31295005649578
31295005649578
31295005649578
by
A THESIS
IN
MASS COMMUNICATIONS
Approved
Accepted
December 1989
73
11
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Ill
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS m
ABSTRACT / iv • •
LIST OF TABLES v
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION 1
CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW 8
CHAPTER THREE: METHODOLOGY 18
CHAPTER FOUR: RESULTS 21
CHAPTER HVE: SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS 42
LIST OF REFERENCES 47
APPENDIX 51
IV
ABSTRACT
The purpose of this study was to identify the perceptions held by public
relations majors regarding the professional practice of public relations. The
research addressed the various reasons students choose their major and
explored the students' perceptions of the skills and knowledge necessary to
enter the public relations workforce.
Coorientation theory raises questions about the orientation of two
individuals or groups/organizations to the same object or concept (Newcomb,
1953). In this case the concept was the practice of public relations: What is the
degree of congruence that students have with professionals in the students'
perceptions regarding the practice of public relations? The study provides
direction to educators in counseling and advising students who desire to
major in public relations.
Students at five universities across the United States were surveyed to
determine what influenced their choices of public relations as a major and
their perceptions of the knowledge and skills necessary for the professional
practice of public relations. The results indicated students made independent
choices in selecting public relations as a major. Further, while students
recognize the value of strong writing skills and practical experience prior to
graduation, many express dislike for writing courses and few gain practical
experience while in school.
LIST OF TABLES
VI
CHAPTER ONE
ESJTRODUCTION
agreed thatjacility with the English language is the most important andj)asic
skill required in public relations practice. This includes writing skills.in all
communications,disciplines. Marketing was the essential business course
most often mentioned. Management was the second most often mentioned
course.
The study further.5Uggested that public relations curricula should
emphasize research, planning, evaluation, electronic communications, and
ethics. Respondents also placed a high value on internships (a rating of 6.67
of a possible 7). Taylor (1988) suggested that internships were important in
crystallizing vocational self-concepts and work values, reducing reality shock
for new professionals, and increasing employment opportunities. The
emphasis on internships reflects the need for educators to continue efforts to
assure quality practical experiences for students prior to graduation
(Anderson, 1986).
The latest Commission on Public Relations Research (1987) expanded
earlier reports and addressed course content as well as course descriptions in
an effort to standardize public relations coursework.
Implications for using the data gathered in the Commission's study
(1987) lie in counseling and advising students both before they select public
relations as a major and as they advance toward graduation. While there is a
continuing difference of opinion on what is the most important element in
public relations education and in which academic unit public relations
sequences should be housed, educators are challenged to prepare students to
meet the expectations of the professional world.
In 1988 the Body of Knowledge Task Force of the Public Relations
Society of America Research Committee published "The Public Relations
Body of Knowledge" as a resource and authority for public relations educators
and professionals (Body, 1988). This work is a part of the effort to standardize
public relations education.
The greatest effort to increase standards and professionalism in public
relations is through the development of accreditation programs. PRSA began
in 1965 to offer accreditation to its members. Presently about one-third of
PRSA's 14,000 members have earned the APR (Accredited Public Relations)
designation (Wilcox, Ault & Agee, 1989). The International Association of
Business Communicators also has initiated an accreditation program;
however, fewer than 5% of its 12,000 members have received the ABC
(Accredited Business Communicator) designation (Wilcox, Ault & Agee,
1989).
Citing the 1981 Smith-Buchwald Commission report, Baxter (1985)
emphasized the importance of faculty counseling and staff advisement in
directing students to courses which will best prepare them for careers in
public relations.
The underlying question for this study was whether public relations
educators are imparting these professional expectations to students. Are
educators providing adequate information about or exposure to the practice of
public relations? Are educators advising students to take the range of courses
identified by professionals as essential to an adequate education for public
relations practitioners? Are educators counseling students about the skills
necessary for public relations practitioners?
In reviewing the literature on college professional education and its
relationship to stress and burnout, Endres and Wearden (1989) criticized
college professional education. They suggested that professional education
tends to create unrealistic expectations for students regarding the job world;
often it is not thorough, practical, or relevant enough; does not sufficiently
train students in interpersonal skills; does not provide adequate information
on the nature of bureaucratic organizations and how to function within the
constraints of the work setting; and does not teach students how to cope with
uncertainty, change, conflict, stress and burnout.
Professionals have criticized the educational background of public
relations graduates. Alan Metrick (1988), an executive vice president of David
M. Grant & Partners, issued a poignant indictment in an editorial in Public
Relations Journal: ". . . the recent graduates I've seen with public relations
degrees struck me as being woefully unprepared for a career in this business
despite their completing what amounts to trade schooling in the guise of a
university degree."
It is the responsibility of educators, in the classroom and as advisors, to
respond to these criticisms. To respond educators must know what students
perceive about their career.
For more than a quarter century, journalism students have been the
subjects of research on career choice and job perception (Bowers, 1974; Lubell,
1959). More recentiy, a researcher has begun to look at advertising majors to
7
determine their motivation and expectations of the workforce (Schweitzer,
1988).
