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National Communication Association

 
Education Encyclopedia: National Communication Association

The National Communication Association (NCA) is the oldest and largest nonprofit, scholarly society dedicated to the field of communication, with a special emphasis on public speaking and other forms of speech communication. Its mission is to promote excellence in the research, teaching, and application of the "artistic, humanistic, and scientific principles of communication." It has a membership of more than 7,100, representing all fifty states and twenty foreign countries.

Program

The NCA serves as an informational center and network for individuals working in the broadly defined field of communication. Its primary goal is to organize and disseminate information of relevance to its membership, and it accomplishes this goal through a variety of venues. Each year an annual convention is held, attracting some 4,000 attendees who participate in workshops, seminars, and panel discussions. Also offered are films and presentations on advances in the field of speech communication, employment placement services, and other special-interest activities. The annual convention is also the occasion for the NCA's various business and planning committees to meet. In addition to the annual convention, the NCA sponsors smaller conferences throughout the year.

In addition to meetings, the NCA disseminates information through a wide range of publications. The first NCA journal, founded in 1915 as the Quarterly Journal of Public Speaking, is now published asthe Quarterly Journal of Speech. Since the inaugural issue of this journal, the NCA has added six others, each with a special focus (education, criticism, text, performance, and so on). The NCA also produces two annuals and an online index, as well as numerous books, monographs, brochures, and pamphlets. The monthly newsletter, Spectra, has an electronic counterpart available on the organization's website.

To encourage excellence in the field of communication, the NCA also sponsors numerous awards, conferred annually at the NCA convention. These awards, many of which carry significant cash grants, recognize achievement in a variety of communication applications, from teaching to "best dissertation." In addition, the organization sponsors exchange programs, which bring international debate and public speaking teams together for competitions. The official NCA collegiate honor societies are Lambda Pi Eta (for four-year institutions) and Sigma Pi Eta (for community colleges), in addition to which the organization encourages the formation of student clubs on university campuses throughout the country.

The NCA is also actively involved in outreach programs with public and private agencies. Through these programs, the NCA promotes its positions on such issues as communication education, freedom of speech, and presidential debates. The NCA also prepares position papers on legislation relevant to its areas of interest and makes these available to lawmakers at the federal and state level when appropriate.

Organization and Funding

The NCA is governed by a sixty-member legislative council, which meets annually at the NCA convention, and a ten-member administrative committee, which meets periodically throughout the year. Policy positions are determined by the legislative council, then disseminated throughout the organization in the form of resolutions. When deemed necessary, the legislative council may call for the formation of special committees to do research on special-interest topics, with the purpose of publishing the results of the research. Past examples of such projects include a brochure on careers in the field of speech communication and a book on the rhetoric of the antislavery movement. More recently, the NCA has published brochures on finding grant support for individual research and a volume on Mexican-American rhetoric and the activism of Cesar Chavez.

The NCA is an independent, not-for-profit organization, relying primarily on membership dues, conference and convention fees, and revenues from the sale of its publications to support the majority of its programs. Individual members and special projects receive support from private sponsors as well as from federal granting agencies. Although many of the NCA annual awards are supported by organization funds, it also solicits endowed awards, and as of 2002 there are ten such awards granted through the organization. In addition to individual memberships, the NCA recruits memberships from institutions and libraries. Undergraduate students receive a reduced membership rate.

History

The National Communication Association was founded on November 28, 1914, in Chicago, Illinois. The impetus for its founding arose from a dispute within the ranks of the National Council of Teachers of English, in which seventeen members broke away from the parent organization to form the National Association of Academic Teachers of Public Speaking. Within a year, the new organization had inaugurated its first publication, The Quarterly Journal of Public Speaking. Interest in the new organization was lively, and by 1916 it boasted 160 members.

Within ten years, membership grew to 910, and the organization underwent its first name change, to the National Association of Teachers of Speech (NATS). New services were added to the organizational profile, including job-placement service. In 1934 the organization began publication of Speech Monographs (now titled Communication Monographs), and membership had topped 2,000. In 1945 the group changed its name, once again, to the Speech Association of America (SAA), under which, five years later, the organization was officially incorporated. In 1953 the association launched its third quarterly publication, Speech Teacher (now Communication Educator). In 1963 the SAA established its headquarters in New York City and for the first time created full-time administrative positions to facilitate the running of the organization. In 1970 the organization adopted a new constitution and bylaws and once again chose a new name: the Speech Communication Association (SCA).

