s most-watched Spanish-language television station, is now broadcasting Cronkite Noticias, a 30-minute news program produced by bilingual ASU students on important Latino community and statewide issues.
The recently launched News Co/Lab at ASU's Cronkite School announced new support from the Rita Allen Foundation.
ASU's Cronkite School dedicated its largest teaching space in honor of Elizabeth Murphy Burns and Richard Burns of Morgan Murphy Media, the pioneering media company headquartered in Wisconsin.
ASU's Cronkite School is presenting Judy Woodruff and the late Gwen Ifill, the award-winning co-anchors and managing editors of the “PBS NewsHour,” with the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism Thursday, Oct. 19.
Arizona PBS won six regional Emmy Awards, including one for a special on the legacy of Walter Cronkite as well as the top public service award, while ASU students at the Cronkite School dominated the intercollegiate contest.
Chicago Tribune; The Post-Courier, and MedPage Today won gold, silver and bronze awards, respectively, in the 11th annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Journalism.
News Co/Lab at ASU, a collaborative lab aimed at helping the public find new ways of understanding and engaging with news and information, today announces a $300,000 grant from the News Integrity Initiative.
ASU's Cronkite School today launched News Co/Lab, a collaborative lab aimed at helping the public find new ways of understanding and engaging with news and information. News Co/Lab’s initial funder is the Facebook Journalism Project, and McClatchy is its first news media partner.
Three Cronkite students worked with USA Today on a project about the U.S.-Mexico border and what kind of an impact the wall would have in unprecedented detail.
To kick off Homecoming 2017 at ASU, the Cronkite School is inviting alumni, students and faculty to Cronkite Day, an annual large-scale celebration on Friday, Oct. 27.
College journalism professors interested in introducing entrepreneurial concepts and practices into their courses are encouraged to apply for the Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute at ASU's Cronkite School.
A team of ASU students at the Cronkite School won a top multimedia award from the nation’s leading professional organization dedicated to American Indian coverage.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) has awarded five public media stations, led by Arizona PBS, a grant to establish a regional news collaboration to enhance and expand coverage of sustainability issues.
First Amendment lawyer Floyd Abrams discusses free speech on campus at an event at the Cronkite School.
Arizona PBS received 12 Emmy nominations from the Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, while ASU students at the Cronkite School dominated the intercollegiate contest.
Anita Helt, a veteran television executive who leads the highly-rated ABC affiliate in Phoenix, is the new president of the Cronkite Endowment Board of Trustees at ASU's Cronkite School.
Floyd Abrams, the prominent First Amendment attorney who represented The New York Times in the landmark Pentagon Papers Supreme Court case, is coming to ASU to discuss freedom of speech on campus.
A veteran editor who led Uruguay’s largest newspaper, a South African strategic communications executive dedicated to eradicating the legacy of apartheid and a Cambodian reporter who was shot at while covering a story are among the 12 global journalists and communicators studying at ASU.
The editor-in-chief of National Geographic Magazine, a veteran White House correspondent, a top ESPN “SportsCenter” anchor and the head of news at Snapchat are among the leading communications professionals headlining a speaker series this fall at ASU's Cronkite School.
The Carnegie-Knight News21 program, a national multi-university reporting initiative headquartered at ASU's Cronkite School, released a major multimedia investigation into water pollution and its impact on health in the U.S.
On the 10th anniversary of a helicopter crash that took the lives of four Phoenix news professionals, the parents of one of the victims announced the establishment of a photojournalism endowment at ASU to honor their late son.
Fernanda Santos, an award-winning author and southwest correspondent for The New York Times, is joining the Cronkite School as a Southwest Borderlands Initiative Professor.
ASU's Cronkite School has received a grant to fund a new virtual-reality project through a news initiative from Google News Lab, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and the Online News Association.
The Cronkite School is a “model for retention, transformative education and inclusion,” a national council said in reaccrediting the ASU program for another six years.
Cronkite Innovation Chief Eric Newton discusses the importance of media literacy in an interview with ASU Now.
Twenty-two high school students from across Arizona are participating in an intensive, two-week media innovation training camp at ASU's Cronkite School.
For the fifth straight year, a journalism student at ASU has been named the top collegiate photojournalist in the state by the Arizona Press Club.
Recent college graduates are taking part in an intensive media sales boot camp sponsored by the National Association of Broadcasters Education Foundation and ASU's Cronkite School.
ASU is the recipient of a grant funded by the Henry Luce Foundation to promote greater interaction between religion scholars and journalists who report and write about religion.
Twenty-eight high school students are at ASU's Cronkite School to receive hands-on training in multimedia journalism.
Vanessa Ruiz, a lead anchor on 12 News in Phoenix and an award-winning bilingual correspondent for national and regional TV news outlets in Miami and Los Angeles, is joining the Cronkite School, ASU announced today.
Entries are now being accepted for the Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism, the nation’s top investigative business journalism contest.
For the 17th straight year, ASU's Cronkite School is the top school in the regional Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence Awards competition.
ASU's Cronkite School, which has grown dramatically in the past decade, is expanding its leadership team.
An in-depth report on voting rights and regulations by the Carnegie-Knight News21 Initiative at ASU's Cronkite School has received a top national award for student investigations.
Aminda Marqués Gonzalez, the executive editor and vice president of the Miami Herald, encouraged the newest graduates of ASU's Cronkite School to defend the First Amendment by producing quality journalism.
Cronkite student Katie Bieri discusses her college career and how her journalistic dreams came true at ASU.
ASU is launching a new Master’s of Science in Business Journalism, the country’s only online master’s degree in business journalism.
The Cronkite School at ASU will offer a new all-online specialization to create experts in how to find, engage and grow digital audiences.
The prevalence of prescription opioid abuse and addiction in Arizona is widespread, according to a major statewide poll released by Cronkite News.
ASU's Cronkite School is receiving one of the highest honors in journalism education for diversity and inclusion.
More than 50 ASU students at the Cronkite School are playing a major role in providing critical support and news coverage for the NCAA’s Final Four in Phoenix this week.
In the lead-up to the NCAA Men’s Final Four in Phoenix, top journalists and executives from CBS Sports, ESPN and Turner Sports are taking part in a special series of talks at ASU's Cronkite School.
Donald G. Godfrey, a longtime broadcaster and ASU professor who taught at the Cronkite School for 24 years, is the 2017 recipient of the Broadcast Education Association’s Lifetime Achievement in Scholarship.
Starbucks Senior Vice President Corey duBrowa is the featured speaker of the annual Public Relations Lab Mentorship Lecture at ASU's Cronkite School.
Facebook and ASU's Cronkite School are hosting national leaders in technology, journalism and academia this weekend to discuss the importance of news literacy.
Univision Arizona and the Cronkite School have partnered to regularly broadcast a 30-minute news program produced by bilingual ASU students on important Latino community and statewide issues.
Walter V. Robinson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning editor who led The Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigation into the Roman Catholic Church, shares his thoughts on investigative journalism at the Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture.
High school students interested in sports journalism can apply for a special two-week summer camp at ASU, where they can report on professional sports teams such as the Arizona Diamondbacks and Phoenix Mercury.
ASU's Cronkite School, in partnership with the journalism program at the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE), is holding a workshop in Mexico City this week on the challenges of the digital revolution and what it means to journalism and freedom of speech.
Walter V. Robinson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning editor who led The Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigation into the Roman Catholic Church, is the featured speaker of the 11th annual Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture at the Cronkite School.
ASU's Cronkite School kicks off its annual “Cronkite Global Conversations” speaker series this week, with in-depth talks from global journalists on the media’s impact in developing nations.
Top journalism students from 18 universities will investigate water pollution and its impact on health in the U.S. as part of the 2017 Carnegie-Knight News21 national multimedia reporting initiative.
ASU's Cronkite School is hosting a public expo next week, featuring a host of cutting-edge technologies impacting journalism’s future.
ASU is creating an endowed professorship at the Cronkite School in honor of Sue Clark-Johnson, the newspaper executive, journalism pioneer and ASU professor who died two years ago this month.
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists, award-winning filmmakers, the former president of CBS News and the social media director of BuzzFeed headline a spring speaker series at ASU's Cronkite School.
Mary Mazur, an award-winning television executive who has played a key role in leading one of the nation’s top public media organizations, is joining Arizona PBS as the station’s new general manager.
Cronkite student Chris Cadeau uses radio show to break stereotypes that surround returning soldiers.
Fifteen journalism professors from 12 states and three countries are coming to ASU for the annual Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute, a rigorous five-day seminar at the Cronkite School.
An ASU senior at the Cronkite School took home the top collegiate honor from one of the nation’s leading public relations organizations.
Julia Wallace, a former Cox Media Group executive and leading editor of newspapers in Atlanta and Phoenix, urged the newest graduates of ASU's Cronkite School to courageously chase their dreams.
Twenty-five journalists and eight journalism educators from around the world are coming to ASU next month to participate in the preeminent training program in business journalism.
Scott Pelley, the award-winning managing editor and anchor of the “CBS Evening News” and correspondent of “60 Minutes,” underscored the threats to journalism’s vital role in democracy as he accepted the 2016 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism Monday from ASU today.
ASU's Cronkite School is presenting Scott Pelley, managing editor and anchor of the “CBS Evening News,” with the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism Monday.
ASU's Cronkite School is hosting a special public discussion tonight on how the news media missed the most important political story of a generation.
Arizona PBS will have the largest local media presence in the state on Election Day with more than 100 Cronkite students reporting from Phoenix, the Arizona-Mexico border, New York and Washington, D.C.
ASU's Cronkite School is commemorating the 100th anniversary of the birth of Walter Cronkite this Friday with a special public birthday celebration as well as a one-hour TV special on Arizona PBS.
Fourteen international journalists are at ASU's Cronkite School this week to examine and experience a free press as part of the U.S. State Department’s Edward R. Murrow Program.
For the fourth time, the Carnegie-KnightNews21 program has won a prestigious EPPY Award from Editor & Publisher magazine for a national investigation conducted by college journalism students.
ASU students at the Cronkite School took home some of the region’s top professional public relations honors at the annual Copper Anvil Awards, presented by the Phoenix chapter of the Public Relations Society of America.
Hillary Clinton now holds a 5-point lead over Donald Trump in the presidential race for Arizona’s 11 electoral votes, with many still undecided, according to the latest statewide poll released today by The Arizona Republic and ASU.
A Minneapolis Star Tribune investigation into state-subsidized sheltered workshops in Minnesota has won the top honor in the 2016 Katherine Schneider Journalism Award for Excellence in Reporting on Disability.
John Misner, a senior broadcast executive who led Phoenix’s highly rated NBC affiliate, 12 News/KPNX-TV, for more than a decade, is joining ASU.
ASU students at the Cronkite School took home more Student Production Awards than any other school at the annual Rocky Mountain Emmy Awards Gala last week.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at the Cronkite School announces the winners of the 10th-annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Journalism.
Top national health journalists and communicators from The New York Times, Los Angeles Times and Consumer Reports are taking part in a new lecture series between the Mayo Clinic and ASU's Cronkite School.
Kristin Bloomquist, a top advertising and marketing executive, is the new president of the Cronkite Endowment Board of Trustees at ASU's Cronkite School.
The National Association of Broadcasters is launching a nationwide campaign to combat heroin and opioid addiction, in part due to an award-winning documentary produced by ASU's Cronkite School and the Arizona Broadcasters Association.
Award-winning NBC Sports primetime host Bob Costas is coming to ASU's Cronkite School this week.
