Established | 1996 |
---|---|
Parent institution | University of Western Ontario |
Dean | Lisa Henderson |
Location | |
Website | http://www.fims.uwo.ca/ |
The Faculty of Information and Media Studies (FIMS) is a faculty at University of Western Ontario, located in London, Ontario, Canada. The faculty offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels focusing on the advancement of knowledge in media, communications, and information technologies. [1]
FIMS was born from a merger between the MA in Journalism program and the Master in Library and information Science (MLIS) program. The MLIS program was established in 1966 with the School of Library and Information Science (SLIS), intended to help address a shortage of professionally trained librarians in Canada. [2]
When Western's SLIS was established, it was housed in a temporary prefabricated structure located on an unpaved parking lot behind the football stadium. [2] The doors opened for students in 1967, making 2017 the 50 year anniversary for a graduate library and information science program at Western. [2]
After 15 years in the temporary building, the SLIS was moved to Elborn College, formerly the Teachers College. [2]
The 1980s and 1990s saw a shift in the SLIS program to an increased emphasis on the "information" aspect of the program. This reflected changes to the profession driven by computers and communication technology. After 1985, rather than a Master's of Library Science, graduates from SLIS received a Master's in Library and Information Science. [3]
In 1995 Dr. Tague-Sutcliffe proposed merging the MA in Journalism program and the Master in Library and Information Science programs in response to American trends of mergers and closures amongst library schools, in combination with the threat of closure facing Western University's MA in Journalism program. The merger of the two programs was carried out in 1996 by a 10-person Joint Transition Committee with Catherine Ross as acting dean. [4]
In 1997, FIMS created their first undergraduate program, a BA in Media, Information, and Technoculture (MIT) which focused on media and information studies. [4] In the same year, Western's Graduate School of Journalism, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, and Faculty of Part-Time and Continuing Education merged to form the Faculty of Communication and Open Learning. In 1998, the Faculty of Communication and Open Learning was renamed the Faculty of Information and Media Studies (FIMS). [5] Following the merger and renaming, FIMS relocated to Middlesex College, which had been the home of the Journalism School. [2]
In 2002, FIMS launched two new programs: the Master of Arts in Media Studies, and the Media Theory and Production Program, offered in conjunction with Fanshawe College. Two years later, FIMS introduced the Media and Public Interest Program, which combined elements of media studies with social justice studies. [5]
With the steady expansion of the faculty, and undergraduate enrolment surpassing 700 students, FIMS moved from Middlesex College into the North Campus Building for more up to date facilities in 2006. [5] The move was followed by the launch of the Masters of Arts in Popular Music and Culture in 2007, expanding the Media Studies offerings. [5]
In 2011, FIMS partnered with the Faculty of Health Sciences at Western to offer master's and doctoral studies in the new Health Information Science program. [5]
In 2016, FIMS celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Master's of Library and Information Science program. [3] The year also marked another move, this time from the North Campus Building to the newly constructed FIMS and Nursing Building.
The first Tor anonymity network node at a Canadian library was established in March 2016 at FIMS, at the FIMS Graduate Library (previously the Graduate Resource Center). [6] [7] In recognition of the library's contributions to digital privacy and freedom at FIMS, the Ontario Library Association gave the FIMS Graduate Library the Les Fowlie Intellectual Freedom Award at the 2017 OLA Superconference. [8]
This is the largest of FIMS's programs, with approximately 966 undergraduate students enrolled. [9] Enrolment is limited to 250 students per year. The MIT program focuses on media theory, history, research and analysis. [10]
The MIT program offers three and four year bachelor's degrees. Areas of concentration within MIT include Media Theory and Production, Advertising and Promotional Culture, Popular Music and Society, News Reporting and Journalistic Practices, Cultural Industries, The Information Society, Media Identity and Diversity, The Political Economy of Media, and Virtual Worlds and Interactive Media.
