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Research
This report of the Commission on Public Relations Education
draws on the findings of five research projects conducted in the
United States by Commission members:
- A survey of public relations practitioners and
educators. Randomly selected practitioners
and educators were surveyed on the state of
public relations education’s student outcomes
and curricula at both undergraduate and
graduate levels.
- Personal interviews were conducted with
leading senior practitioners and educators.
Telephone interviews were conducted with a
purposive sample of leading practitioners
from corporate, agency and nonprofit public
relations. They were asked their perspectives
on public relations practice trends and how
public relations undergraduate and graduate
education could best contribute to improving
the practice of public relations.
- A survey of leaders of public relations firms.
Members of the Council of Public Relations
Firms were asked their perceptions of the
value of public relations education as a hiring
credential and as preparation for employment.
- A survey of faculty advisers to the Public
Relations Student Society of America
(PRSSA). Advisers were asked in a Web-based
survey about internships for public relations
students at their colleges and universities.
- A survey of leaders of public relations academic
programs at colleges and universities.
Program heads were asked to report on the
growth and expansion of public relations curricula
and enrollment at their institutions.
There was substantial agreement across the five
studies and between practitioners and educators
about what public relations students should
study and learn, and about what public relations
practitioners should be able to do at both the
entry level and in senior positions. There also
was substantial agreement between these 2006
studies and those conducted by the Commission
in 1999 prior to its Port of Entry report.
What Skills Practitioners Need
This body of research findings indicates that
the top-rated competencies sought in hiring
entry-level practitioners are writing skills, critical
thinking and problem-solving skills, a good
attitude, the ability to communicate publicly
and initiative. For practitioners at a more advanced level, research skills, the ability to handle
the media professionally, work experience
in public relations, knowledge of the role of
public relations on the management team and
knowledge of issues management are the most
prized characteristics.
All too often, however, those competencies and
skills are weak or missing in both entry-level
and more advanced practitioners. Writing skills,
understanding of business practices and critical
thinking and problem-solving skills were identified
as deficiencies in entry-level practitioners,
while research skills, a global perspective and
experience with a variety of cultures were problematic
among more experienced practitioners.
What a Public Relations Curriculum
Should Include
A public relations curriculum that would properly
prepare undergraduate students to meet
the expectations and challenges of public relations
careers would, according to this research,
include this essential course content:
- writing and speaking skills
- the fundamentals of public relations
- strategic thinking skills
- research skills
- planning and problem-solving skills
- ethics
- the fundamentals of how organizations operate
- liberal arts and sciences
There also was substantial agreement that public
relations education should include an internship,
practicum or other work experience in the
field. The survey of faculty advisers to PRSSA
Chapters indicated that virtually all public relations
students complete at least one internship.
At the graduate level, the research showed considerable
support for interdisciplinary study
that might, for instance, include communication,
management and behavioral science.
Trends Affecting Public Relations Practice
These curriculum recommendations were consistent
with what both practitioners and educators
identified as trends in the practice of public
relations. The public relations knowledge and
skills they identified as essential would prepare
students to succeed professionally in the context
of these trends:
- 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
- the need for organizations to integrate
their communication
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