Six ASU graduates working in professional newsrooms across the country are the final recipients of the Knight-Cronkite Alumni Innovation Grant, a journalism innovation fund for alumni of the Cronkite School.
College journalism professors who want to introduce entrepreneurial concepts and practices into their courses are invited to apply for fellowships to attend the Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute at ASU's Cronkite School.
Joe W. Milner, a pioneering ASU journalism professor who laid the foundation for what would become the Cronkite School, died Sunday at his home in Tempe. He was 87.
ASU students at the Cronkite School will soon have a new digital Spanish-language platform for reporting issues critical to Arizonans thanks to an investment from the Raza Development Fund (RDF).
Business journalists and journalism educators are invited to apply for fellowships to take part in the 11th annual Reynolds Business Journalism Week at the Cronkite School at ASU.
Walter V. Robinson, the longtime Boston Globe investigations editor who led the newspaper’s Pulitzer Prize-winning report on the Roman Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal, is coming to teach at ASU's Cronkite School.
Twenty-five ASU students from the Cronkite School are heading to Rio de Janeiro today to cover the 2016 Olympic Games.
The Cronkite School's Cronkite News has released a major poll with Univision News and The Dallas Morning News on important election issues involving the U.S.-Mexico border.
ASU students at the Cronkite School are traveling to the Republican and Democratic national conventions this month to cover important election issues.
To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth of Walter Cronkite, a large-scale public celebration featuring some of the nation’s top journalists will be held this fall at the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
ASU's Cronkite School is teaming up with Google News Lab to help test new tools and training and encourage their use throughout journalism education.
Alfredo Corchado, a Southwest Borderlands Initiative Professor at ASU's Cronkite School, is receiving one of the highest honors from the region’s leading Latino journalism organizations.
The Arizona Republic has created a fellowship for students at ASU's Cronkite School in honor of reporter Don Bolles, who was mortally wounded in a car explosion 40 years ago.
Top college graduates from across the country are training at ASU's Cronkite School this week as part of an intensive media sales boot camp through the National Association of Broadcasters Education Foundation.
Twenty-eight high school students from across the country will learn multimedia reporting skills this month as part of the annual Summer Journalism Institute at ASU's Cronkite School.
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Journalists interested in sharpening their coverage of public companies can sign up for a free in-depth email course through the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU.
Top journalism students from 18 universities will lead an investigation into voting rights as part of the 2016 Carnegie-Knight News21 national multimedia investigative reporting initiative.
Journalists who have reported on the disability community in the past year are encouraged to submit entries to a national journalism contest that recognizes the best coverage of disability issues.
ASU students at the Cronkite School won more than half of the student categories at a regional Associated Press broadcast contest.
Journalists seeking to innovate in their newsrooms can find support in a grant program sponsored by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation for graduates of the Cronkite School at ASU.
Mark Hass, a leading strategic communications executive and entrepreneur, is joining ASU as a strategic communications professor.
A Cronkite student-produced documentary on the scourge of heroin that was broadcasted on 93 radio stations statewide has won a top professional honor from one of the nation’s oldest journalism organizations.
Bruce Merrill, a nationally known pollster and researcher who taught at ASU for four decades, died Saturday from complications due to cancer. He was 78.
“Hooked: Tracking Heroin’s Hold on Arizona,” a statewide TV special produced by ASU students at the Cronkite School in association with the Arizona Broadcasters Association, will receive a top honor from the nation’s leading broadcaster organization.
Milton Coleman, a former senior editor at The Washington Post, is joining the Cronkite School as the Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at ASU.
Scott Pelley, anchor and managing editor of the “CBS Evening News,” will be the 2016 recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.
Aaron Lavinsky, a 2014 graduate of ASU's Cronkite School, won a prestigious honor from one of the nation’s top visual journalism organizations.
The head of content at Wattpad, an innovative storytelling app creating new paths at the intersection of literature and technology, is the featured speaker of the annual Public Relations Lab Mentorship Lecture at ASU's Cronkite School.
The Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation has awarded ASU's Cronkite School an $800,000 grant for students to learn and experience news innovation and to spread new ideas across journalism.
Cronkite Innovation Chief Eric Newton is receiving one of the nation’s highest press freedom honors for his work at the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.
An ASU student at the Cronkite School placed first among 50 students from 30 different universities in the radio news competition at the annual Hearst Journalism Awards.
ASU's Cronkite School recently led a conference in Mexico City on training for the 21st-century journalist, featuring acclaimed journalists and other experts from both sides of the border.
ASU's Cronkite School successfully completed a $50,000 crowdfunding initiative to help Cronkite News students expand coverage of border and immigration issues during this election year.
ASU students at the Cronkite School collected more awards in news categories in the Broadcast Education Association’s Festival of Media Arts competition than any other school in the country.
Venita Hawthorne James, a veteran Arizona Republic journalist, is a new director in the Phoenix bureau at Cronkite News, a multiplatform daily news enterprise at Arizona PBS operated by ASU's Cronkite School.
U.S. Sen. John McCain will share his thoughts on politics, security and the media as part of an interview series at ASU's Cronkite School and Thunderbird School of Global Management.
International journalists from nine countries will explore important issues impacting journalism at the annual “Cronkite Global Conversations” speaker series at ASU's Cronkite School.
Thomas E. Ricks, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, best-selling author and national security expert, is the featured speaker of the 10th annual Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture at ASU's Cronkite School.
“Hooked: Tracking Heroin’s Hold on Arizona,” a duPont Award-winning investigative report by students at ASU's Cronkite School, is making its national television debut this week.
The Cronkite School and Arizona PBS kick off a crowdfunding campaign to help Cronkite News students increase coverage of border and immigration issues during this election year.
Kevin Merida, the former Washington Post managing editor who is the editor-in-chief of ESPN’s new site “The Undefeated,” headlines a showcase of top-flight communications professionals speaking this spring at ASU's Cronkite School.
ASU is establishing a dual master’s degree program in which students can earn degrees in both journalism and law within two years.
ASU's Cronkite School this month will host its first-ever expo of new technologies with the potential to improve journalism.
ASU’s Cronkite School on Tuesday won an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award, which has recognized the very best in broadcast journalism for more than 70 years.
Mi-Ai Parrish, the new president and publisher of The Arizona Republic, reminded the newest graduates of ASU's Cronkite School that inspiration is possible, even in the most challenging of times.
Mi-Ai Parrish, the new president and publisher of The Arizona Republic, will give the keynote convocation speech to the fall 2015 graduates of ASU's Cronkite School next week.
ASU students at the Cronkite School are collaborating with Univision Arizona KTVW-TV and Univision Los Angeles KMEX-TV to broaden the television stations’ coverage for next year’s presidential elections.
The National Center on Disability and Journalism at ASU has released a one-of-a-kind style guide for journalists and professionals who report or write about people living with disabilities.
Andrew Leckey, president of the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU's Cronkite School, has been named a Fulbright Specialist to Uganda.
For the fourth consecutive year, a major multimedia investigation led by ASU's Cronkite School has received a prestigious EPPY Award from Editor & Publisher magazine.
Nineteen international journalists are at ASU's Cronkite School examining the responsibilities of a free press as part of the U.S. State Department’s Edward R. Murrow Program.
ASU’s Cronkite School is joining the efforts of the Society of Professional Journalists and the Radio Television Digital News Association to honor Walter Cronkite with a postage stamp.
A ProPublica story that uncovered the shocking ways children with intellectual disabilities are physically disciplined in schools across the country has won top honors in the 2015 Katherine Schneider Journalism Award for Excellence in Reporting on Disability.
For the second consecutive year, a national investigation by Carnegie-Knight News21 at ASU's Cronkite School has received one of the nation’s top digital journalism awards.
A statewide TV special exploring the deadly rise of heroin use in Arizona, created by ASU's Cronkite School, received two of the region’s top professional honors at the Rocky Mountain Emmy Awards.
The Associated Press, Minneapolis Star Tribune and The Palm Beach Post won gold, silver and bronze awards, respectively, in the ninth annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism.
John W. Dean, the former counsel to President Richard Nixon and a key figure in the Watergate scandal, will explore the cover-up’s influence on American politics and journalism during a lecture at ASU's Cronkite School.
A statewide TV special exploring the escalating and deadly problem of heroin use in Arizona, created by ASU's Cronkite School, has been nominated for a Rocky Mountain Emmy Award – the region’s premier professional television award.
The Cronkite School and the School of Sustainability are launching a new dual degree program leading to master’s degrees in journalism and sustainability.
A Pulitzer Prize-winning data journalism editor of The New York Times, the former editor-in-chief of Bloomberg News and a senior faculty member of the Poynter Institute are among the media professionals headlining a speaker series this fall at ASU's Cronkite School.
For the first time, a journalism school will receive the highest honor given by the Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS) for an ASU documentary on heroin that reached more than 1 million Arizonans.
A multimedia journalist from Nepal, a television executive from the Philippines and a public relations expert from Russia are among the nine global journalists and communicators selected for the Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program at ASU's Cronkite School.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism is creating visiting business journalism professorships at the University of Georgia and the University of North Texas.
The Arizona Department of Transportation is displaying local news headlines produced by ASU students at the Cronkite School on waiting room monitors at select Motor Vehicle Division locations.
Thirty-five high school journalism teachers from across the country will enhance their digital and teaching skills at ASU this summer during a training program funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation and administered by the American Society of News Editors through its Youth Journalism Initiative.
ASU students at the Cronkite School scored the most first-place finishes at the Society of Professional Journalists’ prestigious national Mark of Excellence Awards.
Entries are now being accepted for the Katherine Schneider Journalism Award for Excellence in Reporting on Disability, administered by the National Center on Disability and Journalism at ASU's Cronkite School.
A recent Cronkite graduate has won the first Edward R. Murrow award honoring a college student for work in video journalism.
For an unprecedented fourth consecutive year, a student from ASU’s Cronkite School has won the national television championship at the prestigious Hearst Journalism Awards.
Top college graduates from across the country are visiting ASU's Cronkite School this week as part of an intensive media sales training boot camp through the National Association of Broadcasters Education Foundation.
Peter Bhatia, the former editor and vice president of Oregon’s largest news organization, has been named the new director of the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU’s Cronkite School.
Charlie Rose, the award-winning anchor of “CBS This Morning” and host of the respected late-night talk show on PBS that bears his name, is the 2015 recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, ASU announced today.
Eric Newton, a global leader in championing transformational digital innovation in the news media as an executive of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, is joining ASU as the innovation chief of the Cronkite School.
For the first time in the history of the Arizona Press Club, students came out on top against professional journalists in the 91-year-old organization’s awards contest.
The Cronkite School is launching ASU’s first-ever Massive Open Online Course (MOOC), which gives people anywhere in the world the opportunity to study media and news literacy.
For the 15th year in a row, ASU’s Cronkite School is the top school in the regional Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence Awards competition.
ASU’s Cronkite School and School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning are offering a new dual degree for students interested in careers as meteorologists at news and weather organizations.
An innovative professional program at the Cronkite School designed to help news organizations strengthen community engagement is receiving a prestigious award from ASU.
Top journalism students from 19 universities will lead an investigation into the issues surrounding the legalization of marijuana as part of the 2015 Carnegie-Knight News21 national multimedia investigative reporting initiative.
The Cronkite School is taking applications for the Knight-Cronkite Alumni Innovation Grant, a fund for Cronkite graduates looking to pioneer cutting-edge technologies and practices in journalism.
Alfredo Corchado and Angela Kocherga, two award-winning journalists who cover the U.S.-Mexico border, will deliver the ninth annual Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture at ASU’s Cronkite School.
