stringtranslate.com

Alumni magazine

An alumni magazine is a magazine published by a university, college, or other school or by an association of a school's alumni (and sometimes current students) in order to keep alumni abreast of fellow alumni and news of their university, often with an implicit goal of fundraising.

An emerging version of alumni magazines are unrelated to educational institutions. Instead the intended readers are former employees of a company. An example of this type of alumni magazine is MoForever magazine of the law firm of Morrison & Foerster.[1][Note 1]

History

The oldest alumni magazine in the United States is Wayland Academy's Greetings, founded in 1882. [3] Still published today, Greetings was initially mailed to Baptist families throughout Wisconsin, but by the July 1888 issue was devoted to "give former students a picture of present Wayland life and to furnish information regarding those who have once been its students."[4] The oldest known university alumni magazine isYale Alumni Magazine, founded in 1891.[5] Chartered in 1636, Harvard University—the oldest university in the U.S.--established an official alumni association in 1840 but did not publish the Harvard Bulletin until 1898.[6] Seven years earlier, Yale University began publishing a weekly alumni publication, which has been credited as the first such periodical that dealt solely with college or university alumni matters.[7] In 1894, Princeton University started producing the Alumni Princetonian in the Saturday edition of the student newspaper.[7] The College of Wooster, however, has been credited as the first institution to publish an alumni magazine-the Alumni Bulletin-in 1886.[8][7]

Role of Alumni Magazines

"The role of college and university magazines is to inform, interpret, interest, and at times to inspire."[6] Over the years, the role of these magazines has evolved from serving solely as house organs of college and university administrations to independent journalistic voices that report about campus life, even if the stories may negatively portray the university that sponsors the publication. Alumni magazines generally report to different university departments. "Most of the magazines receive some support from gifts, the college and alumni. Some editors report to the alumni association, while other report to the offices of alumni relations or development."[9]
The editor of the University of Idaho alumni magazine Idaho the University explicitly stated his view of the role of these publications: "Good university magazines hold themselves a little apart from the universities they serve and even farther apart from their alumni offices. They are not disloyal, but they are honest. That touch of independence is a reality check: There is a larger world to be served than just that of the university."[10] Almost two decades earlier, Mark Singer, the former associate editor of the Yale Alumni Magazine also had strong views about the importance of maintaining an independent campus voice: "An alumni magazine should be a vehicle for continuing education; the publication that functions as a house organ is bound to estrange its audience from the intellectual life of the institution."[11]

In April 1998, about 175 college and university alumni editors asked the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) to endorse a statement affirming the right of editorial freedom in their publications. Editors "should be assured the freedom to exercise their editorial judgment without censorship, within the framework of agree-upon editorial policy." The statement updated an earlier version on professional standards endorsed by the American Alumni Council, the predecessor of CASE. The proposed standards "balances good and bad news" and gives a "complete picture of the institution. The editors called on CASE to adopt the standards for all of its members and mediate disputes between editors and the university administration.[12] This current discussion partially arose because of the controversial 1995 retirement of Anthony Lyle, the editor of the University of Pennsylvania alumni magazine, Pennsylvania Gazette who published some articles that upset the Penn university administration.[13]

CASE refused the request and in October 1998 its commission on communications "concluded that it is not within CASE's mission to sponsor, endorse, or mediate the job conditions for any group of professionals within the association."[12]

Readership

Although there are several thousand college and university alumni magazines, no comprehensive listing of these publications has been published.[14] In 2013, the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) published a study on some alumni magazine readers.[15] Some of their findings from 252 participating institutions:

Ivy League Magazine Network (Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, University of Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, Yale) conducts surveys of its member institutions. The 2019 Media Kit published the following findings about the alumni readers of these magazines:[16]

