The Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications is the undergraduate and graduate college dedicated to the study of journalism, mass communications and media at The Pennsylvania State University in the USA. Re-established is 2017 under its new name after the producer, screenwriter and benefactor Donald P. Bellisario, the Bellisario College is home to four departments; Advertising/Public Relations, Journalism, Film-Video and Media Studies, and Telecommunications. Offering five undergraduate majors, master's degrees in media studies and a Ph.D. program in mass communications, the college is housed on the University Park campus in University Park, Pennsylvania, and is recognized as the largest accredited program of its kind in the United States.
Undergraduate programs
Undergraduate majors
Advertising/public relations
*Advertising option
*Public relations option
*Strategic communications option
Film-video & media studies
*Film-video major
*Media studies major
Journalism
*Broadcast journalism option
*Digital and print journalism option
*Photojournalism option
Telecommunications
Graduate programs
Ph.D. in mass communications
M.A. in media studies
*Integrated undergraduate-graduate degree 5 year program for students to earn a B.A. and M.A in media studies
*JD-MA Joint Degree—In collaboration with Penn State Law, students can earn a J.D. and M.A. in Media Studies
Master of Professional Studies in Strategic Communications — online only
History
The college dates to 1914, when the first journalism course was offered at Penn State. Though the Department of Journalism was first founded in 1930 under the School of Liberal Arts, initial course offerings eventually led to the establishment of the School of Journalism in 1955. This new school brought together the advertising program, which dates back to 1936, and the journalism program to form what became the School of Communications in 1985. Joining the advertising/public relations and journalism programs to form a more comprehensive communications school were programs in film-video, media studies and telecommunications. The film-video program, originating in the College of Arts and Architecture, and the media studies program, previously a communications studies major housed in the College of Liberal Arts, were both introduced at Penn State in the 1960s. The telecommunications major was born in the College of Liberal Arts, dating back to the mid-1970s. After its establishment in 1985, the School of Communications was upgraded to the College of Communications in 1995, followed by the departmentalization of the college in 2000. On April 21, 2017, the college was renamed the Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications, after the acclaimed writer, producer, director and alumnus Donald P. Bellisario committed $30 million to support students and faculty in the college and to establish the Donald P. Bellisario Media Center, set to open in fall 2020. The college is now recognized as the largest accredited mass communications program in the United States.
Research
Arthur W. Page Center for Integrity in Public Communication
The college has more than forty media opportunities and student organizations, both on and off campus. These include CommAgency, CommRadio and Centre County Report.
Facilities
The college has state-of-the-art facilities, located in several buildings on the University Park campus. These include television and radio studios, an equipment room and film shooting space at Innovation Park, as well as a smaller equipment room and writing labs in the Carnegie Building. The college is in the midst of a building project that will bring its many facilities under one roof in the core of the University Park campus. The Bellisario Media Center is scheduled to open in fall 2020.
Alumni
There are some 27,000 alumni. The program's more prominent graduates include:
Donald P. Bellisario, creator of award-winning and popular television series