ASU’s Cronkite School and School of Transborder Studies are launching new dual degrees in journalism and U.S.-Mexico borderland studies starting in fall 2015.
ASU’s Cronkite School took home 15 awards at the Broadcast Education Association’s Festival of Media Arts.
Arizonans largely continue to see illegal immigration as a major problem but believe undocumented immigrants should be treated humanely, according to a poll by ASU’s Morrison Institute and Cronkite School.
Education and water rank as Arizonans’ top two priorities among state residents, according to a new poll by ASU’s Morrison Institute for Public Policy and the Cronkite School.
The National Association of Broadcasters Education Foundation and ASU's Cronkite School are accepting applications for an intensive 10-day media sales training program this summer for recent college graduates.
Retha Hill, a professor at ASU's Cronkite School, is being honored today for her achievements as an educator, journalist and media entrepreneur.
ASU journalism professor Tim McGuire will share lessons from his new memoir on living with a physical disability and raising a child with Down syndrome during a webinar hosted by the National Center on Disability and Journalism.
Leading business figures, including Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett, are participating in a new speaker series at Arizona State University.
ASU's Cronkite School is taking 47 international professionals from 31 countries to the U.S.-Mexico border to study borderlands issues and human rights today.
Christina Leonard, a reporter and editor at The Arizona Republic for the past 17 years, has been named founding director of an innovative business reporting program at ASU's Cronkite School.
High school students who are interested in sports broadcasting can cover professional teams and learn from top journalists through a high-impact summer camp at the Cronkite School at ASU.
Eight, Arizona PBS, part of ASU’s Cronkite School, is debuting a dramatically expanded pre-prime time news and public affairs focus, featuring in-depth news and analysis covering Arizona, the nation and the world.
An estimated 1 million Arizonans tuned in last week to a documentary produced by ASU students at the Cronkite School on the growing perils of heroin and opioid use in Arizona.
More than 200 ASU students at the Cronkite School are assisting the NFL and major media outlets, providing critical support and news coverage for Super Bowl XLIX.
The president of Al Jazeera America, a top anchor at CNN en Español and the CEO of an international public relations agency are among the journalists and communicators taking part in a lecture series at the Cronkite School.
Next week, every broadcast TV station and most radio outlets in Arizona that are used to competing will unite and simultaneously air a 30-minute, commercial-free documentary produced by ASU journalism students.
Fifteen professors from across the country will study entrepreneurial journalism at the fifth annual Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute at the Cronkite School.
Journalists and professors from around the country will participate in a rigorous business journalism institute at the Cronkite School next month.
Peter Bhatia, the former award-winning editor of The Oregonian newspaper and the Cronkite’s Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics, urged the newest graduates of the Cronkite School to invent the future of journalism.
The Cronkite School at ASU will offer two new degrees in the fast-growing field of sports journalism beginning in fall 2015.
Brett Kurland, an Emmy-winning sports producer and multimedia entrepreneur, is the director of a new Phoenix sports reporting bureau at ASU’s Cronkite School.
The Cronkite School has selected digital media innovator Mike Reilley to direct a new professional program in which ASU students will produce dynamic multimedia content.
ASU professor Tim McGuire has established a new endowed scholarship at the Cronkite School to honor his late wife, Jean McGuire.
For the third consecutive year, a major national investigation by Carnegie-Knight News21 at ASU has received a prestigious EPPY Award from Editor & Publisher magazine.
Edward J. Sylvester, an award-winning journalist who taught at ASU for more than 30 years, died Saturday from complications due to cancer. He was 72.
Cronkite graduates working at the National Journal and the Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting are the first recipients of the Knight-Cronkite Alumni Innovation Grant, a special fund to support accelerating innovation in newsrooms across the country.
ASU alumna and faculty member Jacquee Gaillard Petchel has established a new endowed scholarship at the Cronkite School.
Kelly McCullough, who leads one of the nation’s largest PBS stations, is this year’s inductee into the Alumni Hall of Fame at ASU’s Cronkite School.
Former Washington Post Executive Editor Leonard Downie Jr., the Weil Family Professor of Journalism at the Cronkite School, recalls working for the late Ben Bradlee at the Post.
After leading ASU’s Cronkite School to new technological heights, Jim Dove, who recently retired as the school’s chief broadcast engineer, will receive the highest honor given at the Rocky Mountain Emmy Awards.
In a highly unusual collaboration, every broadcast TV station and most radio outlets across Arizona will air simultaneously a 30-minute commercial-free investigative report produced by ASU student journalists on the growing perils of heroin and opioid use.
Award-winning journalist Robin Roberts of ABC’s “Good Morning America” extolled the importance of living life with optimism and faith as she accepted the 2014 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism Monday from ASU.
ProPublica, Reuters and The Huffington Post won gold, silver and bronze awards, respectively, in the eighth annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism.
The Cronkite School is hosting Cronkite Day, an annual large-scale alumni celebration, on Friday, Oct. 31, as part of ASU’s Homecoming 2014.
A national investigation by Carnegie-Knight News21 into the fate of veterans returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan has received the Online News Association’s top award for student reporting in 2014.
ASU students at the Cronkite School amassed 22 Student Production Award nominations in the 2014 Rocky Mountain Emmy Awards — seven more than the rest of the field combined.
Seventeen new scholarships have been created for ASU students under a unique incentive matching program for faculty, staff and administrators.
ASU's Cronkite School is opening the doors of its New Media Innovation Lab to the public, offering expert advice and support on entrepreneurial and technological endeavors.
Eric Deggans, one of the nation’s top television critics, will give a free public lecture at ASU's Cronkite School this fall on race in the modern media through the Provost’s Office of Academic Excellence and Inclusion.
Peter Bergen, an award-winning journalist, author, film producer and CNN’s national security analyst, will screen and discuss his new National Geographic Channel documentary “American War Generals” at the Cronkite School at ASU.
Two ASU students at the Cronkite School participated in a new fellowship, shining a light on important global sustainability issues for Zócalo Public Square, a cutting-edge media outlet in California.
The Poynter Institute and the Cronkite School at ASU will launch an innovative online certificate program for adjunct faculty and others who teach journalism and mass communications classes at universities and colleges around the country.
The Carnegie-Knight News21 program, a national multi-university reporting initiative headquartered at the Cronkite School at ASU, today released a major investigation into the polarizing issues of gun rights and regulation in America.
Doug Anderson, who led the nation’s largest accredited communications program for the past 15 years as dean of Penn State’s College of Communications, is returning to ASU, where he built the foundation for the Cronkite School.
ASU students at the Cronkite School earned awards and recognition in reporting, photography and public relations, among other areas, for work done during the 2013-2014 academic year.
Starting this fall, ASU students at the Cronkite School will report live from across the state using cutting-edge technology, thanks to a new grant from Women & Philanthropy, a program of the ASU Foundation for A New American University.
Five veteran journalists from The Arizona Republic will explore issues surrounding the child immigration crisis during a special online panel discussion at the Cronkite School at ASU next week.
USA Today columnist Rem Rieder discusses how Arizona PBS joining the Cronkite School could be game-changing to journalism education and lead to much-needed innovation in the profession.
Twenty-six high school students, many from underrepresented communities, received journalism training through the Summer Journalism Institute at the Cronkite School at ASU.
Thirty-five high school journalism teachers from across the country will enhance their digital and teaching skills at ASU this summer during a training program funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation and administered by the American Society of News Editors through its Youth Journalism Initiative.
Ten years later, Cronkite School Dean and University Vice Provost Christopher Callahan recounts the extraordinary development of the ASU Downtown Phoenix Campus in an article for The Arizona Republic.
For the third consecutive year, a student from the Cronkite School at ASU has won the national television championship in the prestigious Hearst Journalism Awards Program.
Robin Roberts, the award-winning anchor of “Good Morning America” on ABC News, will be the 2014 recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, ASU announced today.
Top journalism students from across the country will receive intensive digital journalism training this summer as part of a Dow Jones News Fund program at ASU's Cronkite School.
The president of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation warned the newest ASU graduates at the Cronkite School that online freedom of speech is at risk.
The president of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation announced the establishment of a special $250,000 grant for ASU journalism graduates to accelerate innovation in newsrooms across the country.
Micheline Maynard, a former New York Times senior business correspondent, will be the new director of the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU’s Cronkite School.
ASU students in the Cronkite School’s new Public Insight Network Bureau, supported by American Public Media and Knight Foundation, are discovering how to develop a sustainable business model for journalistic collaboration and engagement.
Alberto Ibargüen, president and CEO of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, will be the keynote convocation speaker next week for graduates of the Cronkite School at ASU.
Mauro Whiteman, who will graduate with a master’s in mass communication and a bachelor of arts in journalism, has been named the 2014 ASU Alumni Association Outstanding Graduate at the Cronkite School.
New York Times columnist Dan Barry will discuss reporting on disability issues at a free webinar hosted by the National Center on Disability and Journalism headquartered at the Cronkite School at ASU.
Jeff Cunningham, the former publisher of Forbes magazine and founder of Directorship Magazine, is joining ASU as a faculty member at the W. P. Carey School of Business and the Cronkite School.
Mark Lodato, assistant dean at the Cronkite School, is a recipient of this year’s Faculty Achievement Award for Excellence in Curricular Innovation at ASU.
Virgil Renzulli, who has led ASU’s communications and outreach for more than a decade, is joining the Cronkite School as a professor of strategic communications.
For the 14th consecutive year, the Cronkite School at ASU is the top school in the regional Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence Awards competition.
The Committee to Protect Journalists and Bloomberg News are hosting a panel discussion at the Cronkite School at ASU on the threats to press freedom posed by the Obama administration and the National Security Agency.
ASU alumnus TJ Sokol and his mother Dorothy J. Sokol are establishing a new endowed scholarship for undergraduates at the Cronkite School.
The Pennsylvania State University will host a visiting business journalism professor in spring 2015 under an ASU program funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.
High school students from across the country who are interested in sports broadcasting can cover professional teams and learn from top journalists through a new summer camp at the Cronkite School at ASU.
Peter Bhatia, the award-winning editor of The Oregonian in Portland, is joining the Cronkite School as the Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at ASU.
An Emmy-winning sports television executive is joining the Cronkite School at ASU to head its new Southern California sports program.
To meet the growing demand for skilled business journalists, the Cronkite School at ASU is offering the first online graduate certificate in business journalism through the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism.
ASU’s Cronkite School will establish an engagement and education hub for American Public Media’s Public Insight Network, a community of tens of thousands of citizen sources who help journalists create deeper stories by sharing their experiences.
Four leaders of the Cronkite School are establishing new permanent scholarships to assist ASU undergraduates pursuing journalism and digital communications careers.
Less than a year after graduating, an alumna of the Cronkite School at ASU is part of a reporting team that has won the prestigious George Polk Award for Business Reporting.
ASU’s Downtown Phoenix campus is inviting the public to the largest open-door event in its seven-year history with numerous interactive attractions for the community.
ASU students will collaborate across disciplines to envision new digital products as part of a Hack Day organized by the Cronkite School and the College of Technology & Innovation.
The Cronkite School at ASU has won more awards in the Broadcast Education Association’s Festival of Media Arts competition than any other school in the country for the fifth year in a row.
The National Association of Broadcasters Education Foundation and the Cronkite School at ASU are offering recent graduates from across the country an intensive 10-day media sales training program this summer.
