国际学生入学条件
The Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute accepts candidates with bachelor's degrees in any field and with a wide variety of experience. We look at the quality of applicants writing and insights as displayed in the personal statement, their undergraduate transcripts, their GRE scores if submitted and their recommendations. We accept clips (published examples of applicants work) submitted with applications, and recommend that applicants submit any clips they have. But clips are rarely a deciding factor in the applicant review process. The GRE is not required for any journalism programs. In some cases it is optional and will be considered if submitted. GSAS recommends that applicants achieve a minimum TOEFL score of 100 on the internet-based test (equivalent to 250 on the computer-based test or 600 on the paper-based test). For the IELTS, a minimum overall band score of at least 7 is recommended.
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IDP—雅思考试联合主办方

雅思考试总分
7.0
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雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:7
- 托福网考总分:100
- 托福笔试总分:600
- 其他语言考试:PTE Academic - 68 to 70
CRICOS代码:
申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
The Cultural Reporting and Criticism program at NYU's Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute is for writers who are driven to interrogate the world around them. Here, you will produce work that examines aspects of our culture with the support of deep research, an understanding of history and lines of influence, a critical and questioning eye, and a belief in the power of good writing.<br><br>Journalism is not just about reporting on individual news events. More and more, it's about getting a handle on the complicated reality that frames those events the ever-shifting patterns of culture that determine how we live and what we make of our lives. As the mainstream media expand their cultural coverage and alternative publications and websites proliferate, there has never been more need for engaging, knowledgeable cultural reporting and analysis.<br>The program is dedicated to original, creative, cultural writing, The arts and books and popular culture, the immense variety of social groups, from gay families to Pakistani cabdrivers to obsessive gamers, the explosion of social controversies, the rise of religious fundamentalism, at home and abroad, the changing nature of war, the writer's own experience: all this is fodder for the cultural journalist. Cultural journalism is for writers with an itch to understand connectionsbetween news event and context, present and past, art and society, public and private. Over the last tumultuous decade, the need for such explorations has only intensified.
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