The faculty at New York University reflects in its own make-up a view of journalism. First and always, we treat journalism as a professional practice, with its own skills, pressures, thrills and demands. That means we teach people how to do the work of a journalist in real world settings.
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Mohamad Bazzi
Associate Professor
GloJo
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Robert S. Boynton
Professor
Lit Rep, Director
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Meredith Broussard
Assistant Professor
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William E. Burrows
Professor Emeritus
SHERP Founder and Director Emeritus
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Ted Conover
Professor
Director, Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute
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David Dent
Associate Professor
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Frankie Edozien
Clinical Associate Professor
Reporting Africa
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Dan Fagin
Professor
SHERP, Director
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Meryl Gordon
Associate Professor
Magazine, Director
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Perri Klass
Professor
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Brooke Kroeger
Professor
GloJo, Director
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Yvonne Latty
Clinical Professor
New York/Nation, Director
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Susie Linfield
Associate Professor
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Jason Maloney
Clinical Associate Professor
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Suketu Mehta
Associate Professor
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Pamela Newkirk
Professor
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Adam L. Penenberg
Associate Professor
Director, Undergraduate Studies
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Mary W. Quigley
Clinical Professor
Acting Director, Undergraduate Studies
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Marcia Rock
Associate Professor
NewsDoc, Director
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Katie Roiphe
Professor
Cultural Reporting and Criticism Program, Director
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Jay Rosen
Associate Professor
Studio 20, Director
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Jason Samuels
Associate Professor
Director, Graduate Studies
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Hilke Schellmann
Assistant Professor
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Charles Seife
Professor
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Clay Shirky
Associate Professor
Global Network Professor
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Stephen D. Solomon
Professor
Director, Business and Economic Reporting
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Mitchell Stephens
Professor
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Carol Sternhell
Associate Professor
Studio 20
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Jane Stone
Professor
NewsDoc
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Rachel L. Swarns
Associate Professor
In addition to its full-time faculty and Distinguished Writers in Residence, NYU calls on its outstanding body of teaching professionals, drawn from all corners of the journalism world in New York (and abroad). Typically, they are employed full-time elsewhere in the city, or have substantial free-lance careers. They leave their offices and assignments and come to Washington Square to teach because they want the satisfaction of guiding the next generation into journalism. Our teaching professionals (also called adjunct professors) represent a substantial asset to the university and an invaluable aid to students hoping to enter the field.