Ten international journalists and communicators at the Cronkite School are visiting students and faculty at Yavapai College in central Arizona Friday for a daylong event on globalization and international cooperation.
The Cronkite School at ASU is holding a series of discussions featuring international journalists giving firsthand accounts from some of journalism’s most dangerous frontiers.
The president of the world’s largest public relations agency, the former president of NBC News and the host of ESPN’s “Baseball Tonight” are part of the spring “Must See Mondays” lecture series at ASU’s Cronkite School.
A former international journalist for BBC World Service in India is joining the Cronkite School at ASU as an assistant professor of digital media in fall 2014.
Top journalism students from 16 universities will conduct an investigation into state gun control efforts and gun rights issues as part of the 2014 Carnegie-Knight News21 national multimedia reporting initiative.
Fifteen journalism professors from around the country will participate in a five-day program on teaching entrepreneurial journalism through the annual Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute at the Cronkite School at ASU.
The founding dean of the Cronkite School at ASU is a new member of the National Advisory Board of The Poynter Institute, a global leader in journalism education.
ASU students can see how publications, such as Arizona Highways magazine, were made before the advent of computers through a printing press exhibit at the Cronkite School.
The chief operating officer of Republic Media told the newest graduates of the Cronkite School at ASU that accuracy and integrity are critical in the new era of digital communications.
A faculty member at the Cronkite School at ASU is part of a National Science Foundation-funded study examining how computer science is developing in sub-Saharan Africa and impacting innovation in the region.
Ryan Gabrielson, a reporter for The Center for Investigative Reporting’s California Watch, expressed concern over the scarcity of disability coverage as he accepted the inaugural Katherine Schneider Journalism Award for Excellence in Reporting on Disability Monday.
David J. Bodney, partner at Phoenix law firm Steptoe & Johnson LLP, is the new president of the Cronkite Endowment Board of Trustees at the Cronkite School at ASU.
The Donald W. Reynolds Center for Business Journalism selects 30 fellows for four days of intensive study in business journalism at the Cronkite School in January.
Craig A. Newman, chair of the National Board of Advisors at the Cronkite School, has been appointed a member of the newly established Trustees of ASU.
In honor of Veterans Day, the Cronkite School and Carnegie-Knight News21 at ASU are hosting a special panel discussion examining the unique issues and challenges that female veterans face when they return home from war.
Twelve international journalists are visiting the Cronkite School at ASU as part of the U.S. State Department’s prestigious Edward R. Murrow Program for Journalists.
For the second year in a row, a major national investigation by Carnegie-Knight News21 has received an EPPY Award from Editor & Publisher magazine in the best college/university investigative or documentary report category.
Award-winning newscaster Bob Schieffer discussed the dangers and hope of digital journalism as he accepted the 2013 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism Tuesday from ASU.
Marie Dillon, a prize-winning editorial writer at the Chicago Tribune, is this year's inductee to the Cronkite School Alumni Hall of Fame at Arizona State University.
More than 1,000 people from across the Valley and ASU participated in the 45th annual Y Race Phoenix and the inaugural Y Race Fitness Fest during Homecoming weekend.
The Committee to Protect Journalists releases a major investigation, led by Leonard Downie Jr., Weil Family Professor of Journalism at the Cronkite School, on U.S. government attacks on press freedoms.
Business school deans rank the quality of U.S. business and economic news coverage in a survey by the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU.
A Tampa Bay Times/Center for Investigative Reporting joint project, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal won gold, silver and bronze awards respectively in the seventh annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism.
Student and community health took a major stride with the grand opening of ASU’s Sun Devil Fitness Complex, a $24.1 million student recreation center in the heart of Downtown Phoenix.
For the first time, the Committee to Protect Journalists is conducting a major investigation, led by Leonard Downie Jr., Weil Family Professor of Journalism at the Cronkite School, on attacks to press freedoms by the U.S. government.
The Valley of the Sun YMCA and ASU are hosting the inaugural Y Race Fitness Fest, an interactive community health event and expo, on Oct. 18 at Civic Space Park on ASU’s downtown Phoenix campus.
Eighteen journalism students will be able to participate in the Carnegie-Knight News21 program over the next three years, thanks to the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation.
The Cronkite School is hosting the second annual Cronkite Day, a large-scale alumni celebration, on Oct. 18 as part of ASU’s Homecoming Weekend.
The president of the world’s largest public relations firm, a staff writer for The New Yorker and three Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists will be part of a public lecture series this fall at ASU’s Cronkite School.
Leading media figures from the United States, United Kingdom and Ireland will discuss who can create media in a digital world in a one-day symposium hosted by ASU on Sept. 16 at Dublin City University.
The Carnegie-Knight News21 program, a national multi-university reporting initiative, today released a major national investigation into the enduring battles facing post-9/11 veterans.
Two veteran journalists have been named Reynolds Visiting Business Journalism Professors at California State University, Fullerton and the University of Oklahoma under a $1.67 million grant from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation. They are Dick Weiss and Joe Winski.
ASU is joining with the Valley of the Sun YMCA to host the 45th edition of the Grand Canyon State’s oldest running event – the Y Race Phoenix.
The National Center on Disability and Journalism at ASU is accepting submissions for a new national journalism awards contest recognizing excellence in reporting on disability issues and people with disabilities.
The J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board has announced the selection of ASU Professor Andrew Leckey as a Fulbright Scholar to China for the 2014 spring term. He will teach business journalism at Sun Yat-Sen University in Guangzhou, China.
The Maricopa County Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has recognized Sharon Bramlett-Solomon, an associate professor at ASU’s Cronkite School, for outstanding teaching and exemplary community leadership service.
Registration is now open for two day-long training programs at the Cronkite School for people interested in how to self-publish on e-books and who want to learn to use social media in a strategic way.
An ASU senior from Scottsdale has won the national television championship in the prestigious Hearst Journalism Awards Program.
Thirty-four high school students, many from underrepresented communities, are learning journalism this summer through two residential programs at Cronkite.
Thirty-four high school journalism teachers from around the country will enhance their skills at ASU this month in a training program funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation and operated by the American Society of News Editors.
ASU is launching a program designed to bring together the worlds of journalism and medical science.
Arizona State University students won 12 awards in the Society of Professional Journalists’ prestigious national Mark of Excellence competition, more than double the number of any other university in the country.
Leonard Downie Jr., vice president at large of The Washington Post and Weil Family Professor of Journalism at the Cronkite School, makes the case in a Post opinion piece that the Obama administration is undermining investigative journalism in the U.S.
Bob Schieffer, the award-winning CBS News correspondent and longtime anchor of “Face the Nation,” will be the 2013 recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, ASU announced.
The Society of Professional Journalists presented a special First Amendment Award to the Cronkite School for a national multimedia investigative reporting project on voter rights and voting fraud.
National media personality and noted author Ian Punnett will join the Cronkite School at Arizona State University this fall as a doctoral student.
The national director of the Carnegie-Knight News21 program urged graduates of the Cronkite School to "pay it forward," giving back to their professions and others as they embark on their careers.
Brittany Morris, a junior in the 线上网赌网址-手机版, has been awarded a research scholarship from the Center for Religion and Conflict to travel to Kuwait to study the participation of Muslim women in civil society.
Journalism programs at the University of Oklahoma and California State University, Fullerton will receive visiting business journalism professors next spring under an ASU program funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.
Arizona State University has appointed documentary filmmaker Peter Byck to jointly serve as professor of practice for the Global Institute of Sustainability’s School of Sustainability and for the Cronkite School.
For the 13th consecutive year, students of the Cronkite School took first in the regional Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence student awards competition.
Two dozen journalists and educators from 16 countries come together for a discussion about globalization and international cooperation with students and faculty at Yavapai College in central Arizona.
Gwen Ifill, one of the nation's most recognizable and seasoned television journalists, said that diversity is not only important in newsrooms it is what makes society strong.
Cronkite students spent the past six weeks covering Major League Baseball teams for major media outlets as part of the school’s expanding sports-journalism program.
Lauren Gilger, a 2011 Cronkite graduate, won a prestigious George Foster Peabody Award for an ABC15 investigative series exposing a deadly acceleration defect in Ford Escapes that led to a massive recall of the SUVs.
Students in a business journalism reporting course at the Cronkite School spent their spring break in Los Angeles tracking the money side of entertainment.
For the fourth year in a row, the Cronkite School has won more awards in the Broadcast Education Association’s Festival of Media Arts competition than any other school in the country.
A new version of Urban Devil, a mobile app that lists events happening on and near ASU's Downtown Phoenix Campus, is now available in app stores and online.
The Cronkite School announces plans to offer a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mass Communications and Media Studies entirely online.
The New Media Innovation Lab and the Center for Games & Impact hold ASU’s first news game development workshop March 22 on the ASU Downtown Campus.
Gwen Ifill, one of the nation’s most recognized and respected television journalists, gives a free public lecture on diversity in the news at ASU.
Stephen Doig, the Knight Chair in Journalism in the Cronkite School, was recently selected as a member of the inaugural class of the Defense Information School (DINFOS) Hall of Fame in Fort Meade, Md.
The winners of the Knight News Challenge: Mobile present their projects for the first time at an ASU gathering on the future of mobile media.
The moderator of PBS’s “Washington Week” is among those headlining a spring speaker series at ASU.
Joe Hengemuehler, former news director at KNXV-TV, Phoenix’s ABC affiliate, is the newest Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at ASU.
ASU's Cronkite School teams up with The Arizona Republic to present “Politics and the Press,” the first in a series of community conversations.
ASU hosts an Associated Press exhibit of photojournalism chronicling American presidents at Cronkite.
Fifteen professors from U.S. universities come to Cronkite to learn principles of journalism entrepreneurship through the five-day Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute.
The executive editor of The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com told the newest graduates of the Cronkite School that though the journalism industry is changing rapidly, they can look forward to a bright future.
Former CNN correspondent Susan Lisovicz is the Donald W. Reynolds Visiting Professor in Business Journalism for the spring semester at the Cronkite School.
In a Dec. 6 op-ed for The Washington Post, Leonard Downie Jr., former executive editor of the Post and Weil Family Professor Journalism at the Cronkite School, urges the rejection of proposed legislation to stop intelligence leaks.
The Cronkite School will launch a leadership development program for high-performing freshmen in fall 2013.
A major national investigation into voting rights in the U.S. by Carnegie-Knight News21 has received a 2012 EPPY Award from Editor & Publisher magazine.
An ASU student reporting project on Puerto Rico is getting international distribution through BBC Mundo and the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism has selected 31 fellows – 16 journalists and 15 professors – for four days of intensive study in business journalism.
With the objective of strengthening the content it delivers in one of its new markets, The E.W. Scripps Company is embarking on a ground-breaking program with Arizona State University that will place top-tier journalism students in a Scripps newsroom.
Student journalists from Cronkite provided multimedia coverage of the 2012 elections Tuesday for audiences across Arizona.
ASU is launching Cronkite Nation, an interactive online network for graduates of the Cronkite School.
Award-winning sportscaster Bob Costas praised the “timeless virtues” exemplified by Walter Cronkite as he accepted the 2012 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism at ASU Tuesday.
CNN International anchor and host Becky Anderson is the 2012 Cronkite Alumni Hall of Fame inductee.
ASU, responding to an increase in both student and industry interest in sports media, is expanding its sports journalism programs and opportunities at the Cronkite School.
The Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences inducted Cronkite Professor John Craft into its Gold Circle Society.
The New York Times, USA Today and a joint project by The Charlotte Observer and The (Raleigh) News & Observer won gold, silver and bronze awards respectively in the sixth annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism, the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism announced.
