
Atlanta, USA
DURATION
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
Request application deadline
EARLIEST START DATE
Sep 2025
TUITION FEES
USD 52,545
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
Key Summary
Introduction
While defining the importance of education, Dr. King also could have been writing journalism’s mission statement. Those principles have not changed. However, in the 15 years of Morehouse’s journalism program, the discipline has become a rapidly evolving multimedia environment that has chopped down the past’s print, broadcast, and photographic silos.
Founded by famed filmmaker Spike Lee ’79 and the late ESPN sports columnist Ralph Wiley, the Journalism in Sports, Culture, and Social Justice addresses the needs of student journalists who are mastering media and technological literacy using creativity and innovation.
Outcomes
The following are the learning outcomes of the journalism program:
- Writing will become clearer, more concise, and better organized
- Critical thinking, interviewing, and news analysis skills will improve
- Skilled usage of photography, video, and audio as storytelling tools
- Real-world exposure to professional journalists through internships, conferences, and covering events
- Comfort in using social media as reporting tools and contact platforms
- Awareness of historic and contemporary racial dimensions of sports
Career Options
As a minor, the journalism program produced more than 90 students working in media, sports, or related industries. They have taken jobs with newspapers, websites, magazines, television stations, advertising firms, corporate marketing and public relations, and sports journalists and media relations professionals.
More than 40 of our students have obtained master’s degrees in journalism. Others used their journalism background as a springboard to law school and graduate study in psychology, sports management, fine arts, film study, political science, theology, and other fields.
Historic Impact
Journalism’s positive contributions to Black people date back to at least 1827 when Freedom’s Journal was printed as the first Black-owned and operated newspaper in the United States. Journalism’s influence took on new heights during the post-World War II civil rights movement.
“If it hadn’t been for the media – the print media and television – the civil rights movement would have been like a bird without wings, a choir without a song,” civil rights icon Congressman John Lewis said in the closing words of the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalism classic “The Race Beat” by Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff.
Admissions
Scholarships and Funding
Morehouse Scholarships
We offer newly admitted and returning Morehouse students scholarship opportunities to support their academic and career goals.
Using The Morehouse Scholarship Portal (Current Students)
Current students may apply using the Morehouse Scholarship Portal. The scholarship portal has newly enhanced feature functionality and search capabilities to help students better match themselves with scholarship criteria. Current students can begin applying for scholarships now.
Our Scholarship Opportunities
A Morehouse College education is an investment in your future success. Morehouse’s tradition of producing extraordinary leaders begins in the classroom, where men of distinction come to learn, grow, and discover their potential to impact the world. Our rigorous academic programs and transformational experiences inspire our scholars to pursue excellence throughout their studies and professional careers.
To be eligible for scholarships, you must:
- Be a newly admitted or currently enrolled Morehouse student
- Meet the criteria established by the scholarship donors
- Submit all required documents necessary for processing. We strongly encourage you to complete a Free Application for Federal Student
- Aid (FAFSA) to maximize available scholarship opportunities.
- Maintain GPA, community service hours, or meet other conditions necessary for the scholarship
Morehouse offers both general scholarships, which are open to all students, and scholarships restricted to those within a specific major or field of study. Scholarships may be recommended to you at different times throughout the year as applications become available. Please make note of scholarship deadlines, as late submissions will not be accepted.
Curriculum
Earn the Major
General Education (Core)
33-48 hours
Refer to the general education requirements for more information.
Journalism Major
30 hours
Every journalism major must complete nine courses with a C or better, plus a pass/fail journalism or sports-related internship. There are six mandatory core courses:
- HJOU 258— Intro to Multimedia Journalism
- HJOU 368— Advanced News Writing
- HJOU 388— Multimedia and Visual Storytelling
- HJOU 410— Internship
- HCOM 457— Mass Media Law
- HJOU 490— Journalism Innovation
To complete the curriculum, each major must take four courses in one of these tracks:
- Sports Journalism (HJOU 378— Sports Reporting is required plus three electives)
- Arts and Culture (HJOU 380— Movies, Music and Celebrity Journalism is required plus three electives)
- Social Justice Journalism (HJOU 350— Social Justice Journalism plus three electives)
Among the electives, these three apply to all tracks: HJOU 389—Drone Storytelling; HJOU 488—Advanced Multimedia and Visual Storytelling; PHI 202 or 302— Critical Thinking or Philosophical Ethics.
Earn the Minor
Every Morehouse student can benefit from the journalism minor, regardless of his major. The minor provides a broad foundation in multimedia journalism. Even if a student doesn’t want to become a journalist, his writing will become clearer, more concise, and better organized. Those are valuable assets in the professional world, whether writing a legal brief, an enlightening sermon, a compelling marketing brochure, a dramatic ending to an NBA Finals game, or a critical grant proposal for STEM research.
Outcomes
Through our courses, the student will benefit in the following ways:
- Learn to write with fewer words that make a bigger impact on readers
- Critical thinking, grammar, and punctuation skills will improve
- Introduction to multimedia platforms and technology
- Improved communication skills applicable to any profession
The five core courses focus on reporting, interviewing, journalism ethics, online writing, and social media, and using photography and videography as storytelling tools.
Core Requirements- 15 hours
Every journalism minor must complete five courses with a C or better, plus a pass/fail journalism or sports-related internship. There are five mandatory core courses:
- HJOU 258— Intro to Multimedia Journalism
- HJOU 368— Advanced News Writing
- HJOU 388— Multimedia and Visual Storytelling
- HJOU 410— Internship
- PHI 202 or 302— Critical Thinking or Philosophical Ethics
Approved Electives Three Hours
Choose one course from the list below:
- HJOU 378— Sports Reporting
- HJOU 478— The Power of Black Activist Athletes
- HCTM 258— Survey African American Cinema
- PSY 340— Black Men, Black Boys, and Psychology of Modern Media
- HCOM 457— Mass Media Law
- KSP 464— Special Topics in Kinesiology: Sports Analytics