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FilterBuddy tool is designed to protect minority content creators from online hate.
SC&I is exciting, dynamic, and forward-looking. It has outstanding faculty doing leading-edge and creative research across various topic areas drawing on different theoretical perspectives. It has a history of theoretical and methodological innovation, and as a professional school, it has taught the leaders of various fields.
Rutgers University names Professor of Communication Itzhak Yanovitzky a recipient of a Faculty Scholar-Teacher Award for the academic year 2021-2022. This award honors tenured faculty members who have made outstanding synergistic contributions in research and teaching.
Large majority also believe someone having a behavioral health crisis should be treated first by a health-care provider or crisis counselor, not law enforcement.
Gailliard, who initially joined SC&I in 2012 as assistant professor of Communication, returns as the first person to hold this new position, created to benefit faculty, students, and staff and contribute to DEI initiatives across Rutgers University and beyond.
Assistant Professor Kiran Garimella and his co-authors have developed new techniques to enable administrators of WhatsApp public groups to monitor junk senders without violating the privacy policies WhatsApp has established for their users.
Here we are, at the culmination of several weeks of effort... *Drum roll, please* The all-important first draft! This is the deliverable that, if you've been following the series, we have been working towards from the start.
In our Q&A, Tsakonas describes the ways the JMS major has prepared him for his internships and jobs in the sports media field, and how he will use these experiences to continue his career in sports journalism post-graduation in May.
Hayley Slusser (SC&I ’22) is the former editor-in-chief of The Daily Targum.
“The MCM provides you with world-class learning and helps prepare you to achieve and succeed at your dream job. This program helped me be the best version of myself,” said Nick Yacenko MCM’21, COM’20.