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Faculty Credentials
The recommendations of the Commission’s October 1999 report
remain valid. But the critical shortage of qualified public relations educators
has become even more acute since that report was published.
Qualifications for teaching public relations at a
college or university generally include a Ph.D.
degree. Those holding Ph.D. degrees who also
have had substantial and significant practitioner
experience are highly preferred. The
Commission encourages those faculty who
have Ph.D.s, but who have limited or no practitioner
experience, and those without this terminal
degree who are former practitioners, to
pursue a range of academic and professional
experiences that will familiarize them with
both the knowledge and the skills needed in
the current practice of public relations.
In addition to the academic credential of a doctorate,
a broad knowledge of communication
sciences, behavioral sciences and business, as
well as considerable cultural and historical
knowledge, also are highly desirable in public
relations faculty.
Summary of Recommendations in the
Commission’s October 1999 Report
The October 1999 Commission said the ideal
full-time public relations educator would have
both a terminal degree (usually a Ph.D.) and
significant practitioner experience. When this
ideal was not possible, the report suggested a
balance among public relations faculty, i.e.,
those who had terminal degrees and those who
had substantial and significant practitioner experience.
The report urged that adjunct faculty
have both practitioner experience and at least a
baccalaureate degree–with accreditation by a
professional public relations association being
highly desirable. The report further recommended
that all public relations educators be
actively engaged in scholarship or in professional
and creative activity, in part through
their active participation in practitioner and/or
academic associations. Full-time faculty should
provide the majority of public relations instruction
in an academic unit.
The critical shortage of qualified public
relations educators has become even more
acute… because of the increasing numbers
of public relations students who are filling
the nation’s classrooms.
The October 1999 Commission report recognized
that the doctoral curriculum in public
relations historically had been a specialized
option within a broader program, usually in
“mass communication” or “communication.”
Such a theory-and-research degree would prepare
public relations faculty to add to the body
of knowledge in the field. Faculty holding a
Ph.D. also would be aware of the relationship
of the public relations body of knowledge to
other communication-related knowledge, e.g.,
interpersonal, rhetorical, organizational and
small group, and would thus be able to integrate
a range of knowledge into their teaching
and research. Faculty having such scholarly
breadth also could develop competing paradigms
of public relations that would be based
on different metatheoretical and philosophical
foundations, which could be shared in an interdisciplinary,
multicultural and global context.
Public relations faculty also were urged
to keep current in their knowledge through
“professor in residence” programs, facultyprofessional
exchanges, participation in professional
development programs and
sabbaticals in which they work in a practitioner
environment.
The October 1999 report reiterated a recommendation
from the 1987 Commission report:
“Public relations courses should not be taught
by people who have little or no experience and
interest in the field and have no academic
preparation in public relations.”
Progress and Change in Public Relations
Education Since the 1999 Report
The critical shortage of qualified public relations
educators has become even more acute
since the October 1999 report because of the increasing
numbers of public relations students
who are filling the nation’s classrooms. Indeed,
since the last Commission report, the demand
for public relations professors with Ph.D.s has
significantly increased. Furthermore, colleges
and universities are being pressured even more
by their regional accrediting bodies to fill faculty
positions with candidates having Ph.D.s.
As a result, public relations educators are being
valued more for their academic credentials than
for their practitioner experience, which previously
might have compensated for the lack of a
terminal degree.
The numbers of doctoral students planning academic
careers in public relations is slowly increasing.
Several existing doctoral programs
have paid increasing attention to public relations
education and some new public relations
doctoral programs have been developed. Still,
these recent efforts do not sufficiently address
the continuing shortage of qualified public relations
educators.
The good news is that scholarly convention
paper presentations by junior professors and
doctoral students are providing anecdotal evidence
of a new generation of public relations
educators who exemplify the ideal qualifications
identified in the October 1999
Commission report. While public relations centers
and endowed chairs at universities remain
few in number, they nevertheless have helped
“institutionalize” public relations doctoral education
programs as well as attract students to
doctoral study in public relations.
The shortage of qualified faculty and the
paucity of doctoral programs in public relations
are exacerbated by the growing body of public
relations knowledge that must be taught in doctoral-
level courses. Without enough faculty
knowledgeable and academically prepared to
teach this growing literature in the field, there
is the danger that the growing number of baccalaureate
and master’s program students will
be less than adequately taught.
