[Air-L] Technology and authority: Graduate programs

James Howison jhowison at syr.edu
Fri May 23 12:28:32 PDT 2008


I think that research like that would also be very welcome within the  
Information Schools (iSchools):

http://www.ischools.org/oc/schools.html

(I notice that you have Rutgers iSchool on the list, but there are  
many others, like Syracuse, where I am, that I know would welcome such  
work.)

Of course, the main goal should be to identify a researcher (or better  
yet a small group of co-located collaborators) whose research work is  
close to your interests and whose research style you respect.

--J

On May 22, 2008, at 5:52 PM, Brian Wickhem wrote:

> Hello fine scholars and researchers,
>
> I'm currently looking around for Ph.D tracks and scholars for graduate
> school (fall '09).  I'm most interested in how new media is being  
> used to
> challenge authority: digital music, memes, mobile communications.
>
> After a good amount of research, I created this short list of  
> programs that
> seem to be a good fit, thought it might be nice to spread it around  
> for
> future students' benefits:
>
> USC (Anneberg School)
> UC Davis (Communications)
> Northwestern (Media, Technology and Society)
> Northwestern (Technology and Behavior Studies)
> Washington (Communications)
> NYU (Media, Culture, and Communications)
> Utah (Communications)
> U of Illinois at Chicago (Communications)
> Iowa (Communication Studies)
> UC San Diego (Communications)
> Michigan State (Communications Arts and Sciences)
> Cornell (Science and Technology Studies)
> Michigan (Communications Studies)
> Georgia Tech (Language, Literature, and Communications)
> UC Santa Barbara (Communications)
> Georgetown (Communication, Culture, and Technolgy)
> Rutgers (School of Communication, Information, and Library Studies)
> Virginia Tech (Science and Technology Studies)
> MIT (MediaLab) (really only a good one if you have experience in
> hardware/computer programming, though...)
>
> Anyone have any further suggestions as to where I/others should be  
> looking?
>
> Any further advice would be great...and thanks in advance.  Always  
> look
> forward to the daily posts!
>
> Brian Wickhem
> _______________________________________________
> The Air-L at listserv.aoir.org mailing list
> is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org
> Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
>
> Join the Association of Internet Researchers:
> http://www.aoir.org/
>




More information about the Air-L mailing list