The Digital, Participatory and International Turn: Media at the University of Adelaide

The Media discipline has a vibrant, entrepreneurial history, marked by creative innovation and problem-solving capacities. It emerged from cross-disciplinary teaching from the late 1970s to 2002 and then, as a sub-discipline of English, constructed the Bachelor of Media. It became a separate intelle...

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description The Media discipline has a vibrant, entrepreneurial history, marked by creative innovation and problem-solving capacities. It emerged from cross-disciplinary teaching from the late 1970s to 2002 and then, as a sub-discipline of English, constructed the Bachelor of Media. It became a separate intellectual and administrative group in late 2006, growing rapidly and known today for innovative teaching and research, and lively engagement with its profession, community and industry. In a relatively short period, it has twice recalibrated the original degree, and established an Honours program, a growing postgraduate cohort, research agendas, valuable international connections, and a record of scholarship and publications, which includes the dynamic field of digital media.Program and discipline differ markedly from the more modest proposals in 2001. The crucial turn in 2006 to a discipline-defining contemporary program in digital and participatory media, with a distinctive, attractive niche among its South Australian competitors, was not easy to achieve. Media education's beginnings in technical tertiary institutions as ‘craft’ training explain certain strongly held misconceptions about the value of critical and creative media studies — which also produce technically adept graduates — to a prestigious research university. Those leading Media developments have encountered the common challenges originating from prevalent preconceptions, even prejudices, about contemporary media, which have in turn shaped judgements about tertiary media education; and a supposed contradiction in the discipline's ‘theory plus praxis’ approach has at times impeded the discipline's establishment.
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source University of Adelaide Press (Open Access); JSTOR eBooks: Open Access; OAPEN; DOAB: Directory of Open Access Books
subjects Arts
Broadcast media
Business
Business administration
Business engineering
College instruction
Communications
Corporate communications
Cultural history
Cultural industries
Education
Education, history, theory
Educational methods
Educational research
External corporate communications
Formal education
Historical methodology
Historiography
History
History instruction
Humanities instruction
Industrial research
Industrial sectors
Industry
Marketing
Mass communication
Mass media
Media studies
Pedagogy
Radio
Research and development
Social sciences
title The Digital, Participatory and International Turn: Media at the University of Adelaide
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