Professional Programs

Cronkite NewsWatch

An award-winning, student-produced television news broadcast reaches 1.4 million households on Arizona PBS four nights a week.

Cronkite News Service

An immersive professional program generates multimedia news stories and reports used by 30-plus professional media outlets across Arizona.

Washington News Bureau

A professional newsroom in the nation’s capital offers students the chance to report on public policy issues of interest to Arizonans.

Cronkite Sports

Students cover professional and intercollegiate sports from bureaus in Phoenix and Santa Monica, Calif.

Carnegie-Knight News21 Initiative

A national fellowship program produces investigative, multimedia projects in partnership with publications that include The Washington Post and NBCnews.com.

New Media Innovation Lab

An entrepreneurial digital media lab teams journalism students with computer engineering, design and business students to create cutting-edge media products.

Public Relations Lab

A professional public relations agency puts advanced PR students to work developing campaigns and strategies for clients.

Public Insight Network Bureau

A specialized news bureau where students work with professional news organizations around the country, mining news sources and generating story ideas and angles.

Career Services

A full-time career services director oversees nearly 600 internships and provides job placement assistance to recent graduates and alumni.

Cronkite News

Arizona PBS Moves to Cronkite School
Arizona PBS, the public television station based at ASU with more than 1 million viewers, will become part of the Cronkite School.

USA Today Highlights Cronkite-Arizona PBS
USA Today media editor Rem Rieder discusses how Arizona PBS joining the Cronkite School could be game-changing to journalism education.

Disability Reporting Contest Is Now Open
The NCDJ at ASU is accepting entries for the annual Katherine Schneider Journalism Award for Excellence in Reporting on Disability.

Students Receive Journalism Training
Twenty-six high school students, many from underrepresented communities, received journalism training through the Summer Journalism Institute.