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CMS is a place where writers, actors, podcasters, and filmmakers can get a taste of the entertainment industry. All projects are original. This club is open to all majors. Come join our production team, and gain media experience for your resume.

Follow the links below to learn more!

The Department of Media Studies is an academic department within the UNC system; It is not empowered to regulate the use, creation, or consumption of media on campus or by members of the UNCG community. Additionally, the Department does not provide legal advice or Consent forms.

If you have questions about filming, recording, and conducting similar activities on campus, please contact the relevant facilities or location supervisor and review the UNCG Request for Use of University Buildings or University Property Policy. Other concerns and questions should be directed to, inter alia, University Counsel, the Office of the Provost, Public Safety, the Dean of Students’ Office, and Residence Life.

Please be mindful that UNCG is an educational institution. Depending on the circumstances, it may be prudent to inform campus authorities or others potentially impacted, and implement steps to prevent the unreasonable disruption of courses or other University business, and the improper intrusion on the privacy of students, residents, employees, and others.

John Lee Jellicorse

During his formative years, John Lee Jellicorse’s interest in communication and expression was comprehensive.  He was put in speech therapy, participated in debate and forensics, acted and directed, learned much from his father who was a radio and television engineer, was a radio announcer, and began shooting 16 mm film when he was eleven.  He earned his AB degree from the University of Tennessee and his doctorate from Northwestern University.  He began his career as an educator as a speech and theatre teacher at Knoxville Central High School and as an instructor at Appalachian State University and Northwestern University.  He rose through the ranks at Northwestern earning tenure in 1968 as an associate professor and serving as Acting Department Head of the Communication Studies Department in his last year there.  Jellicorse’s graduate studies had been funded by a College Teaching Career Fellowship from the Council of Southern Universities.  The Fellowship required that recipients serve a portion of their careers in the south, so in 1969 Jellicorse returned to the University of Tennessee as an associate professor on a joint appointment between Speech and Theatre, a department in the College of Liberal Arts, and the College of Communication.  For the College of Communication he developed undergraduate and graduate core courses in communication theory and helped plan a doctoral program.   For Liberal Arts he initiated and taught the University’s first upper division film study courses.

In 1974 Jellicorse came to UNC Greensboro as Professor and Head of the Drama and Speech Department.  He helped guide this unit through a period of explosive growth.  By 1991, when he took leave to work in Hong Kong, the small Drama and Speech Department (thirteen faculty in three areas) had become the Department of Communication and Theatre with multiple undergraduate and graduate programs in six different disciplines.  It was the University’s largest department, enrolling 1,308 FTE students and serving more than nine hundred majors.  Jellicorse hired the first faculty in education-of-the-deaf and initiated the media courses and curricula that became the Broadcasting and Cinema Division and later Department (now Media Studies).  Subsequently the five divisions of the Communication and Theatre Department all became separate flourishing departments with Jellicorse serving as the first regular department head in Broadcasting and Cinema.

During his absence from UNCG in the early nineties Jellicorse designed a comprehensive communications curriculum for the US Information Service to be implemented at the Technical University of Wroclaw, Poland; and he served for three years as the founding Dean of the School of Communication at Hong Kong Baptist University in China.  Establishing the School required creating departments, hiring new faculty and staff, selecting department chairs, and developing new degree programs and having them accredited.

During his career Jellicorse was a member of or chaired numerous University and College committees ending with creating a program at UNCG to promote the development of arts entrepreneurship.  He has been a frequent contributor to professional journals and associations and pursued creative work as an actor, director, and film producer.  He was mainly a teacher nd curriculum developer, however.  Because of the breadth of his background and interests, he was able to prepare and initiate new courses, develop enrollment for them, and then hire specialists to take them over while he moved on to extend a different area of the curriculum.  Thus throughout his university career, he taught over sixty different courses including nine in journalism and mass media, seven in communication theory, twelve in broadcasting, twenty in cinema, two in fundamentals of speech, fourteen in communication studies, and six in theatre plus thesis and doctoral student supervision.

Kate Nugent Curtis

Dear Friends,

Elliot Curtis and I are fellow UNCG graduates and Broadcasting Cinema majors, and we thought you would be interested to know that in July of 2012 we established The Dr. John Lee Jellicorse Endowed Scholarship in Media Studies!

Many of you may remember Dr. Jellicorse and the impact he had on the Broadcast Cinema department (now Media Studies) and the University as a whole.  In an effort to say thank you, we established this scholarship to honor a man who dedicated most of his professional life to the university, and gave so much to his students and the department.

This is the first endowed scholarship in the Media Studies department, which holds a special significance for all of us with ties to our Broadcasting Cinema days. With this scholarship, Dr. Jellicorse’s legacy will live on in perpetuity for future generations of Media Studies students at UNCG.

As you can imagine, Dr. Jellicorse was thrilled to hear the news, and in April of this year, he and I had the pleasure of meeting the very first recipient, Shaniece Harvey.

Giving back to the Universitiy has been an extremely rewarding experience and one of the greatest things we’ve ever done to pay it forward.  I would like to give you an opportunity to share in this significant event and contribute to the success of this scholarship with a donation as well.

Our goal is to fully fund this endowment by 2015.  We’ve started with an initial gift of $10,000.  Our next goal is to get to $15,000 by Dec 31st 2013, $20,000 by the end of 2014 and finally reach $25,000 by the end of 2015.

We’re looking for 10 gifts at the $100 level, and 6 gifts at the $500 level, and 3 gifts at the $1,000 level.  If we are successful, that would put us just over our goal for 2013!

Elliot and I will be making phone calls over the next few weeks, and we’d love to talk to you about the scholarship and see if you would be willing to support us in achieving our goal.

This is an opportunity to give back in a very special way and say “thank you” with the gift of education.  Since graduating in 1989, my educational experience at UNCG put me on a path toward an exciting career in broadcasting and public relations, and gave me the foothold I needed to start my own business.  It is my hope that, with your support, we can help provide the same education opportunity we enjoyed to someone else year after year.

Please consider any amount that is within your means, knowing you can also spread it out over the next few years by committing to smaller quarterly or annual donations.

We hope you will consider joining us in supporting UNCG and the Media Studies Department.

Sincerely,

Kate Nugent Curtis ‘89

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