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College of Communication and Information

The University Library is located in the heart of the ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ campus.

U.S. News & World Report ranks ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ in the top 20 Best Library and Information Studies Programs in the country in its 2022 edition of Best Graduate Schools. Overall, ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ is recognized in 12 new national rankings in the 2022 edition of Best Graduate Schools, including three specialty rankings.

CCI Diversity

Gerald H. Read Center for International & Intercultural Education
Picture of Latinos in the Media Poster

Celebration! Dan Armelli is doused with champagne during the Washington Nationals Oct. 15 celebration of winning the National League pennant.

As the champagne flowed Oct. 15 in the clubhouse of the National League Champion Washington Nationals, there was a ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ connection in the middle of the frenzy that capped the team’s first trip to the World Series.

Celebration! Dan Armelli is doused with champagne during the Washington Nationals Oct. 15 celebration of winning the National League pennant.

As the champagne flowed Oct. 15 in the clubhouse of the National League Champion Washington Nationals, there was a ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ connection in the middle of the frenzy that capped the team’s first trip to the World Series.

Covering the Carnage: Journalists Risk Own Mental, Physical Health In Reporting From Dayton, El Paso

Note: Gretchen Hoak is a former television reporter/anchor and current assistant professor of journalism in ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Her research survey, ,  focused on how universities prepare young journalists for the trauma they may endure in covering violence. ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ Today asked Hoak to share her thoughts on the impact the mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton will have on the reporters assigned to cover these events.  

An interdisciplinary team of ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ faculty seeks to improve educational opportunities in Nigeria thanks to a U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) grant.

An interdisciplinary team of ¶¶MÅ®ÆÍ faculty will participate in a $13.3 million grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to improve educational outcomes for Nigerian children.