James Chesebro
James W. Chesebro was Distinguished Professor of Telecommunications in the Department of Telecommunications at Ball State University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1972.
Chesebro played a key role in renaming the Speech Communication Association to the National Communication Association in 1996 to better reflect the intellectual diversity of its members and promote public understanding of the association. He was committed to integrating multiculturalism into the communication discipline, and his advocacy significantly shaped the direction of the association during his tenure.
Previous educational institutions
Chesebro taught at several institutions, including:- Indiana State University
- North Dakota State University
- Ball State University
- George Mason University
- Queens College of the City University of New York
- University of Puerto Rico
- Temple University
- University of Minnesota
- Concordia College
Specialization
Professional service
- President of the Eastern Communication Association
- Editor of Communication Quarterly
- Chair of the NCA's Publications Board
- Director of Education Services, National Office of the National Communication Association, July 1989 to July 1992
- President of the National Communication Association
- Editor of the NCA journal Critical Studies in Media Communication
- Editor of the National Communication Association online journal ''Review of Communication''
Books
- Public Policy Decision-Making: Systems Analysis and Comparative Advantages Debate
- Orientations to Public Communication
- Gayspeak: Gay Male and Lesbian Communication
- Computer-Mediated Communication: Human Relationships in a Computerized World
- Analyzing Media: Communication Technologies as Symbolic and Cognitive Systems
- Extensions of the Burkeian System
- Methods of Rhetorical Criticism: A Twentieth-Century Perspective
- A Century of Transformation: Studies in the Honor of the 100th Anniversary of the ECA
- ''Communicating Gender and Power''
Articles
Awards
Chesebro received numerous awards throughout his career, including:- NCA's Golden Anniversary Award for the outstanding monograph of the year 1985.
- NCA's Samuel L. Becker Distinguished Service Award 1997.
- Robert J. Kibler Memorial Award for "demonstrated dedication to excellence, commitment to the profession, concern for others, visions of what could be, acceptance of diversity, and forthrightness" 2001.
- Everett Lee Hunt Award for Outstanding Scholarship, presented by the Eastern Communication Association in 1989 and 1997.
- Kenneth Burke Society's Life-Time Achievement Award, 1999.