The chairman of CBS News, a New York Times bureau chief, the editor of Slate Magazine and an award-winning author and historian are among those headlining a speaker series this fall at ASU.
ASU journalism alumni are invited back to the Cronkite School for the school’s first-ever large-scale alumni celebration Oct. 26.
The Donald W. Reynolds Foundation, the nation’s leader in philanthropic support of professional development and education in business journalism, has awarded two grants totaling $8.21 million to ASU to improve coverage of complex business and economic issues.
Student journalists from the national Carnegie-Knight News21 program will participate in a panel discussion about voting rights Tuesday at the Washington, D.C.-based New America Foundation.
Retha Hill, director of the New Media Innovation Lab at the Cronkite School, conducts a workshop at a conference in Mexico City on international open data movements.
The Downtown Phoenix Partnership and ASU have collaborated to bring a weekly Pop Up Park event to the ASU Downtown Phoenix campus.
ASU is offering the “Discover Phoenix” series on the Downtown Phoenix campus to help students engage with the thriving community that surrounds them.
Student journalists participating in the national Carnegie-Knight News21 program have produced a major national investigation into voting rights in the U.S.
Ten international journalists and communicators are starting their yearlong studies at the Cronkite School as part of the prestigious Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program.
CCNMA: Latino Journalists of California is relocating to ASU’s newly opened California offices in affiliation with the Cronkite School.
The Cronkite School has received ASU's inaugural Institutional Inclusion Award in recognition of its efforts to advance diversity and inclusion at the institutional level.
A new national journalism awards program at the Cronkite School will recognize excellence in reporting on disability issues and people with disabilities.
Students at the Cronkite School have founded the first university-based organization affiliated with the Asian American Journalists Association.
The Cronkite School has received two gifts to support the school’s public relations program.
Nineteen students from the Cronkite School are in London to cover the 2012 Olympic Games for Cronkite News Service and other news organizations.
Nine journalism students are participating in the Carnegie-Knight News21 program this summer thanks to support from Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation and the Hearst Foundations.
The federal government needs to remove roadblocks to granting nonprofit status to startup news organizations that provide increasingly important accountability journalism in communities around the nation, the former top editor of The Washington Post, now an ASU professor, said in a new report.
Six college journalism students from around the country will enhance their digital media skills at ASU this summer in the Village Voice Digital Media Fellowship Program.
Thirty high school journalism teachers from around the country will grow their skills at ASU this summer in a training program funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation and operated by the American Society of News Editors.
Three May graduates of the Cronkite School received honors in the national championships of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation’s Journalism Awards Program.
Thirty-eight high school students will learn digital and broadcast journalism skills this summer at the Cronkite School.
Gangplank, an Arizona nonprofit that fosters creative, collaborative and entrepreneurial working environments, has partnered with Arizona State University to provide a popup workspace on ASU’s Downtown Phoenix campus.
Fifteen business journalism students from the Cronkite School will intern this summer at major news organizations around the country.
Cronkite graduate Dustin Volz has received a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to Indonesia through the Fulbright U.S. Student Program.
For the third time in four years, Cronkite students have won the prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award.
Journalism programs at Central Michigan University, Elon University and Louisiana State University will receive visiting business journalism professors next spring under a $1.67 million grant from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.
The president of CBS News encouraged the newest graduates of the Cronkite School to stay true to the values embodied by the school’s namesake as they embark on their journalism careers.
Ben Silver, an award-winning correspondent for CBS News who later taught broadcast journalism at ASU for nearly 20 years, died Wednesday from complications of Parkinson’s disease at his home in St. Louis Park, Minn. He was 85.
Emmy Award-winning sportscaster Bob Costas will be the 2012 recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, ASU announced today.
Cronkite students have won seven awards in the Society of Professional Journalists’ prestigious national Mark of Excellence competition, including best student newscast and best online in-depth report.
The international program headquarters at the Cronkite School was named today in honor of alumna Adelaida Severson and her husband, Barry.
CBS News President David Rhodes will deliver the keynote graduation address next month at the Cronkite School.
For the 12th consecutive year, Cronkite students took first place in the regional Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence competition.
Cronkite student Jack Highberger is one of nine journalism students from across the country to win the 2012 Roy W. Howard National Collegiate Reporting Competition.
The national political editor of The Washington Post discussed how the new media landscape is changing the coverage of the 2012 presidential election Thursday night at Arizona State University.
Steven Ginsberg, the national political editor of The Washington Post, will be the featured speaker at the sixth annual Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture.
For the second time in three years, ASU has won first place in the Hearst Journalism Awards Program’s prestigious intercollegiate broadcast competition.
Steve Doig, Knight Chair in Journalism at the Cronkite School, has won a prestigious George Polk Award for his work with California Watch, a nonprofit investigative journalism organization.
Cronkite students are producing daily multimedia news coverage of Major League Baseball spring training for four major news organizations.
Recent Cronkite School graduate Elvina Nawaguna-Clemente has received the award for the nation’s top student-publication business story from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers.
Journalists, philanthropists and community leaders will gather at ASU this week to discuss the role of philanthropy in the future of local accountability journalism.
A new partnership between American Public Media and ASU will help foster collaborative reporting and innovative storytelling in public affairs journalism.
Sharon Bernstein, an award-winning editor and reporter with more than 20 years of experience at the Los Angeles Times, has been named the Donald W. Reynolds Visiting Professor in Business Journalism for the spring 2012 semester at the Cronkite School.
A major national investigation into food safety in America is now available in e-book form.
The Reynolds Center for Business Journalism has named four veteran business journalists as its inaugural visiting business journalism professors.
A mobile news app for smartphones such as iPhones and Androids is now available for Cronkite News, the multimedia daily news site produced by the Cronkite School.
Two Cronkite School professors are receiving a grant from AEJMC and the Knight Foundation to support further development of a student-created mobile app.
Sandra Mims Rowe, former editor of The (Portland) Oregonian and chairman of the Committee to Protect Journalists, will be the newest Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at ASU.
John Dille, a faculty associate at the Cronkite School, has been named a “Giant of Broadcasting” by the Library of American Broadcasting.
The Cronkite School has received a grant from the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation to support the News21 initiative.
The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences' Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter will induct Cronkite Career Services Director Michael Wong into its Silver Circle Society.
In his column for The Guardian, Kauffman Professor of Digital Media Entrepreneurship Dan Gillmor looks at the life and legacy of Steve Jobs in a piece titled, "Steve Jobs: a man of contradiction and genius."
Nearly 350 people gathered at the Cronkite School this week for a Federal Communications Commission hearing to discuss the future of U.S. media.
Craig Harris of The Arizona Republic wins the Reynolds Center's Barlett & Steele gold award, which recognizes the best in investigative business reporting.
The Cronkite School will host a Federal Communications Commission hearing Monday on the future of American media.
Eleven students from the Cronkite School have been nominated for the 2011 National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Student Achievement Awards.
Journalism programs at Colorado State University, Grambling State University, Texas Christian University and the University of South Carolina will receive visiting business journalism professors next spring under a $1.67 million grant from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.
A Cronkite student reporting project in the Dominican Republic is getting national distribution through The Washington Post and the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting.
Ten international journalists and communicators are studying at the Cronkite School as part of the prestigious Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program.
The Cronkite School this week welcomes its first class of doctoral students in a program designed to transform communication professionals into media researchers and scholars.
A new study by the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU finds business journalists are optimistic about the economy.
An investigative series on the dangers of traveling in America is now available in e-book form.
In partnership with the McCormick Foundation, the Cronkite School is offering free online training for journalists reporting on the U.S. census.
Former Sun Devil and TV adoption advocate Christine Devine ('87), an anchor for KTTV Fox 11 in Los Angeles, earns her 15th Emmy.
Professors from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism at Arizona State University have developed a new textbook for college students pursuing broadcast journalism.
McClatchy-Tribune News Service is partnering with Arizona State University to distribute Cronkite News Service stories worldwide.
Students and faculty of the Cronkite School are the recipients of a string of recent awards honoring their work in radio, television, multimedia and entrepreneurship.
SmartPHX, the new smartphone app developed by students to help visitors and natives alike navigate downtown Phoenix is garnering media attention across the state.
Selected journalism professors will learn about teaching entrepreneurship under a new fellowship program by the Cronkite School and the Scripps Howard Foundation.
Student teams from the Cronkite School, led by Associate Professors Fran Matera and Xu Wu, win top awards in national PR competitions.
Pulitzer Prize-winner William K. Marimow will join the Cronkite School to lead the Carnegie-Knight News21 in-depth digital journalism program.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York are funding Arizona State University to operate the News21 in-depth digital journalism program for the next decade, the foundations announced today.
Thirty-five high school journalism teachers will grow their skills at ASU this summer in a training program funded by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation and operated by the American Society of News Editors.
Students of the Cronkite School finish first and third in a major multimedia journalism competition.
Clear Channel Radio and Digital Media establishes a new scholarship for students of the Cronkite School in memory of the late radio personality Bill Austin.
Christopher Callahan, who has led the dramatic transformation of the Cronkite School into one of the nation’s top and most innovative journalism schools, is named vice provost of ASU’s Downtown Phoenix campus.
The Cronkite School offers a series of hands-on workshops this summer for Arizonans of all ages seeking 21st-century digital media skills and strategies.
The former executive editor of the Detroit Free Press urges the newest graduates to take charge of their careers and create their own roles as they enter fast-changing media industries.
A Cronkite student is the recipient of this year’s Alistair Cooke Award in Journalism to the United Kingdom.
For the 11th consecutive year, students of the Cronkite School take first place in the regional Society of Professional Journalists Mark of Excellence awards.
The Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communication voted unanimously Friday to grant full re-accreditation to the Cronkite School.
A new podcast series produced by the Cronkite School is the most popular selection of Apple’s iTunesU.
Cronkite School Dean Christopher Callahan becomes the first dean named to the Board of Directors of the American Society of News Editors.
Seven Cronkite students spent the spring semester covering the Milwaukee Brewers’ spring training for JSOnline, the website of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The Society of Professional Journalists honors two watchdog projects by Cronkite News Service, a professional program operated by the Cronkite School.
Two recent graduates of the Cronkite School win national business reporting awards from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers.
Seventeen students from the Cronkite School spend their spring break in the Dominican Republic reporting on immigration issues.
Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics Caesar Andrews receives the 2011 Robert G. McGruder Award for fostering diversity in the field of journalism.
The Cronkite School hosts a national panel on ethical considerations for journalists who cover violence and tragedies in communities.
The Cronkite School won more Broadcast Education Association student journalism awards this year than any other school in the country.
The Cronkite School dedicates its sixth-floor broadcast center in honor of the late Stanley and Erika Tobin, longtime supporters of public-service journalism.
A multimedia project by new graduate students of the Cronkite School wins the highest honors in the interactive multimedia competition of the Broadcast Education Association’s Festival of Media Arts.
Cronkite graduate Ian Lee reports from Cairo on the protests, working for The Daily News Egypt and Reuters and contributing to CNN reports.
Cronkite students will produce multimedia news coverage of the Milwaukee Brewers' spring training for Wisconsin’s largest news organization.
Two new journalism clubs will advance opportunities for students interested in African-American media issues or expanding their photojournalism skills.
Brian Storm, founder and executive producer of MediaStorm, will kick off a speaker series this spring at the Cronkite School.
The Times of London features the Cronkite School in a story about the future of U.S. journalism education in the digital age.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at the Cronkite School hosts 30 journalists and professors for its annual Strictly Financials and Business Journalism Professors seminars.
