Skip Navigation
The Missouri Honor Medal Missouri School of Journalism
University of Missouri
 
MU Home
  Real-World Experience
Journalism A to Z Index
KOMU Columbia Missourian Vox Magazine Adelante! KBIA Public Radio Global Journalist The MOJO Agency Missouri Digital News

Missouri Journalism Centennial and Dedication of the Reynolds Journalism Institute Register Online

About the J-School A Brief History
Connections
The Journalist's Creed
Media Outlets
Mission
Missouri Honor Medal
Calendar
Career Center
Contact Us
Faculty and Staff Convergence
Radio-Television
Journalism Studies
Magazine Journalism
Newspaper Journalism
Photojournalism
Strategic Communication
Doctoral Faculty
Graduate Faculty
Adjunct Faculty
Endowed Chairs
Reynolds Institute
Professors Emeriti
Show All Faculty
Show All Staff
Show Everyone
Giving to the J-School
J-School Home
News Releases
Reynolds Journalism Institute
 

Center on Religion & the Professions Debuts New Name

Missouri School of Journalism Affiliate Leads Research on Coverage of Religion

Debra Mason Debra Mason
Journalism Studies
Faculty
Links

By Amy White
Center on Religion & the Professions

Columbia, Mo. (Aug. 30, 2007) -- A new name will kick off the new school year for the Center on Religion & the Professions, an affiliate of the Missouri School of Journalism and the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute at the University of Missouri.

Center on Religion & the Professions Home Page
The home page of the new Center on Religion & the Professions Web site.

The Center works to improve religious literacy among professionals, including journalists, so that they can better serve, cover and communicate with a diverse public. Founded in 2003 as the Center for Religion, the Professions & the Public, the Center received approval in June to change its name to the Center on Religion & the Professions.

The new name is more succinct, avoids awkward acronyms and makes marketing the Center's activities more manageable, said Debra Mason, director of the Center since September 2006. She also serves as executive director of the Religion Newswriters Association, a professional association for journalists who write about religion in mainstream media.

"We still see the public as central to what we do - both in terms of outreach and programs - because the public is the focus of what professionals do," Mason said.

The Center's multidisciplinary outreach programs support the philosophy that as America grows more religiously diverse, professionals in all fields need to better understand the religious traditions and beliefs of the public they serve.

The Center is a national leader in research on coverage of religion in the media and journalists' attitudes about and knowledge of religion. It also develops curriculum for training journalists in covering religion. Other activities include public forums and related events to increase the visibility of religion in the public sphere.

The program theme for the 2007-2008 year is "Religion and Politics." Among the activities planned on the University of Missouri campus is a film series and lecture on religious literacy and American politics by Stephen Prothero, author of Religious Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know - and Doesn't.

The interdisciplinary Center also has close ties to the MU College of Arts and Science and other professional schools. It was founded in April 2003 with a $1.4 million grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts and received a $1.5 million renewal grant in December 2005. The latest grant is funding a major new study of the future of religion journalism, new research on the relationship between spirituality and the coping skills of long-term disabled patients as well as new public outreach and continued teaching initiatives.

In addition to a new name, the Center has launched a redesigned Web site, new logo and new Web address, http://corp.missouri.edu/.

Related


Debra Mason Named Director of Center for Religion, the Professions and the Public Debra L. Mason, a nationally recognized, award-winning and widely published specialist in religion journalism, has been named the new director of the Center for Religion, the Professions and the Public at the Missouri School of Journalism. The Center's research and teaching seeks to advance religious literacy and public knowledge of America's increasing cultural and religious diversity. [More] Debra L. Mason
Recent Journalism Graduate Named a Finalist for National Religion Writing Student Award Leah Lohse, BJ '06, is one of ten finalists for the highest national award given to young writers on religion. The Chandler Award for the Student Religion Writer of the Year recognizes excellent reporting skills at the collegiate level and a grasp of religion issues that is fair and balanced according to journalistic standards. [More] Leah Lohse
RPP Web Site MU Center Awarded $1.5 Million Renewal Grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts The Center for Religion, the Professions, and the Public at the University of Missouri-Columbia has received a $1.5-million renewal grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts. The grant will allow the Center to continue studying issues in the professions related to America's increasing religious and cultural diversity. The Center was established in 2003 with a $1.4-million Pew Trusts grant. [More]
Ross Todd Ross Todd Named a Finalist in Religion Newswriters Association National Contest Ross Todd, a Missouri School of Journalism graduate student, is a finalist in the Religion Newswriters Association 2004 Contests for excellence in religion reporting in the general circulation news media. [More]
The J-School Arch Stone Lions  
Revised: 29 August 2007. Copyright © 2008 The Curators of the University of Missouri  |  Contact the J-School