As public relations has emerged as a separate academic sequence in
schools of journalism and mass communication, and as efforts continue to
develop the public relations curriculum, it is appropriate to investigate the
perceptions and motivation of students who choose to prepare for careers.
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
Research Questions
The literature review demonstrates the interest public relations
professionals have in the educational background of potential employees. It
reaffirms an emphasis on writing skills which historically has been the
foundation of education in mass communication. At the same time it
suggests that a broader, more comprehensive education is appropriate for
students preparing for careers in public relations.
How public relations students understand and respond to the
expectations of professionals is an important factor in the educational
process. It is reasonable to expect that students whose perception of public
relations practice is similar to that of the professionals for whom they will
work will be more successful in finding their first job and in advancing in the
field.
Specifically, the following research questions guided this study:
1. What influences students to choose public relations as a major
course of study?
17
2. What academic areas do public relations majors identify as
important to support their public relations education?
3. What skills and experience do public relations majors identify as
significant to their careers in public relations?
4. How do student perceptions compare to concerns of public relations
professionals reflected in recent studies?
CHAPTER TFIREE
METHODOLOGY
Procedure
Faculty members at the five participating universities were contacted
by telephone and their assistance requested in administering the survey.
Questionnaires and instructions were mailed in bulk to cooperating faculty
members. Pre-paid return envelopes were provided to return the completed
surveys. This survey method was used because of the relative ease and the
low cost of collecting data from a specialized audience (Wimmer & Dominick,
1987).
20
One hundred seventy-seven students were enrolled in classes selected
by faculty members at the participating schools; 140 students completed
questionnaires; and 134 questionnaires were used in the analysis, for a
response rate of 75n%. Six of the completed questionnaires were not used
because the students completing them were identified as advertising majors.
Responses were coded and entered into the statistical program
Statistical Program for Social Sciences (SPSS-X). For the semantic differential
scales, responses were coded from " 1 " for "very important" or "a great deal"
to "5" for "unimportant" or "very little." Frequency distributions were
calculated for the total sample and for the individual universities for
comparison. Explanatory responses to open-ended questions were grouped
manually for discussion with the results.
Crosstabs were run to observe student involvement in professional
organizations and activities and important factors in selecting a major by both
sex and class. Crosstabs also were run to observe variations in favorite/least
favorite class by gender, class and experiences.
A factor analysis grouped responses to a question about skills necessary
to the public relations professional. New variables were created and
compared by crosstabulation with responses to questions about favorite
courses and students' experience level.
CHAPTER FOUR
RESULTS
Demographics
More than two-thirds (69%) of the students were female, and one-half
(50%) were under 22 years of age. The large number of female students is
consistent with the increasing numbers of women in public relations (Barnes,
1969). Nearly three-fourths (72%) of the students overall were seniors
approaching graduation. Only in classification of students did the students at
the five universities vary substantially. Virtually all (97%) of the Texas Tech
students and 89% of the Kansas State students were seniors, but only 45% of
the Marquette students were seniors (Table 1).
Two-thirds (66%) of the students overall declared public relations as
their major during their freshman or sophomore year, but the range varied
from 42% at Kansas State to 79% at Texas Tech and 90% at Marquette (Table 2).
Approximately one-fourth (24%) of all the students chose to minor in
business; however the variation is from 13% at California State to 43% at
Texas Tech. More than one-fourth (26%) chose minors in various areas in
the arts and sciences. Again there was a wide variation—from 12% at Texas
Tech to 50% at Marquette. Sixty percent of the students had previously
pursued a major other than public relations, with the only substantial
variation being 41% at South Carolina. Overall 22% of the respondents had
been business majors, and 16% had been majors in other communications
fields. Again a wide variation was noted. Five percent of the Marquette
students and 6% of the South Carolina students had previously majored in
business and 37% of the Kansas State students had majored in business. Forty
21
22
percent of the students at Marquette had previously majored in other areas of
communications although the students at the other schools were fairly close
to the overall percentage of 16%.
In general, the respondents were not actively involved in student
activities, either professional or social. Fewer than half (40%) were members
of Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA). Marquette,
however, does not have a PRSSA chapter; and the other percentages varied
from 18% at South Carolina to 60% at California State. Crosstabs revealed
that senior students were more likely to be involved in PRSSA than juniors:
42% of the seniors and 33% of the juniors were members. Females (43%)
were more likely than males (31%) to be members (Table 3).
When these six variables [(1) credibility of the field, (2) good pay and
working conditions, (3) advancement and promotion opportunities, (4)
contribution of the field to society, (5) desire to develop communication
skills, and (6) desire to develop planning/decision-making skills! were
crosstabbed by gender and classification in school, there was no statistically
significant difference in the responses between males and females or between
juniors and seniors. A Chi-square analysis was computed after omitting
empty cells and collapsing the responses into three options rather than five
(Table 5).
