The Adviser
May 2013
- Intern Spotlight: Jessica Stark, RD Thomas
 - Major Spotlight: Public Relations
 - MCTV
 - Professor Spotlight: Rebecca Ortiz, Ph.D.
 - Get to Know Your Adviser Q & A: Don Ellis, Electronic Media & Communications
 
Intern Spotlight: Jessica Stark, RD Thomas
 by Morgan Spruiell, photo by David Vaughn
                     
                     
Jessica Stark
Taking full advantage of opportunities and resources available within your college
                        and university is one of the most crucial elements of success after graduation. Ask
                        Jessica Stark, a senior advertising major from Borger, Texas, who recently landed a competitive position at one of Lubbock's'
                        most prestigious advertising agencies, RD Thomas. 
 “I came to Tech three years ago; I transferred here from a community college, and
                        I graduated with 20 hours [dual credit] from high school and then continued on [at
                        a community college] for a year to get my basics,” Stark said.
 With more high schools offering dual credit and AP testing for college credit, students
                        are able to come in freshman year with classes already accounted for on their prospective
                        degree plan. It's very important for students to bring their high school or community
                        college transcript to Red Raider Orientation so an adviser can determine which classes
                        are transferable to Texas Tech. 
 Stark said she started out in graphic design and realized that it was not for her,
                        but she liked the selling aspect so she changed her major to advertising. 
 “I started talking to Aleesa Ross and I signed up for her email list, which is a daily email about what jobs and internships
                        are available and just from that I was able to create a connection with her and she
                        has really helped me out, especially within the past few months,” Stark said.
 Aleesa Ross is the Media & Communication Career Center director and helps all students of all majors within the college, with jobs and internships.
                        
 Stark said, “I think the most important thing for students to do is to get involved
                        with the activities here at Tech, joining organizations, really getting to know your teachers and the people who can help you out like advisers or Aleesa because they're the ones that know people outside of the college and they
                        can really help you out.”
 Students of the college have received many internships not only with the university
                        or Lubbock, but around the country. Internships enable experience in a selected field
                        and allow one to try specific positions to decide if it is possibly something they
                        would like to do permanently. 
 “I'm the social media intern for the Office of Communication and Marketing at Texas
                        Tech,” Stark said. “I first heard about it from a teacher from my retail advertising
                        class and then I also heard about it from Aleesa's emails. So I just applied for it,
                        had a few interviews and got the job.”
 The intern said she monitors Texas Tech's social media pages like Facebook, Twitter,
                        Instagram, and Foursquare. She also looks at competitor sites to see what they are
                        doing.
 “We have to stay alert to see what people are posting to our pages and how people
                        are talking about Tech with things like Kliff Kingsberry coming or the new basketball
                        coach and things like the gas leak we had a few months ago,” she said. “You know we
                        had to be on high alert to make sure everyone knew what was going on and that people
                        were being safe about it.”
 With only 24 hours in a day, it's hard to imagine how students so involved are able
                        to juggle activities while staying on top of their school work and still be financially
                        stable. “It is a paid internship, which was actually a nice little surprise for me
                        and that does help out a lot. I got to make my own schedule for this internship, and
                        they were very flexible because all of the interns are students at Tech and I mostly
                        work in the mornings, Monday thru Friday and then I go to class and any other meetings
                        I have,” Stark said.
 With May graduation drawing near, many seniors are gathering their resumes, putting
                        on their suits and interviewing for a potential position in the industry. “The experience
                        I received from this internship has helped me get the job that I actually just accepted
                        last week with an advertising agency here in Lubbock. I'm going to be doing the media
                        buying for them and on a daily basis I'll be checking calendars and making sure media
                        placements are going in as they should be. I'm going to be making sure the budget
                        is correct for what the client wants and just make sure everything's on time,” Stark
                        said.
 “I've learned to have more confidence in myself and just know what I'm able to do
                        and what I can do if I try hard enough,” Stark said. 
 With the extraordinary number of opportunities and resources available for all students
                        in the College of Media & Communication, students should take advantage of them and
                        benefit students in more ways than one.
                     
Major Spotlight: Public Relations
 by Morgan Spruiell, photo by David Vaughn
                     
                     Public relations professionals cultivate society in many different ways. This broad
                        career is not only essential in keeping the public informed on crucial topics but
                        also valuable in establishing beneficial relationships. This yellow-brick road career
                        has the potential to lead one on a fulfilling professional journey with infinite possibilities.
                        
