Today, five distinguished Tallahassee-are panelists will gather at the FAMU School of Journalism and Graphic Communication to share
their observations about the impact of America’s 44th president, Barack
Obama. Obama: Impact on America will begin at 10 a.m. and is free and
open to the public. A second panel discussion led by student leaders
will begin at 2 p.m.
Panelists for the morning session include FAMU trustee and former state Rep.
Marjorie Turnbull, Tallahassee Democrat Associate Editor Byron Dobson, Florida Public Radio producer Margie Menzel, Florida State University economics professor Patrick Mason and FAMU political science professor Keith
Simmonds. These local citizens who make important contributions to the
community through their work as educators, journalists, volunteers and
more, are also respected as thought leaders with informed opinions and
observations that, when combined, will make for a provocative two-hour
discussion.
“The symposium is an extension of our Obama: Impact
On America series that has allowed our students to explore the
historical nature of the first African-American president of the United
States,” said Kenneth Jones, a FAMU broadcast journalism professor and sequence coordinator for
the broadcast degree program. “We began the series in early 2008 and
have continued it through the current semester.”
Jones stated the
perspectives captured by his broadcast students serve as evidence of
the unique impact this president has had on our country.
The
project began when students in the news reporting class were asked to
take their video cameras into the streets of Tallahassee on the evening
of the 2008 election. What the students found was a mixture of
emotions, expectations, and concerns.
Most importantly, the
five-minute documentaries capture an important moment in time when
America was reacting to the immediate impact of having elected their
first president of color. Since then, Jones has assigned his students
to look at various issues ranging from military and unemployment to
media and education and examine public sentiment. [For a review of the
entire library of documentaries, go to www.famutvnews.com and click on
‘student documentaries.’]
Associates in the university’s
student-run public relations firm will serve as event facilitators,
discussion moderators, fact-checkers and on-site social media
technicians.
“This is another opportunity for students to hone
their skills,” says Gina Kinchlow, an assistant professor in the FAMU
SJGC and faculty adviser for Prodigy, the university’s student-run PR
firm. “The ability to research the issues, moderate a discussion
between professionals, and execute this event is value-added for today’s
competitive PR students.”
“This symposium isn’t a political
debate or campaign rally,” Jones said. “Regardless of your
political persuasion or your personal opinions, I think the impact of
this president is worthy of objective, unbiased study. This is
history.” Jones believes the ability to hear varying perspectives on
the historical impact of President Barack Obama from scholars, media
professionals, students and others is a special moment in U.S. history
that should not be lost.