University General Course Catalog 2025-2026 (DRAFT)
Donald W. Reynolds School of Journalism
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Gi W. Yun, Dean
301 Reynolds School of Journalism
(775) 784-6531
OBJECTIVE
The Donald W. Reynolds School of Journalism helps undergraduate and graduate students turn their passion for storytelling into careers in news, broadcasting and documentary, advertising and public relations, Spanish-language media, media studies, film and media production, sports media, and visual communication. Our programs encourage an inclusive learning environment that supports students from all backgrounds and walks of life.
The school balances enduring values of fair and ethical communication with emerging practices and new technologies. Students prepare for the professional world with experiential learning in the school’s own production centers and agencies as well as with its media partners. Alumni go on to make a difference in their communities and across the world through the stories they tell and the causes they support.
The Reynolds School is one of 110 fully-accredited U.S. journalism and mass communication programs. Our faculty members include endowed chairs in business journalism and media ethics.
We partner with the College of Engineering around digital media innovation, with the College of Business around entrepreneurship, with the College of Liberal Arts with Spanish and French dual-degree programs, with the College of Education for journalism and social studies education, and with the School of Medicine and the School of Public Health around health communication. Our students have won national and regional competitions in advertising, public relations, media design, journalism, and film.
ACCREDITATION
The Donald W. Reynolds School of Journalism is accredited by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. Accreditation was first granted in 1970.
PRE-MAJOR AND MAJOR STATUS
Students can declare a Journalism major after meeting with an advisor. Beginning journalism students maintain Pre-Journalism status until the following requirements are met:
- Sophomore standing (30 units completed).
- An overall grade point average of 2.5 or higher and a journalism grade point average of 2.5 or higher.
- Completion of JOUR 103, JOUR 107, and JOUR 108 with a grade of “C” or better in each and a GPA of 2.5 in the three classes. NOTE: Each of these classes may be repeated only once.
- Submission of a completed major application form.
Journalism majors must maintain these GPAs to remain in the major. A major will revert to Pre-Major status whenever either the journalism or overall GPA falls below 2.5. After two consecutive semesters below 2.5 in either GPA, the student may be removed from the major.
Bachelor of Arts Degree
Students seeking the bachelor of arts degree from the Reynolds School of Journalism must complete at least 120 credits.
The 120 credits as detailed under Journalism Degree Requirements include:
- Non-journalism course requirements (72 credits minimum)
- The University Core Curriculum (24 credits minimum)
- Minor or second major (18 credits minimum)
- Two semesters of college level Foreign Language (8 credits)
- Electives (13-23 credits). More credits may be necessary depending on a student’s minor choice and progress through the University Core Curriculum.
- Journalism course requirements (39 credits minimum. 12 of the 39 Journalism credits in 400-level classes).
- The 120 credits must also conform to the following:
- Cumulative GPA of 2.5
- Journalism GPA of 2.5
- 40 credits in classes numbered 300 or higher
- 60 credits acquired at a four year institution
- 30 credits in residence at UNR
- Credits taken for S/U grades equal 6 units maximum.
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