
JOCK LAUTERER __________________________________________ Personal Senior Lecturer/Teaching Professor Director, the Carolina Community Media Project 212 Carroll Hall cb 3365 School of Journalism and Mass Communication the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, N.C. 27599-3365 Home address: 122 Araya Lane Chapel Hill, N.C. 27516 [email protected] Office (919) 962-6421 Home (919) 968-1797 Mobil (619) 619-1034 Education University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, B.A., double major in Journalism and Geography, 1967. Professional Experience • Director of Public Information Brevard College, N.C. 1986-1991 Duties included public relations, publications and design, alumni magazine, and running the College’s news bureau; also taught journalism to freshmen and sophomores. Adviser to the twice-monthly student newspaper, the Clarion. • Director of Special Events WUNC-FM 1985-1986 Produced the program guide and created and coordinated public information for the National Public Radio station at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. • Founding Editor and Publisher The McDowell Express 1980-1983 Founding editor and publisher of weekly newspaper in Marion, N.C.; converted to twice- weekly in 1981; sold in 1983. 1 • Founding Co-Editor and Co-Publisher This Week 1969-1980 Along with partners, started and ran a weekly newspaper in Forest City, N.C.; converted to daily (The Daily Courier) in 1978. Served as co-editor until 1980; sold out to partners to launch start-up in Marion, N.C., the McDowell Express. • Editor The Alleghany News 1968-1969 Ran a one-man weekly newspaper in Sparta, N.C., for a small chain. • Reporter/photographer The Chapel Hill Weekly 1967-1968 General assignment duties; entry level position. • Features and Photo Editor; staff photographer The Daily Tar Heel 1963-67 Coordinated features and all photos for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill student daily newspaper; began as staff photographer, summer 1963. Honors Nominated for the C. Knox Massey Award for public service, spring 2017, by the School of Media and Journalism, UNC-Chapel Hill. “Leaders in Diversity” award, small company category, for the Durham VOICE, from the Triangle Business Journal, September 2016. Awarded second place nationally by AEJMC Newspaper Division for the Durham VOICE, in the annual online college online newspaper competition, August 2015. Recipient, the N.C. Central University award for community service, for the Durham VOICE, in recognition of community engagement, April 2015. “The Roots Journalism Award,” first-ever award presented by the Community Journalism Interest Group, AEJMC, for service to the industry and academy for creating and sustaining community journalism education nationally and internationally, AEJMC, Washington, DC., August 2013. Featured in the center spread of the Carolina Center for Public Service annual report, “Engaged Scholarship: Connection Carolina Communities, 2012-2013” for a photograph with VOICE Teen Mentoring Coordinator Carlton Koonce mentoring Durham urban youth in a high school journalism class. Best of the Web, honorable mention, the Durham VOICE, AEJMC Newspaper Division national competition, 2012. 2 Fulbright grant from the U.S. State Dept. to teach Community Journalism in China, May 2012, at Communication University of China and Renmin University, Beijing. Nominated by JOMC for the inaugural Edward Kidder Graham award for Public Service at UNC, fall 2010. "The Innovative Outreach to Scholastic Journalism," second place, awarded by the Scholastic Journalism Division, "in recognition of an outstanding program that promotes interest and training in scholastic journalism at the K-12 level," AEJMC, Denver, Aug. 2010. "The Office of the Provost Engaged Scholarship Award," awarded to the Carolina Community Media Project "in recognition of outstanding service to the state of North Carolina through the Northeast Central Durham Community VOICE," UNC-Chapel Hill, April 2010. Awarded one of eight Faculty Engaged Scholar Program awards, fall 2007, by the UNC- CH Center for Public Service and the Office for Engagement, for work across the state with community journalism. Completed two-year curriculum, Spring 2010. Winner of a Bryan Award for Public Service, from the Carolina Center for Public Service, April 2005, for work across the state with the Community Journalism Roadshow. Winner of the inaugural Edward Vick Prize for Innovation in Teaching, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, April 2004. Awarded the National Geographic magazine faculty fellowship to study at the National Geographic magazine headquarters in Washington, D.C., summer 1998. Invited visiting faculty member at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies’ community/civic journalism seminar, “Reconnecting with Readers,” St. Petersburg, Fla., Feb. 1997. (First Penn State visual communications professor ever invited to serve as visiting Poynter faculty.) Invited to participate in a live, radio roundtable discussion about photojournalism ethics relative to Princess Diana's death, WMAJ, State College, Pa., Sept. 3, 1997. College Faculty Marshal for Summer Commencement:, Penn State, Aug. 1995. Journalism Program Faculty Marshal, Spring Commencement, Penn State, May 1995. Awarded a Poynter Teaching Fellowship to study the art of teaching print graphics. Poynter Institute for Media Studies, St. Petersburg, Fla., May 1995. 