Volume 38
Number 7
September 2010
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Student Column: Tasks for ICA's Student Affairs Committee (Part 1)

The Student Affairs Committee of the International Communication Association has renewed itself and is ready to work hard toward making ICA an intellectual home for emerging scholars.

This year, the Student Affairs Committee is composed of five people and is quite diverse. The committee leaders are the two elected student representatives to ICA's Board of Directors: Malte Hinrichsen, who is a Ph.D. student in communication research at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, and Diana Nastasia, who has recently finalized her Ph.D. in communication and public discourse at the University of North Dakota in the U.S. The committee also includes Nicolas Bencherki, a Ph.D. candidate in communication at the University of Montreal in Canada; Anastasia Grynko, a Ph.D. candidate in journalism at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy in the Ukraine and a public relations practitioner in her country; and Joice Soares Tolentino, an M.A. Student in global media studies at Karlstad University in Sweden and a former public relations officer for nonprofit organizations in Brazil.

To identify a set of priorities for ICA's Student Affairs Committee, a set of items for this committee to work on in the near future, we have exchanged several e-mails among ourselves and with previous members. In order to avoid reinventing the wheel, we have asked former elected ICA student representatives to detail their successes and roadblocks, and to discuss the things they would have liked to do and did not get to, during their service on the Student Affairs Committee.

Rebecca Hains, 2006-2008 ICA Student Representative (currently assistant professor at Salem State University), stated that being a good student representative "wasn't so much about big accomplishments or milestones as being responsible and focused in the many functions of the position - always prioritizing students' interests."

Tema Milstein, 2004-2006 Student Representative (currently assistant professor at the University of New Mexico), wrote extensively about both successes and things remaining to be done. She commented: "I feel the greatest successes included getting the student reception really going. When we started, it was a rather bland get-together in a hotel room over a few dozen overpriced appetizers. My student board comembers and I transformed the reception into a true party, where people got to really get to know each other by dancing, reveling, and experiencing the host country/city together. In NYC, we first moved the reception from the conference hotel to a dance club. In Dresden, we worked with local grad students to find a great club and local DJs. I hope this tradition carries on. It was not only fun, but it provided a space in which people felt more free and made long-lasting international connections and memories.

"We also took part in creating and running an orientation for first-time ICA attendees (student and faculty)," she added, "And creating a student lounge space at the conference that had ICA-experienced grad students assigned to the lounge at all times to help orient and introduce new students to others. I think both these efforts helped people feel more at home at the conference and my advice would be to continue with the lounge and publicize it well before and during the conference."

Tema also shared her thoughts about what could still be done in the future: "Three things we weren't able to do, but that I hope can still be done, are:

  1. "secure money to fund more graduate students to attend ICA; 
  2. "create a more open-access resource for job postings - a job listserv supported by ICA that freely reaches ICA members and nonmembers would not only be an important international resource for students (and faculty looking for positions) but would attract more people to ICA as an organization; and
  3. "poll grad students who are not ICA members to find out why they aren't. For instance, I'm at a department with a strong emphasis in intercultural communication and many international students, but very few people attend ICA. I think there are at least two issues at play on this last issue that is true for grad students from many different universities: a lack of funding to attend more than one conference a year, and a perceived or real lack of space for many of the topics and approaches grad students are focused on in their work (e.g., performance, environmental, cultural, critical, etc.). I think a poll of reasons grad students have for not attending would be enlightening for the ICA leadership and would help ICA envision future directions."

With these ideas in mind, we are making our own list of tasks for the Student Affairs Committee. In the next issue of the ICA newsletter, we will share this list of tasks with you, and will invite your feedback. Stay tuned!

NOTICE

Effective 1 July 2010, all ICA journals accept only submissions that are formatted according to the Style Guide of the American Psychological Association, 6th edition (2009).



INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION 2010-2011

Executive Committee
Francois Cooren, President, U de Montreal
Larry Gross, President-Elect, U of Southern California
Barbie Zelizer, Immediate Past President, U of Pennsylvania
Patrice Buzzanell, Past President, Purdue U
Sonia Livingstone (ex-officio), Finance Chair , London School of Economics
Michael L. Haley (ex-officio), Executive Director

Members-at-Large
Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U
R.G. Lentz, McGill U
Rohan Samarajiva, LIRNEasia
Gianpetro Mazzoleni, U of Milan
Juliet Roper, U of Waikato

Student Members
Malte Hinrichsen, U of Amsterdam
Diana Nastasia, U of North Dakota

Division Chairs & ICA Vice Presidents
James E. Katz, Communication & Technology, Rutgers U
Peter J. Humphreys, Communication Law & Policy, U of Manchester
Myria Georgiou, Ethnicity and Race in Communication, London School of Economics 
Diana Rios, Feminist Scholarship, U of Connecticut
Robert Huesca, Global Communication and Social Change, Trinity U
Monique Mitchell Turner, Health Communication, U of Maryland
Robert F. Potter, Information Systems, Indiana U
Rebecca M. Chory, Instructional & Developmental Communication, West Virginia U
Ling Chen, Intercultural Communication, Hong Kong Baptist U
Walid Afifi, Interpersonal Communication, U of California - Santa Barbara
Frank Esser, Journalism Studies, U of Zurich
Richard Buttny, Language & Social Interaction, Syracuse U
David R. Ewoldsen, Mass Communication, Ohio State U
Dennis Mumby, Organizational Communication, U of North Carolina
Nick Couldry, Philosophy of Communication, Goldsmiths College, London U
Yariv Tsfati, Political Communication, U of Haifa
Paul Frosh, Popular Communication, Hebrew U of Jerusalem
Craig Carroll, Public Relations, U of North Carolina
Luc Pauwels, Visual Communication, U of Antwerp

Special Interest Group Chairs
J. Alison Bryant, Children, Adolescents amd the Media, Smartypants.com
Jefferson D. Pooley, Communication History, Muhlenberg College
John Sherry, Game Studies, Michigan State U
Lynn Comella, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, & Transgender Studies, U of Nevada - Las Vegas
Vincent Doyle, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, & Transgender Studies, IE U
Lisa Sparks, Intergroup Communication, Chapman U

Editorial & Advertising
Michael J. West, ICA, Publications Manager

ICA Newsletter (ISSN0018876X) is published 10 times annually (combining January-February and June-July issues) by the International Communication Association, 1500 21st Street NW, Washington, DC 20036 USA; phone: (01) 202-955-1444; fax: (01) 202-955-1448; email: publications@icahdq.org; website: http://www.icahdq.org. ICA dues include $30 for a subscription to the ICA Newsletter for one year. The Newsletter is available to nonmembers for $30 per year. Direct requests for ad rates and other inquiries to Michael J. West, Editor, at the address listed above. News and advertising deadlines are Jan. 15 for the January-February issue; Feb. 15 for March; Mar. 15 for April; Apr. 15 for May; June 15 for June-July; July 15 for August; August 15 for September; September 15 for October; October 15 for November; Nov. 15 for December.



To Reach ICA Editors

Journal of Communication
Malcolm Parks, Editor-Elect
U of Washington
Department of Communication
Box 353740
Seattle, WA 98195-3740 USA
macp@u.washington.edu  


Human Communication Research
Jim Katz, Editor
Rutgers U
Department of Communication
4 Huntington Street
New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA
jimkatz@scils.rutgers.edu


Communication Theory
Angharad N. Valdivia, Editor
U of Illinois
228 Gregory Hall
801 S. Wright Street
Urbana, IL 61801 USA
valdivia@uiuc.edu


Communication, Culture, & Critique
John Downing, Editor-Elect
Southern Illinois U - Carbondale
Global Media Research Center
College of Mass Communication
Carbondale, IL 62901 USA
karen.ross@liverpool.ac.uk


Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication
Maria Bakardjieva, Editor-Elect
U of Calgary
Faculty of Communication and Culture
2500 University Drive
Calgary, AB T2N1N4 CANADA
bakardji@ucalgary.ca


Communication Yearbook
Charles T. Salmon, Editor
Michigan State U
College of Communication Arts amd Sciences
287 Comm Arts Building
East Lansing, MI 48824-1212 USA
CY34@msu.edu



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