El Dorado News-Times

Communicat­ion department shut at John Brown

Enrollment low and few jobs for students, university says

- By Jaime Adame Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

John Brown University is shutting down its communicat­ion department and incoming students will no longer be able to enroll in the department’s bachelor degree program, a university spokeswoma­n said.

The private Christian university, in a statement Tuesday, cited both a decline in enrollment for the department and fewer jobs awaiting its graduates, as well as “overall financial goals” for the campus.

Communicat­ion majors at John Brown pursue an emphasis in such areas as public relations, media production or digital journalism. The university will create a journalism minor, according to its statement.

Students criticized the decision in a group statement published Monday on the website of the college’s student newspaper.

“Although we are a smaller major, those who decided to study communicat­ion feel God’s calling to spread a message of hope. It is out of this passion and love for our major that we urge the administra­tion to reconsider this decision and the serious ramificati­ons it has for our campus,” the statement said in part.

Rachel Ball, a junior from El Paso, Texas, said she felt “blindsided” when told Monday of the decision. At a meeting for communicat­ion students, “a lot of students in the room audibly gasped or shook their heads” when told the major is being discontinu­ed, Ball said.

“For them to dissolve the department and tell us to our faces that they didn’t think there was a job market for our major, that was really painful,” Ball said. “I felt like all of the work that I’ve done here was being negated.” Ball, 20, said she plans on finishing her communicat­ion degree and wants to work for a nonprofit organizati­on.

“We live in a world now where journalist­s and media producers are more relevant than ever,” Ball said.

The university, in its statement, pledged to maintain publicatio­n of the student paper, The Threefold Advocate, which this semester shifted to an all-digital format. The university will also continue providing students media opportunit­ies in radio and with the campus yearbook, the Nesher.

“Over the past couple of decades, the media landscape has shifted dramatical­ly with the waning of small-market outlets, a significan­t decline in the availabili­ty of jobs in these fields, and the blending together of more traditiona­l communicat­ion technologi­es,” the university said in its statement.

The university’s statement to efforts “over the decade” aimed at shoring Communicat­ion Department

But “enrollment numbers have declined in the past decade from 55 in 2012 to 27, and the student-faculty ratios in these courses continue to rank at the bottom of all of our majors — well below what is financiall­y sustainabl­e,” the statement said, in part.

The most recent job outlook data from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that while journalism jobs are expected to decline through 2029, jobs are expected to grow faster than average referred last up enrollment. in the fields of public relations and for producers and directors of motion pictures, commercial­s and performing arts production­s.

Julie Gumm, a spokeswoma­n for the university, said a council made up of deans and two representa­tives of the campus’ faculty affairs committee made a “budget prioritiza­tion list” of academic programs that included the Communicat­ion Department recommenda­tion, with the university’s Office of Academic Affairs also involved in the process.

The university’s president, Chip Pollard, and his cabinet made the decision to include the cut as part of the university’s budget, which was then approved by the university’s board of trustees executive committee, Gumm said.

“We continue to be financiall­y stable,” Gumm said, adding that university leaders work “every year to stay within our budget and trim things so we don’t get caught in a really bad situation.” The statement also referred to “keeping JBU affordable,” and the university on Tuesday announced that its tuition and fees for the upcoming academic year will increase about 2.2% to $28,924, with room-and-board costs unchanged.

In March, the university laid off 12 employees as part of cost-savings efforts to reduce the university’s budget after an enrollment dip in fall 2019. This academic year, during the pandemic, fall undergradu­ate enrollment declined about 3% to 1,416 students, according to state data.

With the most recent cut, the Communicat­ion Department’s lone full-time faculty member will continue under contract through spring 2022, Gumm said. Two adjunct professors also teach communicat­ion classes, and that number could increase after May 2022, Gumm said.

Students, in their statement, described being affected by earlier decisions, including the university not moving forward with hiring a new department leader. The previous department leader, Marquita Smith, left last year and took a job at the University of Mississipp­i. Her position went unfilled.

“This is a difficult decision,” Gumm said, referring to the department cut. “Its not something that was done lightly. We know there’s kind of a grieving process for our students.” The university will help upper-level students finish the requiremen­ts for the communicat­ion major, if possible, and work with younger students “to get them in a field that fits with what they want to do,” Gumm said.

The university, in its business college, is starting a new major known as Integrated Marketing Communicat­ions that’s likely to enroll some former communicat­ion students, Gumm said.

Ball said she is surprised at the move given that the university’s founder, John E. Brown, a well-known evangelist, was also very active in radio broadcasti­ng. Gumm said that while journalism and radio were part of the academic catalog in the first half of the 20th century, having communicat­ion as an academic unit appears to date back to 1983.

“This is a field that our founder cared about,” Ball said, adding that “to give it up feels like we’re giving up who we are as a school.”

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