New Research Findings and Analysis
Public relations educators must be fully qualified
to teach what students at the undergraduate,
master’s and doctoral levels need to know.
Research by the 2006 Commission identified
several trends for which public relations educators
must adequately prepare their students.
These include: the need for transparency and
accountability; the increasing value of public
relations to top management; the demand for
public relations research methodology, measurement
and metrics; globalization; an increasingly
complex and difficult ethical
environment; challenges to institutional trust
and credibility; rapidly changing media; technological
change; the increasing importance of
internal audiences; and the need for organizations
to integrate their communication.
Research by the 2006 Commission revealed that
undergraduate students particularly need the
following subject matter: writing and speaking
skills, the fundamentals of public relations,
strategic thinking skills, research skills, planning
and problem-solving skills, ethics, fundamentals
of how businesses operate, and a
foundation in the liberal arts and sciences.
Qualitative research indicated that students also
need to learn about technological advances, the
strategic function of public relations, multidisciplinary
approaches to public relations, measurement
in public relations, the integration of
marketing and communication, globalization,
the need for transformational leaders and an
understanding of factors leading to the disintegration
of civil society. Even though some of
this content is taught outside public relations
courses, public relations faculty are responsible
for making sure that students master it.
Commission research suggested that graduate
education content should move toward understanding
business and management and public
relations as a strategic management function.
Subject matter for graduate study that was
identified as important by the Commission’s
quantitative survey research included an understanding
of the social consequences of public
relations as well as its global harmonizing role,
the economic contributions of public relations,
familiarity with a range of research methodologies
and an understanding of cultural diversity.
Quantitative research noted that graduate students
should be taught subject matter above
and beyond that of undergraduate students,
with content including: public relations theory
and concepts, public relations law, public relations
ethics, global public relations, public relations
applications, public relations management
and diversity, public relations research, public
relations management, public relations programming
and production, public relations
publics, communication processes, management
sciences, and behavioral sciences. Again,
public relations educators must integrate into
their teaching much of this subject matter and
bear primary responsibility for student mastery
of the content. Qualitative research found support
for graduate education that was interdisciplinary,
e.g., communication, management and
behavioral sciences.
2006 Recommendations
All of the recommendations of the October
1999 Commission report remain valid, but the
need for adhering to them is more emphatic.
The world and relationships among its inhabitants
have gotten more complicated since the
last report; and the public relations body of
knowledge has increased geometrically.
Qualifications of public relations educators normally
include a Ph.D. degree, which prepares
faculty for careers, not only as educators, but as
scholars who conduct research using multiple
methodologies to help to build theory that adds
to the public relations body of knowledge. Of
course, those holding a Ph.D. degree who also
have had substantial and significant practitioner
experience are even more highly desired.
Public relations faculty also must be broadly
educated in communication sciences, behavioral
sciences and business, as well as have
considerable cultural and historical knowledge.
Such breadth will help ensure that public relations
educators include in their teaching and
consider in their scholarly agendas public relations
as a strategic management function, with
full appreciation of the internationalization of
the practice and the importance of understanding
diversity, ethics and social responsibility.
Public relations education should not be
viewed as an “easy next job to which to retire,”
because many colleges and universities that traditionally
have not had research emphases are
now requiring it from their faculty. Time will
tell whether the practice of hiring “professors of
practice” and others with practitioner credentials
can continue much longer. A successful academic
career increasingly will require a record
of scholarly publication and national and international
recognition in the scholarly community.
Without faculty who fit this model, public
relations education programs won’t be valued
because their faculty will be considered “second-
tier.”
Thus, while the Commission believes there is a
place in the academy for former practitioners
with substantial and significant experience,
those practitioners may be expected to earn
their terminal degrees, i.e., their Ph.D.s, as a
credential for becoming full-time faculty.
The Commission encourages those faculty who
have Ph.D.s but who have limited or no practitioner
experience, and those without this terminal
degree who are former practitioners, to
pursue a range of academic and professional
experiences that will familiarize them with
both the knowledge and the skills needed in
the current practice of public relations.
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