Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute
The Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute at Baruch College was founded with the support of Bernard L. Schwartz in 1997 and dedicated to helping faculty integrate communication-intensive activities into course curricula. Sponsors an annual Symposium on Communication and Communication-Intensive Instruction. Operates under the office of the Provost.
The Institute is a nationally recognized academic service unit and faculty development program dedicated to infusing the curriculum with oral, written, and computer mediated communication-intensive activities to aid in undergraduates’ development as confident, purposeful and effective communicators. The Institute oversees many programs and initiatives at Baruch. These include curricular development and support of Communication-Intensive courses across the curriculum, professional development for Fellows, faculty members and staff, program assessment, educational technology, software development.[1] The Institute has published the education weblog cac.ophony.org since 2005[2] and has developed the VOCAT oral communication assessment instrument sine 2007.[3] Baruch received the 2008 TIAA-CREF Institute's Theodore M. Hesburgh Award for innovative professional development programs.[4]
Directors since 1997
- Robert J. Myers (founding director) 1997-1998
- George Otte 1998-2000
- Paul Arpia 2000-2003
- Mikhail Gershovich 2003–2013, also a professor for CIS3810 : Principles for New Media
- Suzanne Epstein (Interim) 2013-2014
- Heather Sample 2014-
References
- ↑ "Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute | The Schwartz Institute". Blsci.baruch.cuny.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
- ↑ "Will Crowdsourcing Solve All Our Problems?". Cac.ophony.org. Retrieved 2012-02-14.
- ↑ http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/using-web-video-to-fine-tune-student-performance/27558
- ↑ Warner, Fara. "Change Magazine - Improving Communication is Everyone's Responsibility". Changemag.org. Retrieved 2012-02-14.