Students are provided with the option of combining the MIT program with Ivey School of Business (5 year program) and the Faculty of Law (6 year program). [11] However, the Combined BA Honours Specialization in MIT /Juris DR (JD) program has been discontinued. The last date that students were eligible to be admitted to the law program was September 1, 2018, meaning that they must have been admitted to the MIT program in 2015. [12] Students can also pursue a double major with MIT, combining other majors from different faculties. [13]
The MPI program has a limited enrolment of 20 students per year, focusing the curriculum on navigation and relationships within the political economy of communication, social movements, and global justice. [14]
The Creative Arts and Production program, introduced in 2022, is offered across three of Western's faculties: arts and humanities, information and media studies, and music. [15] Students from all three faculties can apply for a spot in this limited enrolment program in Year 2 if they have completed the first-year pre-requisite courses. [16]
Since enrolment in the MIT program is limited, MIT is a competitive program with ambitious students. For the honours specialization and major modules, students must complete their first-year requirements with no failed courses. For an honours specialization in MIT, students must have an average of 72% in their principal courses (with no mark below 60%) and a minimum grade of 70% in their first year MIT courses. For a major in MIT, students must have an average of 68% in their principle courses and a minimum grade of 65% in their first year MIT courses. [13]
The FIMS internship program (FIMS3999) is a 0.5 course credit available to eligible Year 3 and 4 students in FIMS. Placements are typically 140 hours each semester. [17]
The Faculty of Information & Media Studies at Western University offers certificate and diploma programs in Digital Communications. The certificate/diploma in Digital Communications analyzes the environments of social media, the virtual world, and other emerging forms of online communication. Course content covers subjects such as digital content creation and the production of online communities. [18]
Dean | Faculty | Active years |
---|---|---|
Andrew D. Osborn B.A., M.A., Ph.D., L.L.D (honorary) | SLIS | 1967–1970 |
William J. Cameron B.A., M.A., Ph.D. | SLIS | 1970–1984 |
Jean M. Tague-Sutcliffe B.A., B.L.S., Ph.D. | SLIS | 1984–1995 |
Bernd P. Frohmann B.A., M.A., M.L.S., Ph.D. | FIMS | 1995–1997 (acting) |
G.A. Moran PhD | FIMS | 1997–1998 (acting) |
Manjunath Pendakur B.A., M.A., Ph.D. | FIMS | 1998–2001 |
Catherine Ross B.A. Honors, M.A., M.L.I.S., Ph.D. | FIMS | 2002–2007 |
Thomas Carmichael PhD | FIMS | 2007–spring 2018 |
Susan Knabe PhD | FIMS | Spring 2018–present (acting) [19] |
Lisa Henderson PhD | FIMS | 2019 onward [20] |
The FIMS & Nursing Building (FNB) currently houses the faculty at the corner of Lambton Drive and Huron Drive. [21] Built in 2016, FNB is a shared building between the Faculty of Health sciences' Nursing Program and FIMS. FIMS was located in the North Campus Building (NCB) from 2004 to 2017. [4] [22]
The new FIMS & Nursing Building implements a number of progressive design features, such as co-ed bathrooms and deliberate use of large and numerous windows to flood the interior with natural light. [23] Its architecture combines modern and minimalistic design concepts with touches of gothic style that characterizes Western's signature look. The building's design pays "homage to Western's classic style" with the inclusion of several gargoyles from the old Western Service Building at various entrances and corridors of the FNB. [23]
Resources pertaining to FIMS members within FNB include classrooms, multi-media studios, computing labs, faculty and administrative offices, administrative spaces, and the FIMS Graduate Library. [21]
The FIMS Graduate library is located in room 3020 of the FNB. It is for the use of graduate students, graduate alumni, faculty, and staff of FIMS.
Resources the library offers include electronic databases, non-circulating print items, printing services, digital cameras, e-readers, tablets, a makerspace, reservable meeting rooms, and a reading room. [24] [21]
Media studies is a discipline and field of study that deals with the content, history, and effects of various media; in particular, the mass media. Media Studies may draw on traditions from both the social sciences and the humanities, but mostly from its core disciplines of mass communication, communication, communication sciences, and communication studies.
Diego Portales University is one of the first private universities founded in Chile and is named after the Chilean statesman Diego Portales.
The University of Western Ontario (UWO), also known as Western University or Western, is a public research university in London, Ontario, Canada. The main campus is located on 455 hectares of land, surrounded by residential neighbourhoods and the Thames River bisecting the campus's eastern portion. The university operates twelve academic faculties and schools. It is a member of the U15, a group of research-intensive universities in Canada.
Thammasat University is a public research university in Thailand with campuses in Tha Phra Chan area of Phra Nakhon District near the Grand Palace in the heart of Bangkok; in Rangsit, 42 kilometers north of Bangkok; in Pattaya, a resort city on the eastern seaboard of Thailand; and in Lampang Province.
A journalism school is a school or department, usually part of an established university, where journalists are trained. 'J-School' is an increasingly used term for a journalism department at a school or college. Journalists in most parts of the world must first complete university-level training, which incorporates both technical skills such as research skills, interviewing technique and shorthand and academic studies in media theory, cultural studies and ethics.
The Faculty of Information (or the iSchool at the University of Toronto) is an undergraduate and graduate school that offers the following programs: a Bachelor of Information (BI), a Master of Information (MI), a Master of Museum Studies (MMSt), and a PhD in information studies, as well as diploma courses. As a member of the iSchool movement, the Faculty of Information takes an interdisciplinary approach to information studies, building on its traditional strengths in library and information science, complemented by research and teaching in archives, museum studies, user experience, information systems and design, critical information studies, culture and technology, knowledge management, digital humanities, the history of books, data science and other related fields. It is located on St. George Campus, in the Claude Bissell building, at 140 St. George Street, which is attached to the John P. Robarts Research Library and the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library.
Ivey Business School is a constituent unit of the University of Western Ontario, located in London, Ontario, Canada. Ivey offers full-time undergraduate (HBA), MBA, MSc, MFE and PhD programs and also maintains two teaching facilities in Toronto and Hong Kong for its EMBA and Executive Education programs. It is credited with establishing the nation's first MBA and PhD program in Business.
