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Article Title:
Albany State University media students get world of experience
Contributing Author:
By Carlton Fletcher / The Albany Herald
The Story:
ALBANY, GEORGIA -- The Mass Communication program of study at Albany State University
has evolved into something of a mini-United Nations.
Not only do ASU's future journalists receive instruction in the latest
concepts, methods and technology of their chosen field, they're given insight
into the global experiences of professors from such disparate locations as
China, the Netherlands and El Salvador.
Jianchuan Zhou, Judith Rosenbaum and Alfonso Moises, all Ph.D.s and all
with journalistic experience in their respective home nations, offer practical
evidence of the ever-shrinking world community to students from a section of
this country not traditionally known for its diversity.
Zhou draws from his experience as a reporter/editor for an English-language
newspaper in his hometown in China's Sichuan Province to teach future print
journalists. Moises utilizes his background as, among other things, a
documentary-maker in his Central American home in El Salvador and in Mexico to
instruct students drawn to radio, television and film studies. Rosenbaum's
duties as a researcher/instructor/editorial manager in The Netherlands fit
perfectly with her theory and methods classes.
"That's one of the good things about my class load: The theories and
methods of journalism are the same all over the world," Rosenbaum said. "Some of
the text books I use here are the same ones I used in Holland."
Zhou, meanwhile, says his experiences chasing and editing news stories
provide a valuable supplement to materials offered in the classroom setting.
"I think it has to be a combination," he said. "It's difficult to
separate personal experience from what is learned in the classroom. A journalist
takes what he has learned and applies it in the field."
When Moises tells his classes that they must be willing to adapt to a given
set of circumstances in their field, he might well be talking about his
career.
"In general, the procedures are the same," he said. "But the successful
journalists are the ones who can adapt to each new set of circumstances. For
me, education is education, no matter where you are in the world. But in this
field you must be able to adapt."
Zhou (his adopted English name is "Henry") attended college in Beijing,
but his goal was always to come to the United States. He was the top student
in his English foreign language class in high school for two years running,
and he realized his dream of a lifetime when he was awarded a stipend to
attend the University of Texas' master's program.
From there, Zhou applied for and was accepted into the University of
Georgia's Ph.D. program. There he met his future wife, Desiree, and the couple
came to Albany when Zhou was hired to teach in Albany State's Mass
Communication program.
He said the emergence of new technology, the Internet and social networking
sites have many claiming that tried and true journalistic methods are
"dinosaurs," but he said he teaches a combination of the traditional and the new.
"You must stay current, keep up with the 'new and improved,' but there are
traditional methods that are still vital to the process," he said. "I
think there must be a convergence of methods."
Zhou's students say they've learned to appreciate the value of such an
approach.
"I've picked up skills I can use in any type of media career," junior Matt
Philmon of Early County said. "I've learned basic newswriting and
reporting skills in this class, for instance, that will be crucial to whatever
career path I take. The research skills are also important.
"One of the things that this department has provided is a wide range of
skills to prepare us for possible media careers."
Rosenbaum moved frequently during her childhood thanks to her father's
career, but a four-year stint at an American school in France from ages 12 to 16
put the United States in her future plans.
She spent a year in Maine as an exchange student when she was 18 and was
awarded a grant to attend the University of Texas in Austin after earning her
master's degree in Communication Science at The Netherlands' University of
Nijmegen.
"I loved it in Texas, but I wanted to get my Ph.D., and I was offered a
paid research/teaching position (at Radboud University) in The Netherlands,"
she said. "It was a big honor; they only hire a few each year."
Rosenbaum met her American husband, who was stationed at the U.S. Air Force
base in Ramstein, Germany, and the couple were married in Holland. When her
husband was transferred to Robins AFB in Warner Robins in 2007, she came
with him. She applied for a position at ASU and was hired a short while later.
"Moving to the South -- and to a historically black college -- was an
adjustment, but any move is an adjustment," she said. "There has been a learning
curve, but fortunately I feel I fit in immediately. The students here are
very accepting.
"The roles of the media are changing, and I encourage my students to
embrace those changes and how they affect them. This younger generation is so
different, but I think it is important that traditional journalistic methods and
theories remain viable to them. They must find a way to connect with those
methods and the new media they've embraced."
Moises, who came to ASU at the same time as Rosenbaum, said "building a
Mass Communication program from scratch" at ASU was made easier by his
experiences.
Raised in San Salvador, El Salvador, Moises learned English at the
University of Minnesota. He earned the equivalent of a bachelor's degree at the
Jesuit University in El Salvador, a master's degree in Communication Arts from
Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles and his Ph.D. at Northwestern
University in Evanston, Ill.
He's worked as a theater director in El Salvador; a teacher/producer in
Mexico City; a professor at Northwestern, at California State University,
Chico, at the University of Arizona and at the University of Don Bosco in El
Salvador; and as a communications officer with UNICEF.
In addition to having a number of papers published in worldwide
periodicals, Moises has also created short film and documentary projects that have been
well-received.
His students utilize the skills he brings to the classroom to create video
features.
"When they begin their projects, I try and instill in my students the
importance of audience," Moises said. "In general, the procedures are going to
be the same. But the audience must be considered.
"I feel that my experiences allow me to take a more hands-on approach when
working with my students. I am able to give them basic fundamentals and help
them expand those fundamentals in a way that enhances their creativity."
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