Major news organizations are playing a growing role in the dissemination of rumors, Dean Christopher Callahan writes in The Arizona Republic.
Students from the 线上网赌网址-手机版 have been honored for their work in multimedia, newspapers, television and public relations in a series of recent national and regional competitions.
Rafael Romo, senior Latin American affairs editor of CNN Worldwide, is the 2010 inductee to the Cronkite Alumni Hall of Fame.
For two weeks in December, 12 News/KPNX-TV will broadcast the station’s weather segments from the 线上网赌网址-手机版 at Arizona State University.
Susan Lisovicz, a longtime CNN Wall Street reporter who covered the 2008 financial debacle and bailout, has been named the Reynolds Visiting Professor in Business Journalism for the spring 2011 semester at the 线上网赌网址-手机版 at Arizona State University.
Top journalism students at Arizona State University have produced a series of in-depth, multimedia stories on immigrants and immigration issues facing the United States.
Diane Sawyer met with nearly 200 Arizona State University students, accepted the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism and anchored ABC’s “World News with Diane Sawyer” twice from the 线上网赌网址-手机版 during an extraordinary two-day visit.
Diane Sawyer is anchoring the ABC News national newscast “World News with Diane Sawyer” two days from the rooftop of the Cronkite School.
Cronkite students will produce three hours of live election coverage Tuesday night on Arizona PBS and provide continuous online coverage of local and state election results on cronkitenewsonline.com.
Don Dotts, an alumnus of the Cronkite School, received Arizona State University’s Alumni Service Award at halftime of the ASU Homecoming football game at Sun Devil Stadium.
Brian Storm, a leading figure in digital storytelling and founder of the multimedia production studio MediaStorm, will be a visiting professor at the Cronkite School next semester.
Reuters received the gold award and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel received the silver award in the 2010 Barlett & Steele Awards.
The New Media Innovation Lab at Arizona State University has built a Web-based campaign finance database that will be integrated into about 100 U.S. news sites owned by Gannett Co.
Cronkite Dean Christopher Callahan talks about Cronkite News on Eight, Arizona’s PBS station, with host Ted Simons.
Arizona State University today launches Cronkite News, a news website providing Arizonans original multimedia stories each day about critical public policy issues facing the state.
Pam Johnson, who led the award-winning School of Journalism & Broadcasting at Western Kentucky University for the past seven years, will spend her fall sabbatical at the Cronkite School to study digital media.
Two new clubs for journalism students at the Cronkite School foster diversity within the Arizona State University community and beyond.
Prominent media professionals will speak to students Monday evenings this fall at the Cronkite School.
A new online store enables students, alumni, family and fans of the Cronkite School to wear their pride in the school on their sleeve—literally.
The Cronkite School is partnering with The Arizona Republic and 12 News to provide Arizonans a new public service that evaluates the accuracy of claims made by politicians running for office this fall.
Cronkite School Dean Christopher Callahan, accepting the Scripps Howard Journalism Administrator of the Year Award, said the recognition is “much more of a team award than an individual honor.”
Village Voice Media is partnering with the Cronkite School to offer summer fellowships in digital media for college journalism students from underrepresented groups.
News21, a program of the Carnegie-Knight Initiative on the Future of Journalism Education, is offering a new Web-based resource center to help colleges and universities advance the way they teach journalism.
Carnegie Professor Rick Rodriguez is profiled in the latest edition of Diverse: Issues in Higher Education for his work teaching students how to cover immigration issues.
Caesar Andrews, former executive editor of the Detroit Free Press, will be the new Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at Arizona State University.
The Cronkite School building has been awarded an International Architecture Award, Arizona State University announced.
Cronkite professor Dawn Gilpin teaches a newly developed class, Media 2.0: Social Media, to students throughout Arizona State University.
Business journalists express job satisfaction and confidence in journalism's future in a survey commissioned by the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism.
Thirty-four high school teachers from around the country are participating in an intensive journalism boot camp at the Cronkite School.
A student and a professor at the Cronkite School won a $90,000 Knight News Challenge grant to develop a mobile application that enables citizens to propose and collaborate on ways to better their communities.
Dan Gillmor, director of the Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship at the Cronkite School, will be joining Salon.com as a regular blogger.
The Cronkite School's New Media Innovation Lab has developed an innovative iPhone application that makes it easier for citizens to connect with their elected officials.
NBC News President Steve Capus urged graduates of the Cronkite School to uphold the time-honored news values for which the school’s namesake is remembered.
Four Cronkite students will travel to New York in June to compete in the national Hearst Journalism Awards championships for radio, television and print.
For an unprecedented five years in a row, Cronkite students win more awards than any other school in the country in the Society of Professional Journalists’ competition.
Journalism students win a series of national awards in television, radio, online and public relations. Awards recognize work ranging from a documentary to multimedia packages.
The Cronkite School names nine alumni to a new national board of advisors whose members will provide leadership and support for the school.
The Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship at the Cronkite School is awarded the 2010 President’s Award for Innovation from Arizona State University.
Colton Shone wins an Edward R. Murrow Award, one of the most prestigious honors in professional broadcast journalism.
Cronkite broadcast students finish first in two major news competitions: the Hearst Journalism Awards and the Broadcast Education Association Awards.
Steve Capus, president of NBC News, will be the Cronkite School’s spring 2010 convocation speaker. The ceremony will be held May 14 on ASU’s Tempe campus.
Sue Clark-Johnson, former head of the nation’s largest newspaper group and now director of the Morrison Institute for Public Policy, is joining the Cronkite faculty.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism is offering 20 fellowships for an all-expenses-paid seminar on “Covering the Green Economy” June 28-30 in Phoenix.
Christopher Callahan, founding dean of the Cronkite School, is named the Scripps Howard Foundation Journalism Administrator of the Year.
Cronkite photojournalism students are documenting immigration and poverty in Arizona and along the U.S.-Mexico border under a grant from the Howard G. Buffett Foundation.
Cronkite Professor Steve Doig will teach precision journalism and computer assisted reporting in Portugal this fall as a Fulbright Distinguished Chair.
The Cronkite School’s Knight Chair in Journalism and IRE announce the Philip Meyer Journalism Award for investigative reporting that uses social science research
Cronkite NewsWatch now airs live on Eight World, a digital channel of Eight-Arizona PBS that reaches more than 1 million homes across Arizona.
The Washington Post reporter who uncovered mistreatment of wounded veterans at Walter Reed will be the featured speaker at this year’s Paul J. Schatt Lecture.
Two Cronkite students take first and third places in the Hearst competition for editorial writing while six others are honored for their feature writing.
The co-founder of Politico, a TV news anchor, a Google marketing expert and student digital inventors will headline the Must See Monday speaker series this semester.
Award-winning New York Times business writer Leslie Wayne is the first Donald W. Reynolds Visiting Professor, thanks to a new grant from the Reynolds Foundation.
The Cronkite School will help train high school journalism teachers from around the country for the next five years through a new grant by the Reynolds Foundation.
Registration is open for the third Cronkite New Media Academy, offering 10 Saturday sessions to develop multimedia Web skills.
Longtime Washington Post editor Leonard Downie Jr. delivers the keynote address at the Cronkite School’s December 2009 convocation. Ninety-six students received degrees.
Dean Christopher Callahan writes about the Cronkite School’s interview with controversial Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio in The Arizona Republic.
KAET/Eight, Arizona’s PBS station, airs a “Horizon” special on Brian Williams winning Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.
Andrew Leckey, the Donald W. Reynolds Chair in Business Journalism at the Cronkite School, discusses Comcast’s purchase of NBC on the PBS “NewsHour.”
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism awards a total of 23 fellowships to journalists for seminars to be held at Cronkite next year.
Perk Rankin, professor emeritus, founding member of the Cronkite Endowment Board and former Newsweek executive, died at his Tempe home. He was 92.
Three Cronkite professors interviewing Sheriff Joe Arpaio will air live on a big video screen outside the school and on the Internet to accommodate heavy public interest.
Read the coverage of Brian Williams receiving the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, and watch the NBC News anchor’s acceptance speech and a special video tribute.
Brian Williams hosts the “NBC Nightly News” live from the rooftop of the Cronkite School Tuesday. Williams is the recipient of this year’s Walter Cronkite Award of Excellence in Journalism.
The anchor and managing editor of the “NBC Nightly News” receives the 26th annual Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism from the Cronkite School before an audience of more than 1,200 in Phoenix.
Chip Dean, award-winning director of ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” and a 1977 ASU graduate, is the newest member of the Cronkite Alumni Hall of Fame.
A new book by Cronkite Professor Ed Sylvester argues that government biodefense policies are really making Americans more vulnerable to terrorism.
Leonard Downie Jr., the former Washington Post editor and newest Cronkite professor, writes about the future of journalism in a powerful new study.
The Cronkite School’s new downtown Phoenix building earns a silver certification for sustainability citation from the U.S. Green Building Council. The award will be given during the Greenbuild International Conference and Expo in Phoenix.
Cronkite students are honored in the 2009 Emmy Awards given by the Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Five Cronkite School productions are nominated in the Student Production category and one in a professional category.
The Cronkite School hosts a discussion on "Extreme Speech and Democracy" Oct. 22 as part of National Freedom of Speech Week. The event is hosted by Cronkite School Associate Professor Joseph Russomanno.
The Miami Herald wins the gold award and Bloomberg Markets the silver award in the 2009 Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism, the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism announces.
The Cronkite School is the new home for the National Center on Disability & Journalism, providing resources for journalists and a forum for journalists and people with disabilities to share and comment on news coverage.
Walter Cronkite’s life, work and dedication to journalism are remembered during a daylong tribute at the school that bears his name. A satellite interview with renowned journalists and a special video tribute are part of the event.
Sharon Rosenhause, a longtime newspaper editor who has been a champion of newsroom diversity, is the new Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at the Cronkite School.
ASU students produce multimedia reports on “Latino America” that demonstrate how journalism can be done in innovative and in-depth ways on the Web. The projects look at the social, economic, cultural and political impact of the surging Latino population in the United States.
Two Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists, a National Public Radio correspondent, three TV news anchors, the former editor of The Washington Post and Sheriff Joe Arpaio will headline a Monday night speakers series this fall at the Cronkite School.
The Cronkite School is welcoming the strongest freshman class in the school’s history. This year’s incoming class of 264 is 45 percent larger than last year’s cohort.
The 线上网赌网址-手机版 is planning a daylong tribute next month to honor the late CBS News anchor.
A group of supporters of the 线上网赌网址-手机版 at Arizona State University is creating a fund to honor the school’s namesake and educate future generations about the importance of the journalistic values his work embodied.
Robin J. Phillips, a journalist with a rich background in business news and online journalism, joins the Cronkite School’s Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism as Web managing editor.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at ASU launches two new blogs to help business journalists stay ahead of the news and polish their skills. The blogs are available at www.businessjournalism.org.
The Cronkite School is hosting its second Cronkite New Media Academy this fall, offering professional training for those who want to learn new media skills.
Flags at ASU are lowered in tribute to the late Walter Cronkite, and the Cronkite School offers special tributes to the school's namesake.
Cronkite students win recognition for work that includes a Webby honor, a multimedia reporting project that is being showcased by the Online News Association and a presentation that helped win Phoenix an All-American City designation.
For the third year in a row, Cronkite students top a national student magazine contest. Students won a total of seven awards in the 2009 contest sponsored by the Magazine Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
Journalists from all over the country will gather at the Cronkite School in 2010 for the Investigative Reporters and Editors’ Computer Assisted Reporting Conference. The annual event offers hands-on training and expert insight into cutting-edge developments.