Trent Seltzer, Ph.D., public relations department chair since August 2011, said, “Relationships are based
                        off communication. The old version of PR is very much one way communication at people
                        and modern PR is much more about facilitating conversations between people. This occurs
                        internally in an organization via employees, staff, and management, and externally
                        between an organization and different stakeholder groups. So, we're kind of the bridge
                        builders, negotiators, connectors, and facilitators of communication. It's not just
                        talking at people now; it's more talking with people.”
                     

Kristin Wyllys
The Public relations industry is fast evolving, and Seltzer said the major has the
                        largest enrollment of students in the college. The 120-hour degree program will ensure
                        students' knowledge in relationship management, strategic campaign development, traditional
                        and new media practices, persuasive communication, and legal and ethical challenges.
                        
 Special topics courses are provided to allow students to study in-depth popular trends
                        in the industry. In the past, classes have included Nonprofit Public Relations, Crisis
                        Communication, Sports Public Relations, International Public Relations, Event Management,
                        and Online and Digital Public Relations. 
 Once students acquire the necessary skills and tactics from prerequisite courses
                        at the college, students gain experience through the capstone course Public Relations
                        Campaigns. This course is required in order to graduate and allows students to work
                        in account teams to research, develop and pitch their campaigns to actual clients.
                        The projects provide students with knowledge and experience in the different aspects
                        of a campaign. Students often cite their participation in the projects during their
                        interviewing process with potential employers. 
 Kristin Wyllys, a senior public relations major from Austin, Texas, said, “I'm glad I'll have this experience before I go out
                        into the real world. When I graduate in May, I want to get an internship at an agency
                        to gain more experience with a wide variety of clients to see what I like. However,
                        I have always loved sports like soccer and basketball, so my dream job would be to
                        work for the NBA one day.”
 Incoming freshmen are encouraged to join student organization groups. Public relations students founded Tech PR in 2007, and the group now meets once
                        a month. Wyllys is also the president of Tech PR and said,” By bringing in guest speakers
                        and going on our annual trip to Dallas to network with real professionals and Tech
                        alumni, we help our members get a better insight into the world of public relations
                        and also get them more involved within the college.”
 Each student makes their college experience important, and often one gets back what
                        he or she puts into his or her education. 
 “You have four years to experiment and figure out what you like and don't like, build
                        some professional networks, and really just take advantage of the resources you have
                        here,” Seltzer said.
                     
MCTV
 by Stephanie Derkowski, photo by David Vaughn
                     
                     
MCTV Studio
One way students can get hands-on experience working in a television studio and running
                        a newscast is to work for Media & Communication Television, or MCTV.
 Located on the third floor of the College of Media & Communication building, MCTV
                        is a television studio that broadcasts 2-5 minute newscasts everyday Monday through
                        Thursday.
Josh Robinson, media production manager, supervises and works at MCTV. He said MCTV was once only
                        an opportunity for journalism majors, but now that the show has its very own, newly renovated studio, the newscast is
                        open to volunteers of all majors and classifications. 
 “Whether they are a freshman or a senior, it really doesn't matter to us. What we
                        really want are people who are interested in how broadcast television works and want
                        to learn how to put together a daily newscast,” Robinson said. 
 No matter what field of communication a student goes into, Robinson said, students
                        benefit from understanding the way a news station works, and the experience will make
                        a student more marketable for the future.
                     
For instance, Robinson said, if a public relations student is writing a press release,
                        and he or she is working in a news station, they will learn how the process works
                        of getting a story from the press release to the air. Also, he said, an electronic
                        media and communications student can benefit from working in a news station by understanding
                        what goes on behind the camera. An advertising student can get a better idea of how
                        spots run on the air.
 “When you're working in communications, it doesn't matter whether your major is journalism,
                        electronic media, advertising, or public relations, the simple fact is that the more
                        you know about how the world of communications works, the more valuable you become,”
                        Robinson said.
 Kaitlyn Cennamo, senior journalism major from Keller, Texas, anchors MCTV once a
                        week and said being a part of the newscast has helped her prepare for her future career.
                        She said she uses the MCTV broadcasts that she participates in for her newsreel to
                        present to potential employers.
 Cennamo said working with MCTV is a good opportunity because a student can obtain
                        years of experience in a newsroom during their time at college, and they can begin
                        gaining the experience as a freshman or sophomore. 
 “MCTV and really all of the programs and opportunities that the College of Media
                        & Communication have provided me have set me up for success after graduation.”
                     
