A.Q. Miller School of Media and Communication | |
Type: | Public higher education |
Established: | 1910 |
Affiliations: | Kansas State University |
Former Names: | Department of Industrial Journalism established at Kansas State Agricultural College;Department of Industrial Journalism and Printing;Department of Technical Journalism;Department of Journalism;Department of Journalism and Mass Communications; [1] |
39.1878°N -96.5815°WThe A.Q. Miller School of Media and Communication offers distinguished programs of instruction and research leading to bachelor's and master's degrees in both communication studies and mass communications at Kansas State University. Undergraduates can pursue a science or arts degree in one of four sequences: News and Sports Media, Digital Innovations in Media, Advertising/Public Relations, and Communication Studies. Emphases include drone journalism, news broadcasting, graphics production, public relations, and advertising. The Miller School teaches drone photography and video in partnership with the K-State Polytechnic Unmanned Aircraft Systems Flight and Operations program. The School also offers a doctoral degree in leadership communication in collaboration with Kansas State's Staley School of Leadership and the Department of Agricultural Communications and Journalism.
Nationally accredited by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications, the School has more than 6,000 living alumni,[2] nearly 400 undergraduate majors, 100 minors, 40 graduate students, and 30 members of faculty and staff. Its operating budget 2018-19 is more than $2 million, with 57 students receiving School scholarships totaling $152,000.
The School houses the headquarters of the Journalism Education Association (JEA), the largest national organization of scholastic journalism. It houses three endowed chairs or centers: the Huck Boyd National Center for Community Media, R.M. Seaton Chair in Professional Journalism, and Ross Beach Chair in Mass Communications.
Kansas State University offered printing classes in 1874 using a sheet-fed press in the basement of Kedzie Hall, the stately limestone building that houses the storied School, making it the first American university to offer a program in newspaper printing.
In 1910, Kansas State became the second university in the United States to offer a journalism program (after the University of Missouri, 1908) upon the hiring of Charles J. Dillon, a journalist of The Kansas City Star who set up its journalism curriculum.[3] Dillon's curriculum, titled "industrial journalism," required students to take courses in home economics, agriculture, and engineering, in addition to reporting and copy editing. As the scope of the curriculum and its disciplines expanded, "mass communications" was added to the School name in 1971. In 2022 the School of Journalism and Mass Communication merged with the Department of Communication Studies to become the A.Q. Miller School of Media and Communication.
The School is named for distinguished Kansas publisher and editor Alexander Quintella Miller, Sr. (b., February 7, 1874; d., December 29, 1959), whose son, Carl Miller, a Kansas State alumnus, made a financial gift in 1987.
For more than 50 years, A.Q. Miller published The Belleville Telescope, a weekly newspaper established 1870 in Belleville, Kansas, the seat of Republic County. He took his first job as a newspaperman at age 17 as a printer's devil with the Clifton News, a daily newspaper published 1889–1923 in Washington and Clay counties of northern Kansas. About his first job, he was quoted to state: "When I first went to work for the Clifton News, I hadn't the vaguest idea what a printer's devil did. I soon found out. My first assigned task was to mail the single wrappers, individual copies of the newspaper. Flour paste was mixed and used to seal the wrappers. I can still vividly recall the odor exuding from the unused paste after the job was completing. The shop took on all the fragrance of a [meat-]packing plant."[4] A.Q. Miller went to accomplish what the Kansas Editorial Association later recognized as "Distinguished Service in the Field of Journalism" that included several appointments outside of newspapers, such as national counselor to the United States Chamber of Commerce, chief clerk of the United States Senate, and division chief of the U.S. Bureau of Internal Revenue. He advocated strongly for the interstate freeway system, which, consequently, was launched in the state of Kansas.
The School publishes a bi-annual alumni magazine, Update, that highlights notable alumni achievements, positive stories, important changes in curriculum, and the School's role in the quickly evolving communication and media industries. The magazine is printed at Publication Printers in Denver, Colorado, with a distribution run of nearly 5000.
KSDB91.9 is Kansas State University's campus radio station. A non-commercial radio station located in Manhattan, Kansas, broadcasting on 91.9 MHz on the FM dial, KSDB is staffed by about 100 student volunteers who gain valuable experience in all areas of radio broadcasting. It plays alternative/independent rock, hip-hop, and jazz. KSDB-FM, which has been on the air since 1949, is the oldest, continuously operating FM station in the state of Kansas.
K-State's student-run television station includes two weekly shows: Channel 8 News and MHK All Day. Students of any major can be involved with broadcasts beginning their first week on campus. The station is an officially FCC-licensed low-powered television station serving Manhattan and Riley County, Kansas, broadcasting in high-definition. The station is available over-the-air on channel 24 or through the Cox Cable system in Manhattan and surrounding areas on cable channel 8.
The Kansas State Collegian is the official daily student-run newspaper of Kansas State University. Founded in 1896, the Collegian has a circulation of 4,750. It is owned and published by Collegian Media Group.
Manhappenin' Magazine is Kansas State University's student-created lifestyle magazine. In 2018, the magazine (which is in its third year of production), won third place in the ACP/CMA National College Media Convention's Pinnacle Award's four-year feature magazine of the year category.
The Royal Purple's mission is to encapsulate student, faculty, and staff memories and history at Kansas State University each year.[5] The 2017 Royal Purple won the Pacemaker Award, which is the ACP/CMA National College Media Convention's award for the best yearbook in the country.
After 100 years of operation, faculty, staff, students, and alumni of the school celebrated its centennial from Sept. 2-4 2010. Events included the 11th annual Huck Boyd Lecture in Community Media, which was presented by broadcast journalist and K-State alumna Gail Pennybacker, an A.Q. Miller School memorabilia room at the Kansas State University Student Union, a panel on photojournalism, a banquet, and more.
Throughout the celebration, the school raised money for the Dave MacFarland Tools for Tomorrow Technology Fund, which was created to provide media technology for journalism students.