With professional offices and a national headquarters, the SCA grew rapidly over the next two decades, and its services expanded markedly. New publications were founded to address changes in the field, including Journal of Applied Communication (founded 1973), Critical Studies in Media Communications (1984), and Text and Performance Quarterly (1989). The conference and awards programs were expanded as well. In 1997 the organization underwent yet another name change to become the National Communication Association, and in 2001 the association launched its most recent publication, Review of Communication. In the 1990s the NCA outgrew its Manhattan-based headquarters and relocated to Washington, D.C.

Internet Resource

National Communication Association. 2002. www.natcom.org.

— WILLIAM WORK, Revised by, NANCY E. GRATTON

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National Communication Association headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Contents

Scholarly society

NCA is a scholarly society and as such works to enhance the research, teaching, and service produced by its members. Staff at the NCA National Office follow trends in national research, teaching, and service priorities. It both relays those opportunities to its members and represents the academic discipline of communication in those national efforts.

Largest communication association

NCA is the oldest and largest national organization to promote communication scholarship and education. Founded in 1914 as the National Association of Academic Teachers of Public Speaking, the society incorporated in 1950. The organization changed its name several times to reflect the changing priorities and interests of communication researchers, teachers, and professionals[1].

  • National Association of Academic Teachers of Public Speaking, 1914-1922
  • National Association of Teachers of Speech, 1923-1945
  • Speech Association of America, 1946-1969
  • Speech Communication Association, 1970-1996
  • National Communication Association, 1997-Present

Disciplinary activities

NCA takes the lead in publicizing the discipline's scholarship through press releases and regular contacts with policy makers. When appropriate, NCA offers scholarship to support the development of governmental policy. Where proposed laws are of interest or potential concern, the National Office staff notifies members so that they can make their opinions known to their representatives on Capitol Hill.

NCA's sponsors an annual convention, which is the leading outlet for the discipline's scholarship. NCA's summer conferences bring together scholars working in an emerging area of interest to exchange ideas.

NCA publishes 10 academic journals. The official newsletter of NCA is Spectra and is published monthly and mailed to all association members. Spectra includes information about the discipline, events, job announcements, and news about members[2].

Leadership

NCA Presidents from 1915 to present:

