Join us for the first CommTuesday of the Spring semester to chat with Communication Studies students about their internship experiences!
Join us for the first CommTuesday of the Spring semester to chat with Communication Studies students about their internship experiences!
Dr. Paul D’Angelo, a Communication Studies professor at TCNJ, has become an internationally recognized scholar, in part from his work in advancing news framing analysis.
Join us in congratulating WTSR Underground for their two nominations for the 2021 Intercollegiate Broadcast System Media Awards. WTSR Underground is a joint project involving members of both WTSR and LTV (Lions TV), who work together on the production.
The 2020 Polansky Fellowship Award recipient shared how an intercultural communication class, combined with an advanced community engaged learning element, helped her and her peers break out of the TCNJ bubble, and shaped them into who they are today.
As the semester comes to a close, the Communication Studies Department’s Student Advisory Board hosted their last COMMTuesday of the semester on December 1st, 2020 from 3:30PM to 4:30PM.
The widespread impact of the coronavirus pandemic can be seen virtually everywhere, including social media. Assistant Professor of Communication Studies and Public Health Yachao Li and a team of four TCNJ students analyzed how COVID-19 stigma was created and communicated on Twitter.
Please join us in congratulating Communication Studies student, Carly Nocchi ’22, on winning the 2020 Polansky Fellowship Award.
Last COMMTuesday of the semester on 12/1/20 at 3:30PM-4:30PM! Students who attend will be entered in a raffle for Starbucks Gift Cards.
On October 27th, the Student Advisory Board held its second COMMTuesday! Students were given the exciting opportunity to choose what they wanted to learn!
On October 27th, the Communication Studies Student Advisory Board chose to shake up their typical format of the monthly COMMTuesday events in order to highlight two incredible student films: “Tides” by Katrina Bragat ’20 and “Lost Souls” by Jake Leuzzi ’21.