Organizations
The School Media Arts and Studies offers many avenues for students to practice their skills.
Independent and class projects, as well as faculty/client-based projects can be obtained through
faculty members. Perhaps even more influential is the variety of organizations and opportunities
for students to gain practical "real world" experience outside of the class room.
All Campus Radio Network (ACRN)
Ranked one of the Top 5 college stations in the U.S. by the National Association of College Broadcasters,
ACRN is a commercially supported radio station operated by students. The station operates at 99.3 MHz in
stereo on cable FM of Continental Cablevision and the University cable system. ACRN's operating revenues
come from the sale of commercial air time. ACRN's format is New Rock targeted specifically to college students.
From the executive staff to the disc jockeys, ACRN is staffed completely by students. The station gives students
the unique opportunity to gain experience at a commercial radio station. Students learn every aspect of running a
radio station, including the actual sale of airtime, production of commercials, engineering, promotion, on-air
announcing, and much more. ACRN's affiliation with The Source, NBC's young adult radio network, gives students the
added experience of working with a commercial network.
ACRN encourages all Telecommunications students to consider working for ACRN. Students can get involved in all
aspects of ACRN: sales, programming, production, promotion, public relations, music, news, and engineering. The
opportunity for students to gain managerial experience at ACRN makes it a unique college radio station.
Audio Engineering Society (AES)
The Audio Engineering Society (AES) is a student chapter open to anyone with an interest in audio production.
Chapter activities include touring recording studios and audio manufacturing facilities, and attending regional
and national conventions and equipment demonstrations. Each year a number of guest speakers from a variety of
audio related fields address the chapter and conduct seminars on subjects ranging from the recording business
to arts and technology to digital audio recording.
AVW Productions (AVW)
This student-run video production house provides experience in all aspects of production from management and advertising
to the production process itself. Students learn techniques of field and studio operations while producing video for
various outlets. The central mission of AVW Productions is production that is marketable to different regions of Ohio.
Most AVW programs air on Athens Community Television (ACTV-7) and comprise the vast majority of local programming on
that channel. AVW also produces independent videos for clients.
The academic video studio, Studio C, is used by AVW during non-class times to produce many programs weekly. These include:
award-winning "Friday's Live" - a half hour entertainment show; award-winning "Sauti" - an African-American public affairs
show; "Quiz Me" - a children's game show; football and basketball coaches' shows; and many others. AVW also produces coverage
of Bobcat football and men's and women's basketball.
Students can gain multicamera video production experience in studio and on location. There are also direction and management
positions. Participation in AVW is open to any Ohio University student. Students may hold progressively more responsible
production positions as they complete Telecommunications courses. AVW Productions is operated by undergraduate students under
faculty and graduate student supervision.
Black Students Communication Caucus (BSCC)
The Black Students Communication Caucus's purpose is to provide consistent dialogue and interaction among black
communication majors, to voice the concerns (academic, social, and psychological) of black students to various
schools within the College of Communication, and to promote awareness and understanding about minorities in the
communications fields. BSCC meets once a week to discuss conferences, workshops, internships, and forums. The BSCC
is run by students who also create a quarterly magazine addressing campus issues. Membership is open to all communication
majors, but specifically focus on black student issues.
Brick City Records (Website)
Brick City Records is Ohio University's student run record label. Brick City focuses on providing students real world
experience in many aspects of the recording industry. This organization is unique because students can exercise control
over areas such as: artist relations, booking, legal, production, promotion, scouting. Since its inception in 2002, Brick
City has been involved in booking and promoting shows featuring local musicians of all genres. The label has also
recorded, produced, and released albums. The members have the opportunity to work in Ohio University's state-of-the-art
recording studio.
National Broadcasting Society (NBS-AERho)
Founded in 1943, the National Broadcasting Society's focus is to provide a link between the academic and professional
worlds of communication. Chapters are located at more than 120 college campuses and more than 30,000 current and
future communicators have been listed as NBS-AERho members. Alpha Epsilon Rho is the professional business fraternity
for broadcasting. NBS members have the opportunity to become AERho initiates after one year of active membership in NBS.
Admission to NBS is open to anyone who is in a broadcasting-related major. NBS offers many benefits to its members
including exposure to professionals in the industry, contacts with alumni, the chance to meet others in the same major,
and special events such as speakers and trips to stations and production houses.
WOUB Center for Public Media (WOUB)
The WOUB Center for Public Media operates the Public Broadcasting Services of Ohio University. These include WOUB-TV,
WOUC-TV(Cambridge), WOUB-AM/FM, WOUC-FM, WOUL-FM, WOUH-FM, and ACTV-7, Ohio University's community cable channel.
The Center is a non-academic unit of Ohio University. Well known for its quality training program, the Center offers
experience in a wide range of areas in radio, television, educational telecommunications, engineering, promotion, and news.
Students interested in radio start in the training program as preparationfor work in certain basic areas. Departments include
traffic, continuity, and the feed center (the department that tapes programming to air at a later time on WOUB-AM/FM.) Once
students have been "checked out" of the basic training programs, they can move on to other operations at the radio station,
such as on-air announcing and production of radio programs.
Students interested in television start out with staging and lighting, the responsibilities of a floor manager, and studio
and control room operations. Once students learn these basics, they can train in other areas such as camera operations,
duty directing, on-air talent, or technical directing. Students who continue in the training program often move into advanced
level positions such as television director, radio operation engineer, or stereo producer.
The Telecommunications Center offers experiences to students in areas that are not part of the formal training program.
These include consumer affairs, graphic art, news, marketing, development, and photography.
Page last updated: 03/05/2008