
Symposium honors doctoral research and teaching
Jane O’Boyle and Mark Tatge were honored by the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at the annual Doctoral Student Research Symposium April 14.
The Baldwin Business and Financial Graduate Fellowship for Business Journalists provides $70,000 per year, for three to five years, to enable one distinguished business journalist to earn a doctoral degree.
The fellowship is funded by Kenneth W. Baldwin Jr., a 1949 USC journalism alumnus. This is Baldwin’s second gift to the School of Journalism and Mass Communications. In 2009, he donated $500,000 to establish the Baldwin Business and Financial Journalism Endowment Fund to support teaching, research and other activities.
Mark Tatge was selected as the Baldwin Fellow. On completion of the program, the Baldwin Fellow will graduate with a doctorate in mass communications and will be prepared for a tenure-track assistant professor position.
Jane O’Boyle and Mark Tatge were honored by the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at the annual Doctoral Student Research Symposium April 14.
In a class taught by Mark Tatge, you can expect finances, social media and colorful kazoos. Tatge is teaching while earning his doctorate through the Baldwin Business Fellowship.
The only thing more intense than America's passion for football may be the way it is played. But what happens to a player every time he's hit was the topic of the Baldwin Business and Financial Journalism lecture.
Mark W. Tatge, a journalist who has spent more than 30 years working for the nation’s leading business reporting outlets, is the first recipient of the Baldwin Business and Financial Graduate Fellowship for Business Journalists at the University of South Carolina.