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University of Maryland


Country United States
State Maryland
City Adelphi
Address 3501 University Blvd. East
Phone 8008888682
Website http://umuc.edu/

University of Maryland Reviews

  • Apr 20, 2017

During my time at the College of Journalism, I applied to the Capital News Service TV's Broadcast Bureau (CNS-TV) and The ViewFinder, and was declined multiple times. There were no other further opportunities for undergraduate broadcast journalism students like me to be a television news reporter. The other non-Capital News Service and non-viewfinder capstone courses neither meet the undergraduate broadcast students’ interest in television news reporting nor prepare them to be a television news reporter.

I have already taken the initial steps to resolve this by speaking to the Undergraduate Dean: Olive Reid and the Dean of Academic Affairs: Rafael Lorente. My option from them was to take a capstone course that had nothing to do with my career aspirations. Mr. Lorente told to "get any job."

The advice I was given by the Philip Merrill College of Journalism advisers were not successful, and has caused problems for me with news directors and recruiters well-known broadcast companies and its local television news station affiliates, and I do not have one.

I cannot even get a job as a television news reporter with your journalism school because I was neither given the opportunity to do Capital News Service by Ms. Susan "Sue" Kopen-Katcef nor The ViewFinder by Ms. Bethany Swain (this person mistreats learning-disabled students)

The Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland has already failed to help me and other students as a television news reporter to find work in the field. Not many of the undergraduate broadcast students can get into the Capital News Service Program or The ViewFinder. The Philip Merrill College of Journalism has made the excuse of saying, “there are not enough seats guaranteed for CNS-TV or The ViewFinder as we must make these seats available for the master’s students and we do not have enough professors to teach the undergraduate sections.” But actually, the school has money.

These courses and opportunities are already guaranteed to master’s students, but not to undergraduate students. I have seen some undergraduate broadcast journalism students doing both CNS-TV and The ViewFinder in consecutive semesters.

Other students are then forced to take a capstone course that has neither to do in being an on-air television news reporter nor preparing them in being one. The other courses do not have any opportunity for students to do tv news reporting or make a reel for tv news. The students have to do that on their own time which can be difficult.

Many news organizations do not have resources to help their employees make a demo reel. The students are forced to either make a reel using material from previous broadcast classes or doing an internship reel or paying a broadcast talent agency to make a demo reel. Then, when it comes time for jobs, these students cannot apply for reporting jobs without an excellent reel showcasing their work, their skills, and their personality.

There are no other reasonable options for them.

They are forced to take a job as a desk assistant, news assistant or a production assistant and other jobs where the news organization or company do not have resources to help their employees make a demo reel and will tell applicants and employees that this is something they have to do on their own. This means the company or news organization is neither responsible nor liable for making a demo reel for its employees.

This strongly suggests that some of the undergraduate broadcast journalism students are taking CNS-TV and The ViewFinder for granted where the Philip Merrill College of Journalism and these undergraduate broadcast students selected to the courses are stealing these opportunities from other undergraduate broadcast journalism students who truly need these programs and opportunities in order to obtain employment as a television news reporter and/or a television news anchor.

The Philip Merrill College of Journalism is forcing their students to do a job that they do not like and where they may never be an on-air television news reporter or a producer. The Philip Merrill College of Journalism is not doing enough for their undergraduate broadcast journalism students.

Philip Merrill College of Journalism is playing a game with its current students, prospective students, and transfer students' career goals in regards to CNS-TV and The Viewfinder, and not publicly telling them the truth and seriously impacting their career goals. This school did not help me at all and completely abandoned me during my senior year.

The school and its staff did not care about what happened to their students and don't even know how to help them. I cannot find employment in journalism field because of the Philip Merill College of Journalism. The school just want students' money.

To prospective and transfer students, this school is not telling you the truth and just want your money. All the University of Maryland and the Philip Merrill College of Journalism care about is your money. They will squander it.

Please go to another undergraduate journalism school that will fully allow you to be a tv news reporter or anchor guaranteed. Capital News Service TV, The ViewFinder, Philip Merrill College of Journalism, and the University of Maryland are not worth it.

This school does not care about its students at all as claim in advertisements.

  • Nov 24, 2016

I decided to take a second-degree RN-BSN degree from UMUC. In my second course there, HMGT-372, the instructor claims that APA citation errors constitute plagiarism. I contacted the school to contest this instructors assertion, who gave me a zero for my report, which was a large part of my grade. The school did nothing to the instructor, would not adress the instructor's incompetence in grading, and I ended up withdrawing from the course, losing the over $1,000 I paid for the course, and having to start my degree anew at another school.

UMUC only graduates 6% of its undergraduate students! There is virtually no way at UMUC to contest a grade other than going through a process several months post the end of the course and filing a complaint against the instructor. UMUC has never changed a grade that an instructor gave a student that was incorrect! The instructor can do whatever they desire, make whatever claims they desire, and UMUC will allow the instructor to do this.

UMUC is defrauding the U.S. Government, as only 6% of its undergraduate students ever graduate. Most of the students who do not graduate end up defaulting on their student loans. How can a University, a State of Maryland University at that, have only 6% of their students graduate and continue to received federal financial aid funds, let alone remain in existence! At 6% graduation rate, UMUC has one of the lowest graduation rates of any school in the country.

Let's contact congress and get these crooks put out of business. If they did not exist then students would select another school that does not routinely discriminate against students, and where students could actually graduate and receive gainful employment, rather than not being employed, as they have no degree, and ending up defaulting on their student loans, costing taxpayers millions of dollars.

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