1915 J.M. O’Neill,* University of Wisconsin
1916 J.A. Winans,* Cornell University
1917 J.L. Lardner,* Northwestern University
1918 H.S. Woodward,* Western Reserve University
1919 H.S. Woodward,* Western Reserve University
1920 C.H. Woolbert,* University of Illinois
1921 A.M. Drummond,* Cornell University
1922 Glenn N. Merry,* University of Iowa
1923 Harry B. Gough,* Depauw University
1924 Wilber Jones Kay,* West Virginia University
1925 Ray K. Immel,* University of Southern California
1926 E.C. Mabie,* University of Iowa
1927 Andrew T. Weaver,* University of Wisconsin
1928 John P. Ryan,* Grinnell College
1929 F.M. Rarig,* University of Minnesota
1930 John Dolman,* Jr., University of Pennsylvania
1931 Clarence T. Simon,* Northwestern University
1932 Henrietta Prentiss,* Hunter College
1933 Lee Emerson Bassett,* Leland Stanford University
1934 H.L. Ewbank,* University of Wisconsin
1935 Arleigh B. Williamson,* New York University
1936 Maud May Babcock,* University of Utah
1937 Herbert A. Wichelns,* Cornell University
1938 J.T. Marshman,* Ohio Wesleyan University
1939 A. Craig Baird,* University of Iowa
1940 Alan H. Monroe,* Purdue University 1941 W. Hayes Yeager,* George Washington University
1941 Honorary President Thomas C. Trueblood,* University of Michigan
1942 Claude M. Wise,* Louisiana State University
1943 Robert West,* University of Wisconsin
1944 Bower Aly,* University of Missouri
1945 Joseph F. Smith,* University of Utah
1946 W. Norwood Brigance,* Wabash College
1947 Magdalene Kramer,* Columbia University
1948 Rupert Cortright,* Wayne State University
1949 J.H. McBurney,* Northwestern University
1950 Horace G. Rahskopf,* University of Washington
1951 Wilber Gilman,* Queens College
1952 Lionel Crocker,* Denison University
1953 H.P. Constans,* University of Florida
1954 Karl R. Wallace,* University of Illinois
1955 Thomas A. Rousse,* University of Texas
1956 Lester Thonssen,* College of the City of New York
1957 Loren Reid, University of Missouri
1958 Elise Hahn,* University of California
1959 John E. Dietrich,* Ohio State University
1960 Kenneth G. Hance,* Michigan State University
1961 Ralph G. Nichols, University of Minnesota
1962 Waldo W. Braden,* Louisiana University
1963 Ernest J. Wrage,* Northwestern State University
1964 Robert T. Oliver*, Penn State University
1965 J. Jeffery Auer, Indiana University
1966 John W. Black,* Ohio State University
1967 Wayne C. Minnick, Florida State University
1968 Douglas Ehninger,* University of Iowa
1969 Marie Hochmuth Nichols,* University of Illinois
1970 Donald C. Bryant,* University of Iowa
1971 William S. Howell,* University of Minnesota
1972 Theodore Clevenger, Jr.,* Florida State University
1973 Robert C. Jeffrey,* University of Texas
1974 Samuel L. Becker, University of Iowa
1975 Herman Cohen, Penn State University
1976 Lloyd F. Bitzer, University of Wisconsin
1977 Wallace A. Bacon,* Northwestern University
1978 Jane Blankenship, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
1979 Ronald R. Allen, University of Wisconsin
1980 Malcolm O. Sillars, University of Utah
1981 Anita Taylor, George Mason University
1982 Frank E.X. Dance, University of Denver
1983 Kenneth E. Andersen, University of Illinois
1984 John Waite Bowers, University of Iowa
1985 Beverly Whitaker Long, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
1986 Wayne Brockriede,* California State University, Fullerton**
1987 Patti P. Gillespie, University of Maryland
1988 Michael M. Osborn, Memphis State University
1989 Gustav W. Friedrich, University of Oklahoma
1990 Mark L. Knapp, University of Texas
1991 Dennis Gouran, Penn State University
1992 Dale Leathers,* University of Georgia
1993 David Zarefsky, Northwestern University
1994 Bruce E. Gronbeck, University of Iowa
1995 Sharon A. Ratliffe, Golden West College
1996 James W. Chesebro, Indiana State University
1997 Judith S. Trent, University of Cincinnati
1998 John A. Daly, University of Texas, Austin
1999 Orlando L. Taylor, Howard University
2000 Raymie E. McKerrow, Ohio University
2001 James L. Applegate, University of Kentucky
2002 V. William Balthrop, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
2003 Judy C. Pearson, North Dakota State University
2004 Isa N. Engleberg, Prince George’s Community College
2005 Martha Watson, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
2006 H. Dan O'Hair, University of Oklahoma
2007 J. Michael Sproule, St. Louis University
2008 Arthur P. Bochner, University of South Florida
2009 Betsy Bach, University of Montana-Missoula

  • Deceased
  • Donald Ecroyd, Temple University, died before assuming the NCA presidency in 1986.

[3]

The Executive Director of the National Communication Association is Nancy Kidd.

[4]

Non-profit association

NCA is a non-profit organization of approximately 7,700 educators, practitioners, and students who work and reside in every state and more than 20 countries.

The purpose of the association is to promote study, criticism, research, teaching, and application of the artistic, humanistic, and scientific principles of communication.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ NCA's History (2009). Retrieved March 26, 2009 from http://www.natcom.org/index.asp?bid=19
  2. ^ NCAs Publications (2009). Retrieved on March 25, 2009 from http://www.natcom.org/index.asp?bid=262
  3. ^ NCA Presidents (2009). Retrieved on March 26, 2009 from http://www.natcom.org/index.asp?bid=497 with Besty Bach added in 2009.
  4. ^ http://www.natcom.org/index.asp?bid=503

 
 

 

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