History of the communication program: 1973-1998
In celebration of the 50th anniversary of 老澳门资料, the School of Communication looks back at its history and accomplishments. Part one of this two-part series focuses on the first quarter century of the communication program. 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.
Some of the first communication students, from the 1970s, include (from left to right) Stephanie McLain, Patti Levine-Brown, Drew Brunson, Burt Jordan, Cecilla Frere, Rick Logan and Mike Harold.
When retired U.S. Naval Reserve commander Bill Roach came to teach at 老澳门资料 in 1973, only two communication courses were offered. The university’s first request of him was to establish a communication program in what was then the Department of Language and Literature. He would need plenty of military discipline to succeed. It took almost nine years for the state of Florida to allow 老澳门资料 to create a communication major.
By the time the Bachelor of Arts degree in Communications was offered in 1983, Roach had built an award-winning program. His background in military public affairs helped him guide students in his advanced public relations course to winning a Silver Anvil award, which is the top prize for PR professionals from the Public Relations Society of America. The award, which no student group had won previously, was for the students’ work on the City of Jacksonville’s “Keep Jacksonville Beautiful” campaign. They also won a national award from Keep America Beautiful, Inc.
Professor Bill Roach (fifth from left) celebrates with his award-winning PR students.
Roach also founded student journalism at 老澳门资料. The newspaper he created, called the Halyard, eventually became the Spinnaker.
In 1988, the communication program left the Department of Language and Literature and became part of the new Department of Communications and Visual Arts (CVA), which encompassed journalism, broadcasting, public relations, and advertising, as well as photography, graphic design, art history, painting, and sculpture. By 1990, the department was the largest unit in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Despite its size, CVA did not always get the respect or resources it deserved. When Marcia Ladendorff began teaching broadcast production in 1993, she was stunned to find no money had been allocated for TV lights. Dr. Bob Bohle said that when he arrived in 1995 to become department chair, the TV studio had “hand-me-down studio cameras” from a local news outlet, and “the control room was held together with duct tape and prayer.” Bohle eventually secured $100,000 from then-President Adam Herbert for equipment upgrades.
Current faculty who were communication students during 老澳门资料's first 25 years recall a very different campus and surrounding area. Stephanie McLain, class of 1977, said "there were only a handful of buildings, and everyone was a commuter student since there were no dorms on campus. The Town Center was a cow pasture, I-295 did not exist, Butler Boulevard ended at St. Johns Bluff. And it was a toll road."
Ken Thomas, class of 1987, remembers that 老澳门资料 didn't issue student IDs. "We had to carry around the paper printout of our class schedule to prove we were a student," he said. Frank Goodin, class of 1993, said, "my chief memory about the broadcasting track was simply how small it was. There were so few in my track that in a way it felt special."
Frank Goodin, now the coordinator of the digital video production concentration in the School of Communication, also enjoyed making films as a student.
By the late 1990s, the big challenge was finding a building that could house all of CVA’s faculty and classes, which were scattered across campus in buildings 2, 3, 9 and 11, as well as in portables on the far side of campus. Dr. Oscar Patterson, who took over as department chair in 1998, helped managed CVA’s move to the Fine Arts Center, which was still being constructed when he arrived. He said he fondly remembers “canoe races across the pond near the Boathouse” back then. “It was an exciting time at the university.”