Professor Spotlight: Rebecca Ortiz, Ph.D.
 by Stephanie Derkowski, photo by David Vaughn
                     
                     
Rebecca Ortiz, Ph.D.
Many will agree you learn the most about yourself when you are in college. You find
                        out how well you are at waking yourself up for that 8 a.m. class, how you do living
                        with other people besides your family, but most importantly, what your interests are
                        and what you are most passionate about. This is the adventure Rebecca Ortiz, Ph.D., faced in her years as a student.
 Ortiz is an assistant professor in the Department of Advertising in the College of Media & Communication at Texas Tech University. She earned her
                        bachelor's degree in mass communications at Virginia Commonwealth University, her
                        master's in media studies at Syracuse University, and her doctorate in mass communications
                        with a focus in health communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
                        Hill. 
 Ortiz said during her time as an undergraduate student and before going to master's
                        school, she worked in many different aspects of the communications field to learn
                        about what she was most passionate about. 
 “I started doing a whole bunch of internships and jobs,” Ortiz said, “because I knew
                        I liked advertising and communication, but I wasn't really sure what I wanted to be
                        when I grew up, so I wanted to try everything.”
 Ortiz said she interned at a local news and radio station, worked for a newspaper,
                        worked for an advertising agency, worked in marketing research, and worked as a psychology
                        research assistant. From all of these experiences she discovered that she had an interest
                        in research along with her love for writing and communicating with people.
 From there, Ortiz said she went back to school as a graduate student and went on
                        to earn her Ph.D.
 Ortiz said she has been an assistant professor in the College of Media & Communication
                        for almost one year, and she has taught classes to undergraduate and graduate students
                        in the college. She said in the advertising department she teaches Account Planning,
                        and she is scheduled to teach Media Planning next semester. She said she also has
                        taught a special topics course, Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n Roll, and the Media Literacy
                        class.
 Finding new and creative ways to teach is enjoyable, Ortiz said, noting that she
                        incorporates audio-visuals, real-world experiences, and open-class discussions.
 “I remember sitting through those lectures where it was nearly impossible to keep
                        your eyes open,” Ortiz said, “so that's what I probably enjoy the most is finding
                        ways to make the classroom more fun.”
 Ortiz conducts her own research to help others. She studies sexual health communication,
                        which focuses on how to promote positive sexuality through media messages and interpersonal
                        communication. Currently, she is working on a campaign about the HPV vaccine, and
                        in the past, she has worked with topics concerning rape myths, suicide prevention,
                        the H1N1 virus, for example. “I try to make my research applicable to people who can
                        use it,” Ortiz said, “I really want to find out a way to use my research so that other
                        people can really do something with it.”
                     
Get to Know Your Adviser Q & A: Don Ellis, Electronic Media & Communication
 photo by David Vaughn
                     
                     In order to register for classes each semester one must pay a visit to his or her major specific adviser. This is beneficial for many reasons, but most of all, visiting with your adviser ensures that you're getting all the right information about your specific degree plan and know the requirements for graduation. Don Ellis has been the electronic media & communications adviser since August 2012. If this is your prospective major, check out his Q&A to get to know him a little better.

Don Ellis
Where are you from?
Lubbock. Born and partially raised.
Where did you go to college?
My bachelor's degree is from Texas Tech University. Both of them are.
Both?
I have a bachelor's in electronic media and communications and a bachelor's in theater arts.
What is your favorite Texas Tech tradition?
You know, I don't think I have a favorite. I think all of the traditions at Texas Tech are very important and I hold all of those very dear to me. I consider Lubbock to be my home, although I was raised in different parts of the country, I've always come back to Lubbock.
What are your hobbies?
I read a lot. I don't have a lot of spare time now days but when I do, I like to go to the golf course.
What is your favorite part about advising?
Everything! I mean honestly, one of the best parts about advising, for me, is I've gone through this specific program that I'm advising for and I have a little more knowledge about the program itself than any other person. Because I've been through those classes, I know the professors well. Everything that this job is, I really do like. Not just advising students on what classes to take but just talking to students, faculty, and chairs of the department about common interests and what we can do, and what they can do as students.
What advice do you have for incoming Texas Tech students?
Be prepared. That's the best advice I have. When I say be prepared I don't specifically mean be prepared for advising because that's why we're here and we need to get you through. I mean be prepared for everything. It could be, be prepared for each of your classes, for the unexpected, just anything and everything.
Fun Fact:
Don likes listening to American rapper and musician Macklemore. This artist just released popular hit single: Thrift Shop.
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