Pullen Wins Tigrett, COM Graduates

Union University graduated a group of 614 graduates during its 187th annual spring commencement ceremony May 19 on the university’s Great Lawn. The Communication Arts department saw a total of 28 students graduate.

As part of the ceremony, Union presented the Elizabeth Tigrett Medal to Katherine Pullen, a journalism and intercultural studies double major from Jacksonville, Fla. The award honors the mother of Isaac B. Tigrett, a former interim president at Union, as well as a benefactor and trustee. The Medal has been awarded since 1912 by vote of the entire Union faculty to an outstanding member of the senior class.

Among her many activities within the Communication Arts department, Pullen served on the Cardinal & Cream staff as a Staff Writer, Assistant News Editor, and Online Editor, as well as working on our daily news program Jackson 24-7 as an anchor, reporter and producer. In 2011, she was named the Best Multimedia Journalist in the South at the Southeast Journalism Conference (SEJC). Pullen has accepted a full scholarship to the graduate/doctoral program in Sociology at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.

In a separate Awards Day ceremony, the following students were awards Academic Excellence Medals for maintaining the highest grade point average in their respective majors:

Alyssa Karr, Broadcast Journalism
Alex Brown, Journalism
Nigel Manuel, Media Communications
Emily Anderson, Theatre
Kina S. Mallard Communication Arts Student of the Year: Margaret Brinson, Journalism

This Spring’s Communication Arts graduates were:

Emily Anderson, Theatre/Speech
Margaret Brinson, Journalism
Alex Brown, Journalism
Joshua Brown, Journalism
Kara Dukes, Broadcast Journalism
Rebecca Felts, Digital Media Studies
Matthew Fike, Media Communications
Chad Hoy, Theatre/Speech
Whitney Jones, Journalism
Alyssa Karr, Broadcast Journalism and Sociology
Joseph Ladisa, Digital Media Studies
Hannah Lutz, Public Relations
Nigel Manuel, Media Communications
Katlyn Moncada, Journalism
Holly Naylor, Broadcast Journalism
Abby Ott, Journalism
Amanda Parrish, Journalism
Caroline Phillips, Public Relations
Cameron Puckett, Media Communications
Katherine Pullen, Journalism and Intercultural Studies
Juliana Robbins, Broadcast Journalism
Keaghlan Sheridan, Theatre/Speech
Amanda Short, Media Communications
Caleb Stallings, Media Communications and Philosophy
James Summerlin, Journalism
Philip Tang, Broadcast Journalism
Huay Ming Tay, Broadcast Journalism
Elizabeth Watson, Media Communications

PR program receives CEPR certification

The Public Relations Society of America, the field’s premier professional organization, has conferred Certification in Education for Public Relations on Union University’s public relations undergraduate degree program.

Union’s program is the first in the International Association of Baptist Colleges and Universities and only the second in the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities to receive the certification. Only 31 public relations programs around the world hold the PRSA certification.

The letter announcing the conference of CEPR said the program’s well-developed curriculum, facilities and professional affiliations for students were “particularly impressive.”

The certification process included a site visit by two members of the CEPR committee. They met with Union Provost Carla Sanderson to evaluate the university’s curriculum-creation process and its support of faculty scholarship and professional development.

“I was pleased to be able to address how vital the liberal arts core curriculum is at Union,” Sanderson said. “We talked about the importance of faculty as scholars, faculty as mentors and faculty as spiritual developers in the lives of our students. We talked about … how the faculty-student relationship is the most important thing we can foster here.”

Sanderson said the certification is an example of the university’s first core value: academic excellence.

The public relations major at Union is housed within the communication arts department. Public relations professors work and teach in Jennings Hall, where two labs allow students to practice skills necessary for a career in public relations. Professors also encourage public relations majors and minors to join Union’s Public Relations Student Society of America chapter to learn about the profession and connect with the broader professional community, and Bulldog Communication Group, a student-run public relations firm that has clients in the community. The public relations program has long been accredited.

“CEPR is not accreditation but certification of our program by PRSA, which means they endorse what we’re doing,” Kathie Chute, professor of communication arts. “According to PRSA, some employers are showing preference to graduates from programs that have earned this important designation.”

Ashley Blair, assistant professor of communication arts, said the CEPR is significant because it tells future employers that the students who graduate from Union’s program have been prepared well for a job. Blair said the certification will inform employers that though it is a small program, it can be compared in quality with some of the largest schools.

“Being able to say you’re from a CEPR program on your resume provides a specific and significant correlation with PRSA,” Blair said. “Even employers who are not familiar with Union University, but are familiar with CEPR, will connect an added credibility with the applicant.”

The certification was not easy to attain. Chute and Blair spent hours last summer and fall gathering information about the program and filling out a lengthy application as the first step in the certification process.

“I would say the most difficult aspect was gathering all the data PRSA requires,” Chute said. “The certification is as much about Union University as it is our specific program, so there is a lot they want to know.”