Controversies

Awards for Excellence

The Robert Sibley Magazine of the Year award, which bears the name of a former editor of the University of California at Berkeley's alumni monthly, helped initiate the award in 1943 which is the highest award given to alumni magazine editors. The first awards focusing on editorial excellence and achievement by alumni magazines were awarded by the American Alumni Council in 1929. More than 100 magazines competed for awards recognizing best editorial and best story on the achievement of an alumnus, among other topics. California Monthly—the predecessor publication to California, the alumni publication of the University of California, Berkeley—took home top honors for articles about alumni. Robert Sibley was the editor of the winning publication.[22]

Recent Award Recipients

[22]

List of alumni magazines

0-9

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

Q

R

S

T

U

V

W

Y

Notes

  1. ^ The emerging type of alumni magazines for former employees of a company should not be confused with any fictional alumni magazines whose intended readers are former customers of the company (for example, the Flown magazine, with former passengers of Delta Air Lines as the target readership, as reported in satirical newspaper The Onion).[2]

References

  1. ^ "Morrison-Foerster-(MoFo) alumni magazine". agendanyc.com. Archived from the original on 16 January 2017. Retrieved 30 Nov 2016.
  2. ^ "Delta Launches Alumni Magazine For People Who Flew Airline Previously". The Onion. Chicago. 7 Aug 2014. Retrieved 30 Nov 2016.
  3. ^ "Greetings—August 1882 by Wayland Academy - Issuu". issuu.com. Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  4. ^ "Greetings—July 1888 by Wayland Academy - Issuu". issuu.com. Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  5. ^ "About Us". yalealumnimagazine.com. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University. Retrieved 27 Nov 2016.
  6. ^ a b LaSalle, Patricia Ann (1991). College and University Magazine. Washington, D.C.: Council for Advancement and Support of Education. p. 26. ISBN 0-89964-284-5.
  7. ^ a b c Weiner, Richard; Colarsurdo, James (1980). College Alumni Publications. New York: Public Relations Publishing Company. ISBN 9780913046128.
  8. ^ Williams, Dorothy F. (1979). Communicating with Alumni. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
  9. ^ Nicklin, Julie (January 26, 1996). "Turnover at Top Alumni Magazines Spurs Debate About their Role". Chronicle of Higher Education. 42: A23.
  10. ^ Lyons, Stephen (February 13, 1991). "Good Journalism Should be the Goal of Alumni Editors". Chronicle of Higher Education. 37: B1.
  11. ^ Singer, Mark (October 5, 1974). "Alumni Magazines: The Editors Reach Out". The Nation: 306–309.
  12. ^ a b Pulley, John (June 25, 1999). "Alumni Editors Fail to Win Support for Greater Independence". Chronicle of Higher Education. 45: A47-48.
  13. ^ Bassinger, Julianne (May 1, 1998). "Alumni-Magazine Editors Seek Editorial Freedom". Chronicle of Higher Education. 44: A52.
  14. ^ Conversation with a librarian at Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE).
  15. ^ "Alumni Magazine Readers: National Survey Results: A Cross-Institutional Magazine Benchmarking Survey" 2013. Council for Advancement and Support of Education, 46 pages
  16. ^ 2019 (Alumni) Media Kit. Ivy League Magazine Network. 2019.
  17. ^ "Cornell Alumni Magazine Issues Apology for Controversial Cover". 18 September 2015.
  18. ^ Hay, Tina (February 2013). "Honesty is the Best Policy: That's been the rule at the Penn Stater magazine-even during the worst scandal in the institution's history". Case Currents: 44–48.
  19. ^ Lyons, Stephen (February 13, 1991). "Good Journalism, not Fund Raising, Should be the Goal of Alumni Editors". Chronicle of Higher Education: B1–B3.
  20. ^ Kiessling, Karen (March 27, 1991). "Debating the Proper Role of Alumni Magazines". Chronicle of Higher Education: B4–B5.
  21. ^ Clendinen, Dudley (November 23, 1982). "Alumni Magazine's Editor Resigning in Dispute with Dartmouth President". New York Times pg. A18.
  22. ^ a b "Robert Sibley Magazine of the Year Award". Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  23. ^ "About Pomona College Magazine". Pomona College Magazine. Pomona College. Retrieved 31 January 2022.