Technoculture is a neologism that is not in standard dictionaries but that has some popularity in academia, popularized by editors Constance Penley and Andrew Ross in a book of essays bearing that title. It refers to the interactions between, and politics of, technology and culture.
The School of Library and Information Studies of the University of the Philippines or UP SLIS is the oldest library school in the Philippines. Formally established in March 1961 as the Institute of Library Science, it can trace it roots to 1914, making it one of the first library schools in Asia. It is an independent degree-granting unit of the University of the Philippines Diliman, and offers programs in the field of library and information science. In December 2015, the Commission on Higher Education declared the school as the first and only Center of Excellence among universities and colleges with library and information programs in the Philippines.
Galatasaray University is a Turkish university established in İstanbul, Turkey in 1992, following an agreement signed in the presence of President François Mitterrand of France and President Turgut Özal of Turkey during a ceremony at Galatasaray High School, the mother school of the university. Turkey's Ambassador to France, Coşkun Kırca, played an important role in organizing the agreement. Galatasaray University is one of the most important members of the Galatasaray Community as Galatasaray High School and Galatasaray Sports Club, and is widely regarded as one of the most prestigious and notable universities in Turkey.
CELSA is a French communication and journalism school located in the West of Paris, (Neuilly-sur-Seine) and is part of the Sorbonne University. The name CELSA is an acronym for the French phrase 'Centre d'études littéraires et scientifiques appliquées', i.e. Centre for Applied Literary and Scientific Studies.
The Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications is the undergraduate and graduate college dedicated to the study of journalism, mass communications and media at The Pennsylvania State University in the USA. Re-established in 2017 under its new name after the producer, screenwriter and benefactor Donald P. Bellisario, the Bellisario College is home to four departments: Advertising/Public Relations, Journalism, Film Production and Media Studies, and Telecommunications and Media Industries. Offering five undergraduate majors, a master's degree in media studies, and a Ph.D. program in mass communications, the college is the largest accredited program of its kind in the United States. The college's facilities are located on the University Park campus.
The School of Communication and Information (SC&I) is a professional school within the New Brunswick Campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. The school was created in 1982 as a result of a merger between the Graduate School of Library and Information Studies, the School of Communication Studies, and the Livingston Department of Urban Journalism. The school has about 2,500 students at the undergraduate, masters, and doctoral levels, and about 60 full-time faculty.
Universiti Malaysia Kelantan is a public university in Kelantan, Malaysia. The formation of the university was mooted during the tabling of the Ninth Malaysia Plan and approved by the cabinet of Malaysia on 14 June 2006. The launching ceremony was held at the end of 2006 by Prime Minister, Y.A.B. Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. The first students were enrolled with the commencement of the June 2007 semester.
The School ofJournalism & Mass Communication (UWSJMC) is the journalism school of the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Located in Vilas Communication Hall, the School offers two undergraduate programs, two Master of Arts programs in Journalism, and a doctoral program jointly administered with the Department of Life Sciences Communication.
The Department of Radio–Television–Film at the University of Texas at Austin located in Austin, Texas, is one of the five departments comprising the Moody College of Communication. The department was founded in 1965 and has become one of the nation's premiere film schools, consistently ranking in the top 5 for graduate programs and the top 10 for undergraduate studies. The department has a very selective admissions policy, accepting fewer than 25% of applicants in its undergraduate program, and fewer than 15% of applicants in its graduate programs.
The College of Communication & Information is the communications, information, and media unit at the University of Kentucky. The college offers the following undergraduate majors: Communication, Information Communication Technology, Integrated Strategic Communication, Journalism, and Media Arts and Studies. Graduate programs are offered in Communication, Information Communication Technology, and Library Science. The college has over 1,600 undergraduate students and nearly 300 graduate students pursuing Master's and Ph.D. degrees. It is the only accredited program in library and information science in the state of Kentucky.
Located in London, Ontario, Canada, the Library and Information Science (LIS) program at the University of Western Ontario offers both Masters and PhD level programs through the Faculty of Information and Media Studies (FIMS). Its Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) program is one of seven Canadian MLIS programs currently accredited by the American Library Association (ALA). Both the PhD and Masters programs in Library and Information Sciences at Western FIMS emphasize research skills development, engagement with professional literature, information technology learning, and professional career preparedness.
The School of Library and Information Studies is situated at the University of Alberta in Edmonton and is part of the Faculty of Education. The School offers a Master's program in Library and Information Studies (MLIS) that is accredited by the American Library Association, as well as combined programs with a Master of Arts in Digital Humanities and a Master of Business Administration (MLIS/MBA). SLIS offers an Individual Interdisciplinary PhD opportunity in conjunction with other University of Alberta departments that serve as home units for PhD programs. The School also offers the only fully online MLIS in Canada.
A Master of Journalism is a master's degree awarded to students who have studied journalism at a graduate level. Like other master's degree programs, master of journalism programs are typically between one and two years.
{{cite web}}
: Check |url=
value (help)