Asia-Pacific Nius

23 January 2019

USP journalism team drops in on creative industries at AUT

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USP's Eliki Drugunalevu and Dr Shailendra Singh in AUT's School of Communication Studies television studio today. Image: David Robie/PMC
23 January 2019

Two University of the South Pacific journalism academics today met with creative industries staff at Auckland University of Technology to discuss plans to bolster collaboration and looked in on AUT's impressive media facilities.

USP's journalism coordinator Dr Shailendra Singh and colleague Eliki Drugunavelu are on an Asia-Pacific research trip to Auckland.

They met with AUT's Faculty of Design and Creative Technologies dean Professor Guy Littlefair; School of Communication Studies acting head Dr Frances Nelson; associate dean postgraduate Dr Rosser Johnson; and Pacific Media Centre director Professor David Robie.

They discussed proposals for expanding the long-standing journalism collaboration between the two universities to enable more student and staff exchanges, joint research and the ongoing cooperation with the research journal Pacific Journalism Review.

The two programmes have collaborated for more than a decade and currently run joint international journalism assignments, which have included covering two Fiji general elections, and the current Bearing Witness climate change mission in partnership with the Te Ara Motuhenga documentary collective. 

They also share publication of student assignments and staff contributions on the Wansolwara News (USP) and Asia Pacific Report (AUT Pacific Media Centre) portals.

After the meeting, communication studies senior technician Scott Creighton hosted Drugunavelu and Dr Singh on a visit to the school's three television studios and the Media Centre editing suites.

Wansolwara News
Bearing Witness documentary trailer

Eliki Drugunalevu, Scott Creighton and Dr Singh in AUT's main TV studio today. Image: David Robie

"Where to start" - a teleprompter. Image: David Robie/PMC

Reviewing AUT's 2015 Rainbow Warrior series, a group television project that involved more than 40 students.  Image: David Robie/PMC

Pacific Media Centre

PMC newsdesk

The Pacific Media Centre - TE AMOKURA - at AUT University has a strategic focus on Māori, Pasifika and ethnic diversity media and community development.

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