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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The College
of Communication and Information Sciences at The University
of Alabama will establish the Plank Center for Public Relations
Studies named for UA alumna and nationally acclaimed public relations
pioneer Betsy Plank.
Plank, of Chicago, is a 1944 graduate of UA. A long-time leader
in the field of public relations, she has had a distinguished career
in corporate public relations and with counseling firms and was
the first woman elected president (1973) of the Public Relations
Society of America (PRSA). In 2000, she was the first person honored
for outstanding service to the profession by The Arthur W. Page
Society, an association of the nation’s top corporate public
relations executives.
The new center is designed to encourage a national dialogue among
public relations professionals, educators and students about effective
and ethical representation of institutions, organizations, ideas
and individuals. It will promote teaching, research and service
that further the understanding and practice of public relations.
“The Plank Center will bridge public relations practice and academia. It
will provide excellent opportunities for practitioners, faculty and students
to conduct research, discuss issues and participate in workshops, forums and
conferences,” said Dr. Culpepper Clark, dean of the UA College of Communication
and Information Sciences.
Dr. Bruce Berger, chair of the department of advertising and
public relations at the UA College of Communication and Information
Sciences and director of the new center, said the center will also
be a valuable resource for UA faculty and students.
“This center will allow our faculty and students to interact
with the top professionals in the field of public relations and
to engage in the many outreach activities we envision,” Berger
said.
UA’s public relations program has already attained national
distinction as the 12th program in the United States to be reviewed
and certified by PRSA. With more than 550 students, it is the largest
undergraduate degree program in the College.
An advisory board of public relations practitioners and academics
will lead the Plank Center. UA public relations faculty members
will serve as Faculty Fellows of the center.
The center’s activities will include producing scholarly
and professional papers and other publications and sponsoring service
activities, as well as hosting a lecture series and symposia focusing
on issues of significance to the public relations field. The center
may also establish a program of awards and recognition for best
practices and outstanding performance in public relations, and
will seek collaborations with PRSA, The Arthur W. Page Society
and other organizations that serve the discipline of public relations.
The center will also award academic scholarships to undergraduate
students who show exceptional promise as public relations professionals.
Plank has long been involved with public relations education
and its students. She co-chaired the 1987 national commission to
develop guidelines for the undergraduate public relations curriculum
and has served with on-site review teams for the Accrediting Council
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. For work as
founder and co-chair of the Champions for the Public Relations
Student Society of America, the student organization has named
its annual scholarships for her. The PRSA Educators Academy presented
her its first award for service to public relations education by
a practitioner.
A founding member of PRSA’s College of Fellows, Plank is
the only person to receive three of the society’s top awards:
the Gold Anvil, awarded to the nation’s outstanding professional,
the Lund Award, for civic and community service, and the Jackson
Award for exemplary service. She was inducted into The University
of Alabama’s Communication Hall of Fame in 2001, and the
College of Communication and Information Sciences named its Distinguished
Achievement Award for her.
The UA College of Communication and Information Sciences is among
the largest and most prestigious communication colleges in the
nation. It has graduated more than 12,000 students and consistently
is ranked among the top 10 in number of doctoral degrees awarded
and in many of its research programs.
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