Graduate School of Journalism
Journalism | |
Established | 1912 |
President | {{{President}}} |
Dean | Nicholas Lemann |
Degrees | MA, MS, PhD |
Enrollment | 381 students (2005) |
Website | www.journalism.columbia.edu |
The Graduate School of Journalism, sometimes referred to as the J-School, is Columbia's journalism school.
Appropriately enough, it is located in Journalism Hall.
History
The journalism school was opened in 1912 with a gift given ten years earlier by Joseph Pulitzer. According to legend, the trustees thought this was a somewhat nutty idea, but on Pulitzer's insistence, the school was created anyway. In its early years, it was referred to as the "Pulitzer School". It has gone on to become among the top journalism schools (if not the top such school) in the United States.
Pulitzer would also endow the eponymous Pulitzer Prize, which are awarded each year by the J-School in a ceremony held in the Low Library Rotunda.
See also
- J-School Ethics Exam, a 2006 cheating scandal
Columbia University Schools |
Architecture, Planning and Preservation • Arts • Arts and Sciences (Graduate School) • Business • Columbia College • Dentistry • Continuing Education • Engineering • General Studies • International and Public Affairs • Journalism • Law • Medicine • Nursing • Public Health • Social Work |
Affiliated Institutions |
Barnard • Jewish Theological Seminary • Teachers College • Union Theological Seminary |
Defunct Schools |
Pharmacy • Library Service |