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Morehouse College Bachelor of Arts In Journalism in Sports, Culture, and Social Justice

Morehouse College

Bachelor of Arts In Journalism in Sports, Culture, and Social Justice

Atlanta, USA

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English

Full time

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Sep 2025

USD 52,545

On-Campus

Key Summary

    About: The Bachelor of Arts in Journalism in Sports, Culture, and Social Justice focuses on developing students' journalistic skills within the context of sports and social issues. The program covers critical analysis of media narratives and empowers students to communicate impactful stories that highlight diverse voices in sports and culture.
    Career Outcomes: Graduates can pursue various careers such as sports journalist, content creator, media analyst, public relations specialist, or roles in nonprofit organizations focused on social justice and community engagement.

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.

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English Language Requirements

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