Cronkite students sweep a national intercollegiate journalism competition that honors the best of global news coverage. The winners were all students of Associate Professor Carol Schwalbe, who specializes in multimedia journalism and magazine writing.
An innovative news project, developed by two students at Cronkite’s Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship, wins a Knight News Challenge grant.
Thirty-five high school teachers from 14 states are participating in an intensive journalism boot camp at the Cronkite School this month. The program is sponsored by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation and administered by the American Society of News Editors.
Cronkite sophomore Colton Shone is this year’s national champion in the Hearst Journalism Awards program for his work in radio reporting.
Young adults rely heavily on the Internet for economic news, according to a new nationwide study by the Reynolds Center for Business Journalism.
The Cronkite School is first in the nation in the Hearst Journalism Awards, considered the Pulitzers of college journalism. Cronkite has won the competition twice in the past three years and finished first or second in four of the past five years.
A television special goes behind the scenes of a Cronkite School student reporting project in South Africa. The news magazine airs on Eight/KAET’s “Eight World” program and is featured on the KAET Web site.
The Commission on the Status of Women at Arizona State University honors Cronkite Dean Christopher Callahan for his work to advance the status of women at ASU.
For a remarkable fourth consecutive year, Cronkite students finish first nationally in the Society of Professional Journalists' intercollegiate news contest.
CBS 5 News anchor Catherine Anaya urges graduating Cronkite students to be fearless and preserve their integrity as they step into an ever-changing field.
The Cronkite School is launching a doctoral program designed for professional journalists and communicators seeking to enter the world of scholarship and research. It will be the only mass communication Ph.D. program in Arizona and one of the few in the western U.S.
The Society of American Business Editors and Writers is moving its national headquarters to the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism.
Julie Cart, a 1980 journalism graduate of ASU and member of the Cronkite School Alumni Hall of Fame, wins the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting for a powerful Los Angeles Times series on fighting wildfires.
Thousands of aspiring young journalists and their teachers gather in downtown Phoenix for the Journalism Education Association and the National Scholastic Press Association convention, the largest high school journalism conference in the country.
The New York Times features the Cronkite School and its focus on innovation, entrepreneurship and the digital future in a major story about journalism education.
A Cronkite student project on families divided by the U.S.-Mexico border wins a prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for college print journalism.
“NBC Nightly News” anchor Brian Williams will be this year’s recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.
The Cronkite School is opening the Cronkite New Media Academy this summer in response to a growing demand for multimedia and Web training. Participants will learn how to set up and maintain fully functional, multimedia-rich Web sites.
Eight/KAET features “Cronkite NewsWatch en Espanol,” the school's new Spanish-language newscast, on the station’s “Horizonte” program.
For the ninth consecutive year, Cronkite students dominate the Society of Professional Journalists' regional student awards competition, capturing 39 awards — almost four times the number won by the second-place school.
A new grant from the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation supports a visiting professorship at the Cronkite School. The Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics honors pioneering newswoman Edith Kinney Gaylord.
Babak Dehghanpisheh, Newsweek’s Baghdad bureau chief and a prize-winning journalist who has extensively covered the Middle East, is the featured speaker at the third annual Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture at the Cronkite School March 23.
The Cronkite School marks Sunshine Week, a national initiative encouraging dialogue about open government and freedom of information, with a March 18 panel featuring Attorney General Terry Goddard and other leading voices from media, government and public relations.
Cronkite Professor Tim McGuire comments on new business models as journalism shifts from print to online during an interview on Eight/KAET’s HORIZON program.
A report commissioned by the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at the Cronkite School finds that more Americans get their economic news from television than daily newspapers, the Internet and radio combined.
Rick Rodriguez, the Cronkite School’s Carnegie Professor of Journalism, talks about teaching students to cover Latino issues in an interview with Gregory Favre of the Poynter Institute.
A Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist, two leading journalists from Newsweek, the former editor of The Washington Post and local television news anchors are among the speakers who will be featured at the Cronkite School this spring.
Stephen Doig, professor and Knight Chair in Journalism at the Cronkite School, is at the center of a debate over how large the crowds were at President Barack Obama’s inauguration. Doig used a GeoEye-1 image, plus TV footage and photos from Flickr to come up with his count.
Five Arizona high schools have been selected for the Stardust High School Journalism Program, bringing to 10 the number of schools that are part of a unique initiative to create newsrooms in underserved Arizona high schools.
A first-place finish and two other top five performances propel the Cronkite School into first place in the Hearst Journalism Awards Program’s national broadcast competition.
A Spanish-language version of Cronkite NewsWatch is now being aired on Univision’s TeleFutura network in Phoenix. NewsWatch Espanol is produced by top bilingual students in the Cronkite School.
For the first time, Cronkite NewsWatch, the Cronkite School’s award-winning student newscast, is airing on Eight/KAET, Arizona’s public television station. The show has a prime-time slot on KAET digital (Cox Cable Channel 88) and over the air on digital channel 8.3.
Arizona Diamondbacks President Derrick Hall delivers the keynote address for the Cronkite School’s December 2008 convocation. A total of 86 students were awarded degrees during the ceremony, the first held in downtown Phoenix.
Cronkite Junior Christie Roshau wins first place in a national public service announcement contest that spotlights the importance of free speech.
Leonard Downie Jr., the longtime executive editor of The Washington Post who led his newspaper to more Pulitzer Prizes than any editor in American journalism history, is joining the faculty of the 线上网赌网址-手机版 at Arizona State University.
Two Cronkite students are among the winners in the feature writing competition of the national Hearst Journalism Awards Program. The wins put the Cronkite School in second place nationally after the first round of the prestigious writing competition.
Ted Simons, host of HORIZON on Eight/KAET, interviews Cronkite Dean Christopher Callahan about the school’s new building and new programs during a week-long celebration marking the school’s grand opening and the 25th anniversary of the Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.
The Marguerite and Jack Clifford Gallery, housing hundreds of artifacts that honor the career of Walter Cronkite and the history of journalism, is now open at the Cronkite School.
Three students in the Cronkite School are among the honorees in the Emmy Awards given by the Rocky Mountain Southwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. In all, six students and one recent graduate were nominated for 2008 Emmy honors.
The new home of the Cronkite School will serve as an election night hub, with top analysts providing commentary, students and community members watching the returns in the First Amendment Forum and advanced students producing three hours of live TV election coverage.
For the second year in a row, a Cronkite senior is one of the Scripps Howard Foundation’s top 10 journalism students in the country. Deanna Dent of Tempe won a $10,000 scholarship for her academic and journalistic achievements.
BusinessWeek magazine is first and The Seattle Times is runner-up in the second annual Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism, given by the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism.
The executive editor of The Arizona Republic, Nicole Carroll, is the newest member of the Cronkite Alumni Hall of Fame. Carroll, who graduated from the Cronkite School in 1991, was named to the Republic’s No. 2 newsroom position earlier this year. At age 40, she is one of the youngest executive editors of a major metropolitan newspaper.
A five-story light sculpture is attracting attention at the new Cronkite School building in downtown Phoenix. The artwork, designed by Paul Deeb of Vox Arts, Baltimore, replaces what would be ordinary windows in the main stairwell on the south side of the building.
The Cronkite School has raised more than $2.6 million to help fund digital equipment and specialized student programs in the school’s newly opened home on ASU’s downtown Phoenix campus.
The new Phoenix home of the Cronkite School officially opens Monday, a spectacular 21st century learning center designed to teach and inspire digital media innovation while capitalizing on a premier location in the heart of the nation’s fifth-largest city.
The Cronkite School is hosting special programs every day for students and the general public during the inaugural semester of the school’s new downtown Phoenix home.
Digital media innovator CJ Cornell is named Entrepreneur in Residence at the new Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship at the Cronkite School. He will help students plan, develop and launch new media products.
Digital media leader Jody Brannon is the new national director of a 12-university, $7.5 million project funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation to explore new ways to produce in-depth multimedia journalism.
Five Arizona high schools will get fully equipped multimedia newsrooms this fall as part of the Stardust High School Journalism Program, a unique initiative to create newsrooms in high schools.
Ian Lee and Emily Falkner are among 12 ASU graduates who have been named 2008 Fulbright Scholars. Lee will be studying in Cairo, Egypt, and Falkner will be a teaching assistant in the Slovak Republic.
Assistant Professor Xu Wu, who teaches public relations in the Cronkite School, is in China advising media organizations, government agencies and research institutes on China’s response to the catastrophic earthquake that struck the country last month. Wu is a specialist in crisis communications.
A Cronkite student documentary on Muslim students at ASU has won two awards for excellence in national and international competitions. “Holy Hunger in the Midst of Plenty,” won a Telly Award and a Videographer Award of Distinction.
Jason Manning, political editor of washingtonpost.com, one of the nation’s leaders in digital media, is moving west to become director of Student Media at Arizona State University.
For the third consecutive year, Cronkite students have finished first in the Society of Professional Journalists’ highly competitive intercollegiate news contest.
N. Christian Anderson III, who led the Orange County Register to two Pulitzer Prizes as editor and later became the newspaper’s award-winning publisher, will join ASU this fall as the Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics.
Former St. Louis Post-Dispatch Editor Ellen Soeteber, the school’s Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics, delivered the keynote convocation address to the 187 newest Cronkite graduates.
Newly promoted Associate Professor Carol Schwalbe is the recipient of this year’s ASU Faculty Achievement Award for Excellence in Classroom Performance.
Norm Ginsburg, a longtime CBS executive who taught part time at the Cronkite School for more than 20 years, died Thursday after a short illness. He was 83.
The Cronkite School will unveil two major journalism diversity projects at the UNITY: Journalists of Color convention in Chicago this summer. The projects, funded by the McCormick Foundation, consist of a Web-based clearinghouse for research on news diversity issues and a census of ethnicity of the Washington press corps.
Win Holden, publisher of Arizona Highways magazine, has been named president of the Cronkite Endowment Board for 2008, replacing Ron Bergamo, general manager of AZ-TV, who was killed in car accident in January.
The Cronkite School won more awards than any other school in the nation in the latest Broadcast Education Association annual news reporting and interactive media contests, including two of the BEA’s top honors.
Rick Rodriguez, former executive editor of the Sacramento Bee and the first Latino president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, is joining the faculty of the Cronkite School as the school’s Southwest Borderlands Initiative Professor.
Twelve of the nation’s top minority broadcast students spent a week in Phoenix learning from local television professionals as part of an annual fellowship sponsored by the Meredith Corp., KPHO CBS 5 in Phoenix and the Cronkite School.
Four leading women journalists will discuss the gains women have made in journalism and the challenges they still face at the second annual Paul J. Schatt Memorial Lecture, held in memory of Paul J. Schatt, longtime editor at The Arizona Republic and instructor at the Cronkite School.
Aaron Brown, former CNN anchor and the Walter Cronkite Professor of Journalism at ASU, is giving this year’s Goldwater Lecture, offering his insights on press coverage and the 2008 presidential campaign
Longtime media executive Ron Bergamo, chairman of the Cronkite School Endowment Board of Trustees and general manager of AZ-TV in Phoenix, was killed in a car accident Sunday.
Rick Rodriguez, former executive editor of The Sacramento Bee and one of the nation’s most prominent Latino journalists, told Cronkite School graduates that massive changes in the journalism profession mean opportunity for them. Rodriguez delivered the keynote speech at the Cronkite School’s fall convocation ceremony.
