Advanced International Journal for Research
E-ISSN: 3048-7641
•
Impact Factor: 9.11
A Widely Indexed Open Access Peer Reviewed Multidisciplinary Bi-monthly Scholarly International Journal
Home
Research Paper
Submit Research Paper
Publication Guidelines
Publication Charges
Upload Documents
Track Status / Pay Fees / Download Publication Certi.
Editors & Reviewers
View All
Join as a Reviewer
Get Membership Certificate
Current Issue
Publication Archive
Conference
Publishing Conf. with AIJFR
Upcoming Conference(s) ↓
WSMCDD-2025
GSMCDD-2025
Conferences Published ↓
RBS:RH-COVID-19 (2023)
ICMRS'23
PIPRDA-2023
Contact Us
Plagiarism is checked by the leading plagiarism checker
Call for Paper
Volume 7 Issue 4
July-August 2026
Indexing Partners
Journalism Education in the Age of Convergence: Pedagogical and Scholastic Shifts in the Media Departments of Hyderabad
| Author(s) | Mr. Pranay Rupani |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| Abstract | The rapid growth in the field of journalism and mass communication education worldwide is second only to the burgeoning of engineering institutions and B-schools [1]. This also holds true in the Indian scenario, where a study by the Delhi-based Centre for Media Studies reports that there are over 300 media institutes in India offering a wide range of technical and creative programmes with diverse course content [2]. This phenomenal growth must be seen in the context of the manifold expansion of the media market since the economic liberalisation of the 1990s and the ongoing transformations brought about by digital technologies and convergence. Yet the discipline that services this market has no adequately documented Indian history: existing accounts of communication study are largely Western in orientation and, even there, have been criticised as hagiographic and Whiggish. Digital interventions through convergence have meanwhile changed the way journalism is taught as well as understood: skills training is no longer confined to a single technology, reporting is now done simultaneously for multiple platforms, and pedagogy is increasingly focussed on developing multi-skilled students, while media research incorporates techniques such as social media ethnography [3]. Situated within the frameworks of disciplinary historiography and institutional isomorphism, this paper analyses the evolution of journalism education in Hyderabad through a study of two prominent media departments—the Department of Communication and Journalism at Osmania University, founded in 1954 as one of the earliest in the country, and the Department of Communication at the University of Hyderabad, established in 1988–89. Drawing on in-depth interviews with three established academics whose own biographies embody the discipline’s founding lineages, together with a historical perusal of its growth over more than 75 years, the paper examines how journalism curricula have responded to the advent of the digital era, whether educators have had to change their approaches to teaching and research in the age of media convergence, and what the discipline’s many renamings reveal about its constant negotiation with market forces and technology. |
| Keywords | Convergence, Convergent Journalism, Digital Ecologies, Disciplinary Historiography, Journalism Education, Media Education, Social Media Ethnography |
| Field | Sociology > Journalism / Media |
| Published In | Volume 7, Issue 4, July-August 2026 |
| Published On | 2026-07-16 |
Share this

E-ISSN 3048-7641
CrossRef DOI is assigned to each research paper published in our journal.
AIJFR DOI prefix is
10.63363/aijfr
Downloads
All research papers published on this website are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, and all rights belong to their respective authors/researchers.