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CHAPTER FIVE
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Ames, K. (1986, July 7). Public relations: the velvet ghetto. ADWEEK, p.
W26.
Barnes, K. (1989, June). PRJ's fourth annual salary survey. Public Relations
Journal, 44,17-21.
Becker, L.B., & Engleman, T.E. (1988). Class of 1987 describes salaries,
satisfaction found in first jobs. Tournalism Educator, 43(3), 4-10.
47
48
Commission on Public Relations Research. (1987). A design for public
relations education.
DeRosa, D. & Wilcox, D.L. (1989). Gaps are narrowing between female and
male students. Public Relations Review. 15(1), 80-90.
Endres, F. F., & Wearden, S. T. (1989). JMC students' perceptions of the work
environment and potential job stress. Unpublished manuscript.
Harlan, A., & Weiss, CL. (1982). Sex differences in factors affecting
managerial career advancement. In Wallace, P.A., (Ed.) Women and the
Workplace. Boston: Auburn Publishing.
Hunt, T., & Thompson, D.W. (1988). Bridging the gender gap in PR courses.
Tournalism Educator, 43(1), 49.
lABC Foundation. (1986). The velvet ghetto: The impact of the increasing
percentage of women in public relations and business communications.
San Francisco.
Lin, N. & Dumin, M. (1986). Access to occupations through social ties. Social
Networks, 8,365-385.
Lubell, S., & Kimball, P.T. (1960). High school students' attitudes toward
JournaHsm as a career: II. Tournalism Quarterly, 3Z, 413-422.
49
Matthews, C. B., and Schweitzer, J. C. (1989). The path to the velvet ghetto.
Paper presented at the Southwest Symposium for Journalism and Mass
Communications, (1989, October 8-9). Arizona State University, Tempe,
Arizona.
Nieva, V.F., & Gutex, B.A. (1981). Women and work: A psychological
perspective. New York: Praeger Publishers.
Schweitzer, J.C. (1988). Who are all these advertising majors and what do
they want? Tournalism Ouarterly, 53, 733-739.
Wakefield, G. & Cottone, L. (1986). Education for the '80s and beyond. Public
Relations Review. 12(2), 37-45.
Walker, A. (1984). Public relations education: 1983 survey and report. Public
Relations Review. 10(1), 18-29.
Wilcox, D.L., Ault, P.H., «& Agee, W.K. (1989). Public relations strategies and
tactics. Harper & Row: New York.
Wimmer, R.D. & Dominick, J.R. (1987). Mass media research. Belmont, CA:
Wadsworth.
This survey is being administered to students on selected campuses around the country.
Included in the sample are students enrolled in the first upper division public relations course.
Your thoughtful completion of the survey is appreciated
1. What is your minor (or your anticipated minor if not yet declared)?
Freshman
Sophomore
Junior
Senior
5. To what student communications organizations, if any, do you belong? (Check all that
apply.)
6. To what other student organizations, if any, do you belong? (Check all that apply.)
Honor Society
Social Fraternity or Sorority
Student Government
Other
Specify:
7. Are you personally acquainted with anyone whose job you would classify as "public
relations?"
51
52
8. What is the individual's relationship to you?
Father
Mother
Brother/Sister
Other relative
Family friend
Personal friend (peer or contemporary)
Father
Mother
Brother/Sister
Other relative
Family friend
Personal friend (peer or contemporary)
Teacher
No one other than myself
10. How important were each of the following to you in selecting public relations as your major?
Accounting
Psychology
Budgeting
Economics
53
Governmental Structure
Law
Marketing
Organizational Management
Personnel Management
Politics
Public Opinion
12. How important do you think each of the following skills is to the public relations
professional?
Budgeting
Convention/meeting planning
Copywriting/proofreading
Decision-making/problem solving
Graphics/design of
broadcast advertising
corporate publications
news releases
print advertising
promotional films/videos
Interviewing
54
Negotiation
Persuasion
Photographic design/direction
Managing projects
Research
Speech writing
13. Refer to the items listed in question 11. On which five do you think you will be spending
most of your time in your first job?
14. Have you had experience in any of the following? (Check all that apply.)
No
Yes (If so, describe it briefly.)
16. Among all the required courses for your major, which was your favorite?
17. Among all the required courses for your major, which did you like the least?
18. How important do you think each of the following will be in getting your first job?
Advanced degree
Practical experience
"Connections"
No
Yes
before graduation
within one month after graduation
within two months after graduation
within three months after graduation
more than three months after graduation
23. What do you anticipate your starting salary in your first job will be?
24. How many hours per week do you expect to work on your first job?
18-19
20-21
22-23
24 or older
Male
Female
Junior
Senior
Graduate Student
Other
Specify:
28. What is/was your father's occupation? (Please give job title if you can, such as butcher,
mechanic, teacher.)
30. What was your parents' marital status when you entered college?
Married
Widowed
Separated
Divorced
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that the Library and my major department shall make it freely avail-
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//- 3D -e'f
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