BEA Announces the 2010 New Faculty Research Grant
Recipient
Serena Carpenter, Arizona State University
Serena Carpenter, Arizona
State University, has been named the recipient of the 2010
Broadcast Education Association's (BEA) New Faculty Research
Grant.
Serena Carpenter joined the Arizona State University faculty in 2007 specializing in
newer media and media sociology after finishing her Ph.D. degree at
Michigan
State University. Carpenter is
interested in understanding influences on news content. Her dissertation
research was one of the first of a series of quantitative studies on
online citizen journalism. She has produced eleven journal publications,
two book chapters, 17 conference presentations. Her research has been
published in Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Mass
Communication and Society, Journalism and Mass Communication Educator,
and Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media.
Carpenter teaches courses in the areas of online and broadcast
journalism. She regularly reach out to journalistic, academic, and other
professional communities. In an attempt to bridge the gap between
professionals and academics, she started a blog called “Online
Journalism” (http://serenacarpenter.com/). In
this blog, she shares teaching materials and deciphers research
published in journals for a wider audience.
Carpenter has also taught courses at Michigan State University and Bloomsburg
University. Her
professional background includes working as a television reporter and in
radio advertising sales. Carpenter has produced an award-winning
documentary on rural issues.
Carpenter is an active member of the Association of Education in
Journalism and Mass Communication, International Communication
Association, Broadcast Education Association and National Communication
Association.
BEA’s New Faculty Research Grant (NFRG) seeks to promote
scholarship through achievement by untenured broadcast and electronic
media faculty. A cash grant of $2,000 for research projects will be
awarded to Serena Carpenter at BEA’s annual convention in
Las
Vegas, April 15-17. This year’s grant
was matched by a fund created in the memory of Hal Niven, former BEA
Executive Director.
Initial funding for this grant was provided by Rebecca Hayden, winner
of BEA’s Distinguished Education Service Award in 1993, and
long-time editor/publisher of broadcast and media books at Wadsworth
Publishing Co. The grant honors the memory of Sydney W. Head
(1913-1991) and Harrison B. Summers (1894-1980), two key pioneers in
broadcast education. Over time it is hoped that the scope of
funded research will encompass technology, law and policy, audience
studies, international and foreign systems, production and a variety of
other media areas.
BEA is the professional
association for professors, industry professionals and graduate students
who are interested in teaching and research related to electronic media
and multimedia enterprises. There are currently more than 1,500
individual and institutional members. Visit www.beaweb.org for more information on BEA and the annual convention
BEA2010.