Coventry University Department of Media

Coventry University Department of Media
Type Media school, Film school, Journalism school
Established 1975, relocated 2000/1
Location Coventry, West Midlands, England, United Kingdom
Affiliations Coventry University, Coventry School of Art and Design
Website

The Department of Media (formerly known as the Department of Media and Communication) is part of Coventry School of Art and Design in Coventry University. It is located within the Ellen Terry Building, which is a £7 million refurbished 1930s cinema in the centre of Coventry, UK.

Its courses include undergraduate degrees in Digital Media,[1] Journalism and Media,[2] Media Production,[3] Photography,[4] Advertising and Media and Media and Communications[5] (Formerly Communication, Culture and Media). It has masters level degrees in Applied Communication, Automotive Journalism, Film and Visual Cultures, Global Journalism, Global Media and Communications, Health Journalism, Digital Media and Culture and Media Production .

Research, impact and recognition

The department has a long established research culture in the fields of Media and Communication contributing to debates at local, national and international level. This includes major projects funded by Jisc, the AHRC, HEFCE as well as a number of industry and charitable partners. The department goes back to 1975, when It was among the first places to launch a degree in Communications studies in the UK.

In 2006 it launched a weekly industry talk series called the Coventry Conversations[6] whose long list of speakers includes Jeremy Paxman, Murray Walker, Donal Macintyre, Jeff Jarvis, Paul Abbott, Jeremy Vine, Baroness Valerie Amos and many more.[7] Jon Snow, of Channel 4 News, is a visiting professor in the department. The department also has talk series in Open Media[8] and Photography[9]

The department is underpinned by its "Open Media" approach to education in the fields of Media, Culture, Communication, Photography and the Visual Arts. This approach emerges from the issues, new working practices and substantial changes that have been brought about by development in digital culture and communications technologies over the past decade. As a result of this approach, it was the first practical media department in the UK to start broadcasting lectures to the iTunes U platform[10] and onto the YouTube Edu platform in 2009[11] and has innovated in teaching learning through open technologies and pedagogies including the development of the world's first open iPhone application for a photography degree course[12] as well as various other projects in Open Education in Photography and Creative Activism[13] for which it has won international recognition.

In terms of access to research - in July 2009 MC publicly established what was the 1st Green Open Access Mandate for a Humanities Department in the UK and only the 3rd for a Humanities Department in the World; it was also the UK's 24th Green Open Access Mandate[14] This mandates faculty to make academic research output freely available online.

The department is also home to the Coventry University East Asian Film Society[15] and the CU Today Online Magazine[16]

Open media

The department has a reputation for its distinct approach to learning called 'Open Media'. Open Media is the term, which captures a series of interconnected principles that inform all the work of the department. In short Open Media & Communication means:

  1. Open Media - positive and innovative engagements with new media technologies and new media and cultural forms and relationships, this is ‘open’ in the sense that it adopts a collaborative ethos and makes use of ‘freemium’ and ‘prosumption’ models of media and cultural practice;
  2. Sustainable Professional Practice – building independent (staff and student) professional profiles through newly emerging media practices and relationships; engaging from the outset with new communities of scholarship and practice.
  3. Engagement - the active participation of staff and students in live and transformative projects and with diverse communities of interest, be they professional, academic, cultural, or social. These activities open the university, by linking the delivery of content in traditional formats with projects that have a positive impact on the lives of those inside and outside its walls;
  4. Globally Visible Media & Communication - using emerging media practices and networks to multiply and leverage the scope, scale and impact of our (staff and student) work. Engaging in work that is simultaneously local and global in scope and ensuring that this good work is accessible and visible at the same level
  5. Open Pedagogies – teaching and learning which is collaborative, media-enabled and expanded – i.e. this approach begins by conceiving of the Department as our own community of learning, it makes use of innovative and collaborative learning styles, as well as the contributions of and dialogue with leading scholars and professionals across the globe, evaluates and uses libre material and crowd-sourced knowledge and encourages the strategic and reflective use of new technologies to develop extended communities of learning;

Academics

The Department of Media includes a number of academics working across a range of areas including Digital and Open Media, Global Media and Communications, Journalism Studies and Creative Media Practice. These include:

Notable alumni

References

External links

Video clips

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.