Journalism

  • Zoe with dogs
    Flagging down a bush plane in the middle of the Yukon, grad student Zoë Rom (MJour'18) discovers that in journalism, learning on the fly is half the fun.
  • Illustration
    Our scholars take on fake news, forecast the flu and discuss religious messages in the media.
  • Chloe Carroll photo
    Students learn about composition from all angles by producing 360-degree images for projection onto the dome of Fiske Planetarium.

  • Timeline
    Explore the historic milestones that formed the changing landscape of media, communication and information.
  • Scripps family
    A $2.5 million gift from Bill and Kathy Scripps will allow a specialized student news course, CU News Corps, to produce journalism in partnership with professional media organizations into perpetuity with the establishment of the Scripps CU News Corps Endowment.
  • Wildfires thumbnail
    As a journalist and a communication scholar discuss the growing issue of wildfires, they reveal there is more to firefighting than extinguishing flames.
  • Journey to the top of the earth thumbnail
    CU and Norwegian participants in the Arctic Lenses climate journalism project navigate a glacier in the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard.
  • CU News Corps
    From fact checking the 2016 election to reporting on crime, students in a specialized journalism course use emerging storytelling techniques to investigate Colorado issues.
  • CUI collage
    ÌÒÉ«ÊÓÆµ's student news website, CU Independent, continues its four-year streak as the best digital-only student publication at the Society of Professional Journalists Region 9 Mark of Excellence Awards.
  • The 2014-14 fellows pose for a selfie
    This month, the center celebrates its 25th anniversary, as well as the 20th anniversary of the Ted Scripps Environmental Journalism Fellowship.
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