JPC and Geological Sciences Classes and their Field Experiences
The College of Arts and Sciences offers our students unique educational 花季传媒s, both in and out of the classroom. The College offers interactive, off-campus courses, for example, the Journalism and Public Communications (JPC) course 鈥淭V Studio Production鈥, which regularly meets at the Alaska Public Media studio. The College also offers courses with field trip components, like the "Structural Geology" course that just returned from a field trip to Las Vegas. All CAS students can participate in activities outside of the classroom, like joining one of the 20+ student clubs and organizations. But we also want our students to have access to hands-on, in the field, 花季传媒s in the classroom.
We sat down with John Sharify, Atwood Chair of Journalism and Dr. Simon Kattenhorn, CAS Associate Dean and Professor of Geological Sciences, to discuss these unique classroom 花季传媒s.
John Sharify with his class at the AKPM TV Studio
Dr. Simon Kattenhorn with his students on a field trip to Las Vegas
Can you tell us a little more about the courses and/or field 花季传媒?
Sharify: 鈥淭he TV Studio Production course focuses on professional principles and practices of television studio production. The students learn all about the fundamentals, including set up, operation, equipment, safety, workflow, the team process of studio-based video production, and the aesthetics and use of studio-based video for communication.
Kattenhorn: 鈥淭he field component is integral to a Geological Sciences education, so the majority of classes that our department offers have some kind of field component. All of our students - in every lab - are taken out to local field locations, and that includes the introductory level classes. The entire curriculum was redesigned about four years ago with an emphasis on getting students into the field earlier. The field 花季传媒s help students understand how we look at things in the field, how we collect data and what we do with that data. It comes down to the idea that it is really challenging to teach a geologist to be a geologist without taking them out into the world.
We even take students beyond the local destinations and 花季传媒s. For instance, I am taking students in my Structural Geology class down to Las Vegas, to focus on structural geology faults and tectonics.鈥
John Sharify, this question is for you. Can you tell us about the benefits of taking a course like TV Studio Production?
Sharify: 鈥淚鈥檓 thrilled that our JPC students get to have 鈥榬eal鈥 world 花季传媒s by taking this class. They鈥檙e learning everything you need to know about TV production thanks to the partnership we have with Alaska Public Media and thanks to talented professionals at AKPM, like Valerie Kern. Valerie has been fantastic! The best part is the hands-on training they鈥檙e getting. And it has served them well. Because the students have learned so well-the different roles in studio production-they had an opportunity to help with the production of the LIVE gubernatorial and congressional debates. They can now put these shows on their resume and add these two programs to their body of work. They did a great job and I鈥檓 proud of them.
As I keep telling them, they鈥檝e had a front row seat to history. And it doesn鈥檛 get any better than that.鈥
Dr. Kattenhorn, in the same vein, what is the benefit and appeal for students to get these field 花季传媒s as a part of their education?
Kattenhorn: 鈥淭hese 花季传媒s are valuable for students, because no matter how much you try to teach them in a class, until they have to go out and do it themselves they won鈥檛 know the hands-on aspects of field geology. Going into the field allows the students to bring everything they鈥檝e learned in the class together in such a way that all of the pieces start to make sense.
Our students may have career goals to work in a GIS environment, or to work in an analytical lab, or they may want to work with geology on other planets. The field 花季传媒s allow our program to be accessible to all and to provide a more realistic and diverse range of options for students that really align with their career objectives. They can enter any area they want, and they are not going to be completely devoid of the field 花季传媒 needed to make a geological sciences education as rigorous as it can be for them.鈥
Any final thoughts on these two unique classroom 花季传媒s?
Sharify: 鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 especially rewarding to see how engaged they are with journalism, storytelling and TV production. It鈥檚 been so much fun for me to watch them put in the hard work and demonstrate, week after week, teamwork. This business is all about teamwork and, if you ask me, they鈥檝e learned that lesson well.鈥
Kattenhorn: "Students gain so much from experiential, field-based learning. Not only does it reinforce and transcend learnings in the classroom, the students thoroughly enjoy being out in the field, sharing their observations, learnings, and love of geology with each other. As a teacher, field-based instruction is one of the most rewarding 花季传媒s for me, too."
Thank you Simon and John for your work! Keep it up!
Please help enrich student 花季传媒s in the CAS! To support Seawolf field 花季传媒s in geology, journalism, and supplemental 花季传媒s in all CAS programs reach out to Dean McNulty or make a financial contribution to the .