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Moore, Edward H. – Vocational Education Journal, 1988
Good public relations begins with a good communication plan. Eight steps for getting started are (1) have a written plan; (2) begin internally; (3) communicate; (4) target your audience; (5) market; (6) meet the press; (7) know thyself; and (8) be happy on days you break even. (JOW)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Program Development, Public Relations, Vocational Education
Peer reviewedJudd, Larry R. – Public Relations Review, 1995
Proposes three precepts as an approach to ethics for the information age: accept responsibility when appropriate; anticipate negative effects; and attempt justice through fairness, applying John Rawls' principles of justice. (SR)
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Models, Organizational Theories
Peer reviewedParsons, Patricia Houlihan – Public Relations Review, 1993
Identifies four loyalties of public relations practitioners: self, organization, profession, and society. Presents a framework for use in discussions of ethical decision making with students and for use in practical situations by professionals. (SR)
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Models, Public Relations
Peer reviewedRoads, David R. – Tech Directions, 1993
Suggests that teachers have to promote the features and benefits of innovations as industrial arts programs move toward technology-based curricula. Offers activities to integrate into the program to create awareness, gain acceptance, and foster support for curriculum changes. (JOW)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Benefits, Public Relations, Secondary Education
Murray, Marty Lenzini – Vocational Education Journal, 1994
Describes the efforts of Florida's Orange County Public Schools' public relations committee to recruit and retain vocational-technical education students. Indicates the importance of a public relations plan that includes goals, strengths and weaknesses, target audience, catchy slogan, outline of strategies, organization, costs, and evaluation.…
Descriptors: Public Relations, Secondary Education, Student Recruitment, Vocational Education
Willimon, William H. – Trusteeship, 2000
Discusses concepts of marketing an institutional image for colleges and universities, noting that marketing is more about perceptions than reality. Offers 11 marketing guidelines such as: narrow the concept of who you are; be able to distinguish yourself; establish yourself as an alternative; work to be first; know your competition; and think like…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Institutional Advancement, Marketing, Public Relations
Peer reviewedBotan, Carl H.; Soto, Francisco – Public Relations Review, 1998
Challenges the prevailing view of publics as relative entities. Reviews the two primary schools of semiotics, Saussrean and Peircean, arguing for the utility of the latter. Concludes that a public can be best understood as an ongoing process of agreement upon an interpretation, and that the public may develop a more sophisticated, insightful…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Language Role, Public Relations, Rhetoric
Peer reviewedLedingham, John A.; Bruning, Stephen D. – Public Relations Review, 1998
States that scholars and practitioners are defining public relations as relationship management. Identifies, through qualitative research and verifies through quantitative research, relationship dimensions upon which good organization-public relationships are initiated, developed, and maintained. Surveys 384 telephone subscribers in territories…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Organizational Communication, Public Relations, Qualitative Research
Peer reviewedKruckeberg, Dean – Public Relations Review, 1998
Contends that public relations is a professional occupation that has become more than a subset or specialization of other disciplinary areas. Calls for reevaluation of professional and disciplinary areas that have influenced public-relations education. Contends that the integrity of public-relations professional education must take precedence over…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Intellectual Disciplines, Professional Education, Public Relations
Peer reviewedLindenmann, Walter K. – Public Relations Review, 1997
Reviews and discusses the new 28-page booklet defining "Guidelines and Standards for Measuring and Evaluating PR Effectiveness." States that it is the result of a nine-month project carried out by an eight-member task force. (PA)
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Guidelines, Media Research, Public Relations
NEA Today, 2001
Presents tips to help schools handle the mass media when they are dealing with publicity, including: contact them before they contact you; designate a school contact person for the media; have teachers and students submit articles and photographs to the local newspaper; send news flashes to the local media; and follow up faxes or e-mails with a…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Mass Media, Public Relations, Publicity
Peer reviewedLeichty, Greg; Springston, Jeff – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1996
Investigates the structure of public relations roles. Factor analyzes G. Broom and G. Smith's role questionnaire in conjunction with items used in organizational boundary spanning. Extracts eight activity factors. Identifies four primary practitioner roles and one minor role. Refines previous public relations roles concepts. Shows by validation…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Organizational Theories, Public Relations, Role Perception
Peer reviewedHallahan, Kirk – Public Relations Review, 1999
Re-examines "implied third-party endorsement" as an explanation of publicity's effectiveness. Argues that any effect involves inferences by audience members who use biased processing that favors news and disfavors advertising. Suggests that the presentation of information as news is not necessarily perceived by audiences as an…
Descriptors: Political Influences, Politics, Program Effectiveness, Public Relations
Peer reviewedFitzgerald, Mike – Technology Teacher, 2004
The advertising, marketing, promotion, and positioning of technology education programs have become increasingly important. Yet the rewards of promoting a program will not only bring more students and resources to the classroom, it will also bring support on a larger scale, resulting in added resources to help all students become more successful.…
Descriptors: Marketing, Enrollment, Technology Education, Public Relations
Franz-Balsen, Angela; Heinrichs, Harald – International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 2007
Purpose: Sustainability communication is evolving as a new interdisciplinary field of research and professional practice. The purpose of this paper is to point out the advantage of applying theoretical frameworks and related research instruments for an adequate sustainability communication management on campus. It also aims to highlight the…
Descriptors: Public Relations, Sustainable Development, Foreign Countries, Campuses

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