Cronkite students are now appearing weekly on a network television affiliate in one of the nation’s largest media markets.
Longtime Chicago television journalist Bob Petty is the newest member of the Cronkite Alumni Hall of Fame.
Business stories on environmental sustainability published in the nation’s 10 largest newspapers have increased dramatically, a new Reynolds study shows.
Twelve journalists and 12 journalism educators are awarded Reynolds Center fellowships to focus on business journalism, to be held concurrently in January at the Cronkite School.
With nearly 1,100 in attendance, Walter Cronkite presented the annual award in his name to television journalist Jane Pauley.
Rick Rodriguez, the former executive editor of The Sacramento Bee and one of the nation’s most prominent Latino journalists, will deliver the keynote address at the fall 2007 convocation for graduates of the Cronkite School.
Dan Gillmor, an internationally recognized author and leader in new media and citizen-based journalism, will be the founding director of the new Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship at the Cronkite School.
Dean Christopher Callahan calls the subpoenas of New Times records a “grotesque and unprecedented” abuse of government powers.
Ellen Soeteber, an award-winning journalist and former top editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, will join Arizona State University as the Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor in Journalism Ethics at the Cronkite School.
Cronkite students won more awards than students from any other university in the country in the 2007 Student Magazine Contest, sponsored by the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
Reporters at The New York Times and The Sun in Baltimore have been awarded the inaugural Barlett & Steele Awards for Investigative Business Journalism, the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism announced.
The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com are creating an endowed scholarship at the Cronkite School in the name of Republic film critic Bill Muller, who died Sept. 6. The scholarship will be awarded annually to a deserving journalism student.
Tim J. McGuire, the Frank Russell Chair for the Business of Journalism in the Cronkite School, is launching a blog on the business of journalism and media ethics. He will write two to three times a week on trends in the rapidly changing news industry.
Tim McGuire, the Frank Russell Chair in the Business of Journalism at the Cronkite School, will deliver the keynote address for the Arizona Newspapers Association annual meeting and fall convention. Other Cronkite faculty will lead sessions on topics ranging from computer-assisted reporting to managing a newsroom.
Most members of the Asian American Journalists Association have positive feelings about the work they do, but they worry that media consolidation and newsroom cutbacks will weaken the profession’s commitment to diversity, according to a new survey conducted by the Cronkite School on behalf of the Asian American Journalists Association.
Cronkite School Dean Christopher Callahan releases a statement following the news helicopter crash in Phoenix on July 27 that claimed four lives, including that of Jim Cox, a photojournalist for Channel 3 who was a 1993 Cronkite graduate.
Christine Devine, the Emmy Award-winning Los Angeles news anchor and 1987 graduate of the Cronkite School, is making a $50,000 gift to her alma mater to help kickoff a fund-raising campaign for the school’s new home.
Associate Professor Sharon Bramlett-Solomon has been named Outstanding Educator for 2007 by the newspaper division of the nation’s leading journalism education organization.
Retha Hill, a senior executive at BET and digital media leader who helped launch The Washington Post’s first Internet news operation, will join the Cronkite School as director of the New Media Innovation Lab.
Elias Johnson, a recent Cronkite School graduate, took first place in television reporting at the 2006-2007 Hearst National Championships in San Francisco.
Anita Luera, a long-time journalist and past president of the Arizona Latino Media Association, is the first director of high school journalism programs for the Cronkite School.
Cronkite students finished first in the Society of Professional Journalists national Mark of Excellence awards contest for the second consecutive year.
A 30-minute primetime special on Eight/KAET, Arizona’s public television station, showcased the work of advanced television news students at the Cronkite School.
With former CNN anchor Aaron Brown delivering the keynote address, the Cronkite School graduated 196 bachelor’s degree candidates and 15 master’s degree candidates at its spring convocation.
Three-fourths of the nation’s largest newspapers now offer blogs on business-related topics, according to a study released by the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at Arizona State University.
The Cronkite School finished first in the nation in the annual Hearst Journalism Awards, often called the Pulitzer Prizes of college journalism. This year’s victory follows two consecutive second-place finishes and marks the school’s sixth consecutive Top 10 finish in the prestigious competition.
The Cronkite School is first in the nation for broadcast news in the prestigious Hearst Journalism Awards program.
James N. Crutchfield, a former major newspaper publisher and editor, will become director of Student Media at Arizona State University and the Weil Family Professor of Journalism at the Cronkite School.
The Cronkite School will help train high school journalism teachers from around the country through a new program created by the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.
Professor Tim McGuire, the Frank Russell Chair in the Business of Journalism, writes in The Arizona Republic that journalism ethics hold the key to the future of daily newspapers.
For the first time ever, a student has won back-to-back awards as the nation’s best collegiate TV news reporter.
Two Cronkite students sweep the first collegiate awards given by the National Press Photographers Association.
Dean Christopher Callahan talks about the future of the Cronkite School on a new podcast produced by the ASU Office of the President.
Dean Christopher Callahan writes in The Arizona Republic that the future of journalism education must focus on both emerging media technologies and traditional journalism values.
Former CBS Evening News anchor Walter Cronkite joined Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon and ASU President Michael Crow to break ground on the new $71 million building that will house his journalism school in downtown Phoenix.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism is placing top business journalism students from universities around the country at major newspaper internships this summer.
Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon, ASU President Michael Crow and former CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite will host a groundbreaking ceremony for the new building that will house the 线上网赌网址-手机版 and KAET/Eight, the ASU-operated public television station.
The Cronkite School, the Meredith Corp. and KPHO CBS 5 hosted 12 top minority journalism students from around the country as part of a new fellowship program designed to train the next generation of TV journalists.
The Knight Chair in Journalism at Arizona State University and Investigative Reporters and Editors Inc. are honoring three news organizations for their use of social science research methods in investigative reporting.
Jack Clifford, a television industry leader for more than 50 years and an ardent supporter of the Cronkite School, is the recipient of this year’ Dean’s Award for Outstanding Service.
Two Cronkite School students have won top honors in a national photojournalism competition.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism is starting two new awards celebrating the best in print and online investigative business journalism. They will be named in honor of Don Barlett and Jim Steele, the Pulitzer Prize winning investigative reporting team.
The Cronkite School is launching a lecture series in honor of Paul J. Schatt, the veteran Arizona Republic editor who taught at the school for more than 30 years.
The Phoenix City Council approved a $71 million plan to design and build a six-story building that will house the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and KAET-TV, the public television station operated by Arizona State University.
Jack Clifford, a veteran TV executive who created the Food Network, is giving $500,000 to the Cronkite School to create an endowment for the school’s award-winning broadcast journalism program. In addition, Clifford will spearhead a $5 million fund-raising campaign for the program.
Jonathan Higuera, a veteran business reporter for The Arizona Republic, has been named deputy director of the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism at the Cronkite School.
The Arizona Republic and the Cronkite School are launching a multimedia reporting program that will prepare students for 21st century newsgathering while providing breaking news content for azcentral.com, the Republic’s news Web site.
The Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism is designating 15 educators from major universities as fellows for its inaugural Business Journalism Professor Seminar.
More than 60 Cronkite students, faculty and staff produced more than two hours of live Arizona election night coverage for local cable stations.
A national radio executive and a ground-breaking Native American journalist will be the newest inductees into the Cronkite School Alumni Hall of Fame. Susan Karis and Mary Kim Titla will be recognized Nov. 14 at the school’s 23rd Annual Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism Lunch.
Top broadcast news students at the Cronkite School now have their best TV work featured on MSNBC under a new partnership with the national news network.
A national leader in online news is leading a new lab that will help create multimedia products for Gannett and other news companies.
Derrick Hall, a Cronkite Alumni Hall of Fame member, is the new president of the Arizona Diamondbacks
The Cronkite School raised more than $100,000 from a fundraising challenge from philanthropists Ira and Mary Lou Fulton.
Meredith Corp., CBS 5 and the Cronkite School are launching a nationwide fellowship program for minority broadcast journalism students.
Steve Elliott, former Phoenix bureau chief for The Associated Press, will be the founding director of the Cronkite News Service print program
A new national study conducted by the Cronkite School for the National Association of Hispanic Journalists finds coverage of Latinos is sorely lacking in U.S. news magazines.
Two leading Phoenix journalists are joining the faculty to expand the Cronkite School’s award-winning TV newscast and create a new program to provide news packages to stations around the state.
The Cronkite School is the new home of the Donald W. Reynolds National Center for Business Journalism, thanks to a $3.5 million grant that is the largest gift in school history.
The Arizona Republic and its Web site, azcentral.com, published a nine-story package created by a Cronkite School class that explores the slaying of investigative reporter Don Bolles on the 30th anniversary of his murder.
Aaron Brown, the former lead anchor for CNN, will join the Cronkite School faculty for Spring ’07 as the Barrett Honors College’s John J. Rhodes Chair.
Tom Brokaw, who anchored NBC’s nightly newscast for more than 20 years, will be this year’s recipient of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.
Cronkite School Associate Dean Marianne Barrett is named the Solheim Professor, thanks to a generous gift from philanthropist Louise Solheim.
The general managers of eight major television stations in Phoenix met at a Cronkite School forum to discuss the future of local television in the wake of the digital technological revolution. Read Laura Newpoff’s story from the Business Journal of Phoenix.
A student from the 线上网赌网址-手机版 has been named the top collegiate television reporter in the United States.
Twenty percent of all examined newspaper articles about common neurological conditions had medical errors or exaggerations, according to a new study by Mayo Clinic physicians and Cronkite School researchers.
Dennis Shane Mitchell, a Cronkite School sophomore who was Arizona’s high school journalist of the year two years ago, was named the inaugural recipient of the Leroy F. Aarons Scholarship from the National Lesbian & Gay Journalist Association.
A top journalist will join the Cronkite School each spring semester as the Edith Kinney Gaylord Visiting Professor of Journalism Ethics thanks to a generous gift from the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation.
Carol Schwalbe won the Broadcast Education Association’s Best of Competition for an innovative and in-depth Web site she created for her Online Media class.
The National Association of Hispanic Journalists selected the Cronkite School to conduct an in-depth analysis of coverage of Latinos by the nation’s three leading news magazines.
A team from the Cronkite School will conduct an in-depth photojournalism project in Mexico exploring the plight of children living in the borderlands region thanks to a generous gift from the Howard G. Buffett Foundation.
Michiko Howlett, a Cronkite student and news director of the campus radio station, won first place for radio feature reporting in the nation’s most prestigious intercollegiate journalism competition, the Hearst Awards.
The Cronkite School took first place for newspaper feature writing in the nation’s most prestigious intercollegiate journalism competition, with students taking first and 16th place.
Dean Christopher Callahan presented former Regent Donald Ulrich the first-ever Dean’s Award for Outstanding Service in recognition of Ulrich’s years of advocacy on behalf of the Cronkite School.
Dan H. Fellner, a Cronkite School faculty associate, has received a Fulbright Scholar grant to teach journalism and public relations at Moldova State University in Chisinau, Moldova, for five months beginning in January.
Paul Schatt, an Arizona Republic editor who taught news reporting to hundreds of journalism students at Arizona State University over the past 30 years, died at the age of 60.
William Pitts won the Society of Professional Journalists’ Mark of Excellence award for in-depth radio reporting for his examination of military training in a Phoenix suburb.
Dave Barry, the Pulitzer Prize-winning humor columnist for the Miami Herald, will receive the 2005 Walter Cronkite Award for journalistic excellence.