The Libraries seek to support research in journalism, mass media, and current events, and the needs of MS students and the teaching faculty, as well as the needs of Ph.D. candidates in the interdisciplinary Media Studies program established in 1998-99.
The following changes in the user population took place during the first half of the 1990’s: (1) an increase in the number of students specializing in broadcast, rather than print, journalism, (2) a growing demand for electronic full text sources (primarily newspapers, magazines, wire services and transcripts), (3) an expanding interest in computer-assisted reporting texts, (4) increased publication of investigative journalism monographs covering a wide array of subjects including education, business and government, and (5) an increased interest in new media technology, in conjunction with the School's establishment of a Center for New Media.
Areas of established specialization: journalism history, journalism ethics, and journalist biographies/autobiographies. We are in support of greater interest in media studies, and are collecting more materials in the areas of media criticism and the impact of media on society.