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Gerald
Stone:
65-plus journal articles
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Gerald
Stone:
Masscom author

Books
Newswriting,
1992
Public Relations Research, with E.W. Brody, 1989
Communication Theory and Research Applications, with Michael
Singletary, 1988
Examining Newspapers: What the Research Reveals About America's
Newspapers, 1987
Using Communication Theories, 1998
Education
Ph.D.,
mass communication, Syracuse University, 1975
M.A., journalism,
Louisiana State University, 1969
B.A., journalism, Louisiana State University, 1966 |
Journalism professor
Gerald Stone has written more than 65 refereed journal articles in his
career, making him among the most prolific researchers and academic writers
in his field. Journalism is a crowded field for textbook authors, Stone
said, whose four textbooks weren't financial blockbusters. But, he says,
he makes his mark by "contributing to the body of knowledge": writing
for academic journals.
"Most of Text and
Academic Author's members have at one time or another written scholarly
works before writing texts," Stone said. "That is how you establish
publisher credibility to author a textbook." Stone says one thing TAA
needs to do more of is address the concerns and issues of people at
the journal-writing stage. "The organization needs to pay as much attention
to academic publishing as text publishing," he said. Journal writing
doesn't produce any monetary profits for authors -- in fact, a few authors
must pay page charges to get published in a journal. Stone would like
to see that changed. "Academic articles are the single most copied publications
in existence since the copy machine was invented," Stone said. He has
written several articles advocating that academic authors not give away
their creative rights to journal articles. "TAA should take a leadership
role in speaking for those who write journal articles and want to retain
copyright," he said.
Although his five
books -- Using Communication Theories, published in 1999; Newswriting,
1992; Public Relations Research, 1989; Communication Theory
and Research Applications, 1988; and Examining Newspapers: What
the Research Reveals About America's Newspapers, 1987 -- didn't
set any sales records, Stone said he is satisfied. "They got me raises,
tenure and promotions."
He also hopes to
follow his dream: to write the Great American Novel, which he has wanted
to do since high school. After more than 30 years, a masters and a doctorate,
five textbooks and numerous journal articles, Stone is half-way through
his sci-fi fantasy novel titled "Dream Factory." The book's plot is
part of a dream Stone had 20 years ago. "The problem is, I have to put
it aside so frequently that when I go back to it six months later, I've
forgotten who the characters are."
Stone says he is
a "pretty dogged writer": "When I begin a project I'll spend countless
hours on it -- evenings, weekends, vacations, summer break -- to meet
deadlines. It seems I always have something in the works."
Stone earned his
bachelor's degree in journalism from Louisiana State University in 1966,
his master's in journalism in 1969 and his doctorate from Syracuse University
in mass communication in 1975. He took early retirement and became an
emeritus professor in 2003, after serving as director of graduate studies
at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale's School of Journalism,
where he previously was dean of SIU's College of Communications and
Fine Arts. Since leaving academia, he has worked with his son's nonprofit
management group in the Washington, DC area.
Of the 13 courses
he's taught over the years, Stone says the ones that teach skills were
his favorite. "I really enjoyed seeing students go from very little
confidence in their writing to discovering that they not only can do
it, but are good at it and enjoy it," Stone said. Some of his students
have become newspaper editors and broadcast news anchors, and some,
he believes, could win Pulitzers. "I estimate 60 percent or more of
my students have gone on to enjoy a successful career in the field,"
he said.
Stone became president
of TAA in 1995. He didn't know it would be the single roughest year
in TAA's history. One month into his presidency, executive director
Norma Hood died of cancer. He spent the rest of the year organizing
the move from TAA's headquarters in rural Florida where Hood had been
running things by herself, to the University of South Florida-St. Petersburg,
where headquarters remains today. "It took almost six months to recover
the records," Stone said. "That was a tough and tentative time for the
organization."
TAA had relied
on Hood as executive director to do everything for the organization,
Stone said. While president, he tried to spread the responsibility out.
Now headquarters takes care of membership details and the executive
director deals with organizational decisions while the newsletter editor
handles TAA interest information. The treasurer has control of the checkbook
and authorizes payments. "While we now have the protection of more widely
distributed duties," Stone said, "we now have to deal with the long-distance
communication problems that entails."
Stone said that
although 1995-96 was a hard year, the experience created a better organization.
"Our organization had been broke since its inception," Stone said. "But
with the successful receipt of foreign reprography funds, we became
flush with funds and were able to do things for our members that we
had only dreamed of doing before." He noted that the reprography funds
on which TAA relies come primary from the work of U.S. academic authors
whose journal articles are copied abroad.
Among activities
the new finances allowed were random audits of publisher records and
the start a series of on-campus seminars to help people break into publishing
and create better educational materials. One aspect of those seminars
was "Successful Academic Writing," led by Stone and other TAA members
with academic journal experience. "The seminars resulted in doubling
the TAA membership, ensuring the organization's future," Stone said.
He received the Mike Keedy Award for leadership contributions to TAA.
The Stone family
is unique among Text and Academic authors' members: They're a two-member
TAA family. Stone joined in 1992, served on the TAA Council and several
committees, became vice president in 1994 and president in 1995. His
wife, Donna Besser, also a masscom scholar, tagged along at a couple
of conferences and then joined herself in 1996. While Gerald focused
on journalism, Donna's interests straddled advertising and public relations.
Donna was a conference
panel organizer at the 1996 Chicago TAA convention, where the couple's
daughter, Leah, also made a presentation -- a poem she wrote about the
joys and tribulations of writing. Leah, who was an honor student at
Southern Illinois University, later worked as an editor in book publishing,
newspapers and television.
"Does the Stone
family constitute a 'unique' family in TAA?," asked Gerald, rhetorically.
"The organization doesn't have many couple members both of whom write
textbooks, and even fewer whose children have made TAA conference presentations."
Donna is a co-author
of Social, Political and Economic Contexts in Public Relations: Theory
and Cases published by Erlbaum in 1993. She was a public relations
teacher at Ohio University, Kent State University and the University
of Tennessee at Chattanooga, and taught integrated marketing communication
at SIU. She now works with Gerald and their son at the Stone Group in
Washington, DC.
Donna spoke at TAA's
1997 Las Vegas convention on whether textbook publishers are using integrated
marketing communication. Her conclusion: Not yet. She was one of three
winners of a TAA competitive research grant to continue studying textbook
marketing, and was honored with TAA's Norma Hood Award for service-behind-the-scenes. reported
by Kim Pawlak, 1998 |
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