RMIT School of Applied Communication

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}

{{Use Australian English|date=July 2011}}

{{Infobox university

| name = RMIT School of Applied Communication

| parent = College of Design and Social Context,
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology

| image =

| head_label =

| head =

| campus = RMIT City

| affiliations = AFI, PRIA

| website = [https://web.archive.org/web/20090416195007/http://www.rmit.edu.au:80/APPLIEDCOMMUNICATION RMIT School of Applied Communication] (archived)

}}

The RMIT School of Applied Communication was an Australian tertiary education school within the College of Design and Social Context of RMIT University. The school hosted RMIT's Advertising, Communication Design, Editing and Publishing, Journalism, Media, Professional Communication (a specialised hybrid-degree covering Journalism, Media and Public Relations) and its Public Relations programs. It merged with the RMIT School of Creative Media on 6 July 2009 to form the RMIT School of Media and Communication.{{Cite web | title=RMIT - RMIT officially announces School of Media and Communication | url=http://www.rmit.edu.au/browse;ID=ka7itw3r2utb1 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090714031059/http://www.rmit.edu.au:80/browse;ID=ka7itw3r2utb1 | access-date=2025-02-23 | archive-date=2009-07-14}}

Location

The school was headquartered in Building 6 on Bowen Street at the RMIT City campus, located in the "RMIT Quarter" at the northern end of the Melbourne CBD. However, in recent years the school has begun to outgrow its home building, and parts of the school are now also located in buildings 4 and 7 at the City campus.

The school received a new home in 2009 when it relocated to Building 9 (RMIT's historical radio communications building) at RMIT's City campus, which wunderwent a A$16.4 million refurbishment.{{Cite web|url=http://www.rmit.edu.au/capitalworks/building9|title=School of Media and Communication - RMIT University|website=www.rmit.edu.au}}

Programs

=Undergraduate=

  • Bachelor of Communication (Advertising)
  • Bachelor of Communication (Journalism)
  • Bachelor of Communication (Media)
  • Bachelor of Communication (Professional Communication)
  • Bachelor of Communication (Public Relations)
  • Bachelor of Design (Communication Design)

Contextual Studies Strand:

Undergraduates must undertake a study strand in either: Asian Media & Culture, Cinema Studies, Business & Politics or Literature & Philosophy.

=Postgraduate=

  • Graduate Diploma in Editing and Publishing
  • Master of Communication by Coursework (in chosen stream)
  • Master of Design (Communication Design)

=Research=

Doctor of Philosophy by Research (Applied Communication)

="Labsome"=

Labsome is the RMIT School of Applied Communication's specialised honours program. Like most honours programs it is completed in one year (two semesters). Labsome is limited to a maximum of 20 students a year, who have completed a Bachelor of Communication in any stream offered by the school. Graduates must have reached the minimum academic standard of a Distinction average (70%) or better in their third year of undergraduate study to gain entry to Labsome.{{Cite web|url=http://www.rmit.edu.au/browse;ID=8qe6bf7f0rkk|title=RMIT - Bachelor of Communication (Honours), ‘Labsome’|website=www.rmit.edu.au}}

AFI Research Collection

The Australian Film Institute (AFI) Research Collection is a non-lending, specialist film and television industry resource. It opened in the mid-1970s as the George Lugg Library, and was a joint venture between the AFI and the Victorian Federation of Film Societies. In 2002 it became an auspice of the RMIT School of Applied Communication, in conjunction with the AFI.{{Cite web |url=http://www.afiresearch.rmit.edu.au/ |title=RMIT School of Applied Communication – About the AFI Research Collection |access-date=12 September 2008 |archive-date=2 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210302190534/https://afiresearch.rmit.edu.au/ |url-status=dead }}

The collection has particular strengths in screen history and theory and in Australian cinema, and features a diverse range of books, journals, film scripts, film directories, reports and film festival catalogues. A notable part of the original library was a rare collection of books on pre-cinema and early cinema history as-well-as early cinema artifacts, which were all part of the valuable David Francis Collection (David Francis was the founder of the UK's National Film and Television Archive), and purchased by the Victorian and Australian governments in 1975. The early cinema artifacts of the collection are now housed at the Scienceworks Museum, however, the rare books remain in the collection at RMIT.

In 2003, the Australian Broadcasting Authority donated the Henry Mayer Collection to the RMIT School of Applied Communication. Over his many years as an academic, Henry Mayer assembled and annotated a massive collection of communications literature, which is now available through the AFI Research Collection. Also included in the AFI Research Collection is the Wayne Royal Levy Collection, the personal library of the internationally respected academic, author and documentary film maker; as-well-as a substantial number of film stills from the Australian and international film industries.

Journals and publications

The school publishes a number of journals, most notably the Southern Review: Communication, Politics and Culture. The Southern Review is an internationally respected, interdisciplinary journal focusing on the connections between communication and politics, and is published three times a year. It was first published in 1963 (as the Australian Journal of Literary Studies) by the English Department of the University of Adelaide, and gained its international reputation during the 1980s through the publication of innovative and influential arguments and analyses in literary and cultural theory (e.g.: early articles by Tony Bennett, Catherine Belsey, Terry Eagleton, Stephen Greenblatt, Ian Hunter, Colin MacCabe, Christopher Norris).{{Cite web|url=http://www.rmit.edu.au/browse;ID=784z3r3tfggd|title=RMIT - Southern Review: History|website=www.rmit.edu.au}} It moved from the University of Adelaide to the Communication Department of Monash University in 1995, before finding its home in the RMIT School of Applied Communication in 2000.

Notable alumni

{{Main|List of RMIT University people}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

{{Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology}}

School of Applied Communication, RMIT