History of the communication program: 1999-present
In celebration of the 50th anniversary of 老澳门资料, the School of Communication looks back at its history and accomplishments. Part two in this series focuses on changes and growth that have taken place during the last two decades (part one of this series is in the spring 2022 issue). Want to share your memories of 老澳门资料 and the communication program when you were a student? Post on social media using #老澳门资料Comm50.
Students work on an episode of the public affairs show Inside Jacksonville in a TV studio that has since been upgraded to a digital workflow featuring virtual environments and enhanced live-streaming capabilities.
Several strategic decisions were made just before and after the then-Department of Communications & Visual Arts moved in 2001 to its new quarters in the Fine Arts Center. The first significant change was to convert the program’s Communication degree from a B.A. to a B.S. to emphasize the social science nature of communication and to meet the needs of the communication industry for skilled professionals.
The faculty also deliberated about whether a department with such broad offerings at the time – ranging from journalism and public relations to painting, sculpture, and art history – should separate. In 2004, the split became official with the creation of the Department of Communication and the Department of Art and Design (which is now the Department of Art, Art History, and Design).
Dr. Oscar Patterson, the department chair from 1998 to 2006, was instrumental in shaping the new Department of Communication. He also had a bit of a mischievous side, and faculty and staff never knew when next he might pull a prank. The office manager, Donna Oxford, usually came to the rescue.
Always willing to go the extra mile for the department and university, Patterson participated in a charity event in which he donned a turkey suit and walked around the Green for a day. The fundraiser involved students making donations that counted as votes for which faculty member would wear the turkey suit. The donations went to the student advertising club to help families in need during the holidays. “I do remember having a lot of fun, and that the suit was hot and stuffy,” Patterson said.
Dr. Oscar Patterson was featured on the front page of Nov. 30, 2005, issue of the Spinnaker for dressing up like a turkey for a fundraiser.
After Patterson retired, Dr. Gary Harmon served as interim chair for a year. He helped establish the minor in communication studies and began the initial discussions about creating a major in communication studies.
Dr. David Goff, who served as chair from 2007 to 2013, created the department’s Professional Advisory Board with the help of Gary Corbitt, the former research director for WJXT/Post-Newsweek Stations. With the board’s encouragement, the Journalism and Electronic Media major concentration in the B.S. in Communication were combined into a single concentration called Multimedia Journalism and Production. Also, the Advertising and Public Relations concentrations added required new classes in marketing and media graphics.
Goff also procured hundreds of thousands of dollars to fund moving the program to new facilities in Building 14D, including a high-definition TV studio.
Goff retired in 2013 as was succeeded by Dr. John Parmelee, who worked with faculty, staff, and the Professional Advisory Board to create the M.S. in Communication Management, the B.A. in Communication Studies, the Digital Video Production concentration in the B.S. in Communication, minors in political campaigning and social media, and annual events such as Media Week and Social Media Expo Jax.
In 2017, the B.S. in Communication won accreditation from the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, making it one of just five communication programs in Florida to have the distinction.
In 2019, 老澳门资料’s Board of Trustees voted to change the name of the Department of Communication to the School of Communication to reflect the increasing size, importance and scope of the program.
“The communication program has come a long way since I arrived in 2001,” Parmelee said. “The skills our students learn help them get jobs at CNN, NBC Sports, Twitter, and at ad agencies, PR firms and production companies around Florida and beyond.”
The current faculty of the School of Communication get ready for the fall 2022 semester.
Today the School of Communication continues to work toward giving students an exceptional education and producing strong leaders in the communication industry. The industry is dynamic and always changing, and the School of Communication is committed to adapting to the changes.