3 Nominated (1992 -'99) for the Penn State School of Communications Excellence in Teaching Award. Winner of the Paragon Award, first place in the nation for best black and white photograph taken by a two-year college photographer, 1990. Two Grand Awards, (first place) black and white photography, Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) District III Southeast; also, third place for Most Improved Periodical, 1988. President of the Journalism Alumni and Friends Association, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Journalism, 1985-1987; vice president, 1983-1985. Member, Alumni Board of Directors, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1983- 1985. Co-winner of 55 press awards from the North Carolina Press Association, for excellence at newspapers founded and co-founded, 1968-1983. Outstanding Independent Entrepreneur of the Year Award, McDowell Chamber of Commerce, for work founding and running The McDowell Express, Marion, N.C., 1981. Gold Medal Award winner, North Carolina Arts Council statewide photographic competition, “North Carolina by North Carolinians,” 1973. Outstanding Male Graduate of the Class of 1967, School of Journalism, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Order of the Old Well, student honorary society, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1967. The Toronto Exchange, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1966. Eagle Scout. Boy Scouts of America, Troop 39, Chapel Hill, N.C., 1961. Bibliography (books all sole authorship) Note: According to WorldCat, a database of 10,000 library catalogs, there are 13 works in my name in 32 publications in three languages and 1,800 library holdings, including 436 libraries that own at least one edition of Community Journalism: the Personal Approach, (the first two editions) and 225 libraries that own the 3rd edition. (Source: Park Library) Community Journalism: Relentlessly Local, in Mandarin, sole author of book for 4 Chinese journalism students, professors and professionals, May 2014, Nan Fang Daily Press, Guangzhou, China. Community Journalism: Relentlessly Local, 3rd. Ed. 2006, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill. Korean translation, 2009; Rumanian translation, 2010. Community Journalism: the Personal Approach, 2nd Ed., 2000, Iowa State University Press, second printing, summer 2001. Community Journalism: An Instructor's Guide, 2nd Ed., 2000, Iowa State University Press, a companion volume to accompany the second edition; an eBook. Community Journalism: An Instructor's Guide, 1996, Iowa State University Press, a companion volume to accompany the first edition of the community journalism textbook. Community Journalism: the Personal Approach, 1995, 1st ed. Iowa State University Press, a college textbook, Also designed to serve as a handbook, survival manual and field guide for professionals. Second printing, spring 1997. Hogwild: a Back-to-the-Land Saga, 1993, The Appalachian Consortium Press of Appalachian State University, Boone, N.C. A retrospective on the homesteading movement of the ‘70s. Photos and text follow the trials of a young back-to-the- lander. Runnin’ on Rims, 1986, Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. A second volume of oral history and Appalachian portraits, also received with praise from Southern Living, People and Country Living magazines. Wouldn’t Take Nothin’ for My Journey Now, 1980, the University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill. Oral history and black and white photographs of 35 elderly mountain people from the Southern Appalachians. Critically acclaimed by The Washington Post and Southern Living, as well as every major daily newspaper in North Carolina. Nominated for the Mayflower Award and included on the N.C. Historical Society’s book list for 1981. Only in Chapel Hill, 1968, by the Journalism Foundation of North Carolina, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A collection of black and white photographs depicting the campus and town in the ‘60s. Refereed Papers “Why Community Newspapers are Burgeoning in China: And What Can We Learn from that Explosive Growth,” presented at
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