|
Mark W. Tatge is an American journalist. He was a senior editor at ''Forbes'' magazine, a staff reporter at the ''Wall Street Journal'', and an investigative reporter in the Statehouse Bureau of Cleveland's ''The Plain Dealer''. Tatge, spent three decades as a journalist before beginning his career as teacher of multimedia and business journalism. In May 2014, Tatge was named the (inaugural recipient ) of the prestigious Baldwin Fellowship, a program designed to bring a business journalist to the (University of South Carolina's School of Journalism and Mass Communications. ) Tatge will complete a doctoral degree, generate new knowledge on the topic of business journalism, and promote the education of business reporting within the school. The fellowship is funded by a $500,000 gift from (Kenneth W. Baldwin Jr )., a Columbia native and 1949 University of South Carolina alumnus. Tatge previously taught journalism at DePauw University and Ohio University's E. W. Scripps School of Journalism. At DePauw, Tatge taught a mix of multimedia, business, journalism and media courses discussing the impact of technology on journalism and the public interest. Tatge is frequently quoted in popular media about contemporary media issues.() At Ohio University, Tatge was a visiting professor and executive-in-residence.(). Under Tatge's direction, the Scripps School offered its first classes in business and economics journalism beginning in 2007. The program has since expanded, producing graduates who are now working professionally in print, digital and broadcast media nationally. Tatge teaches print and online journalism, media literacy, media law and business and economics writing. In addition, Tatge worked closely with the journalism and business schools on curriculum development, recruitment and fundraising issues. Tatge has taught in both the journalism and business schools at OU. He is a guest commentator on national news shows, including CNBC, ABC American Broadcasting Company, MSNBC, National Public Radio, Fox Business Network, PBS station WOUB-TV, and Chicago PBS affiliate WTTW.() Tatge previously worked as an adjunct professor at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism where he taught graduate journalism students about business, economics and finance. in 2010, Tatge published his first book, the New York Times Reader: Business and Economics. Tatge was previously a Senior Editor and Bureau Chief of ''Forbes'' magazine’s Midwest Bureau, where he oversaw content produced for the magazine, Forbes.com and the Forbes Video Network. He was a staff reporter for ''The Wall Street Journal'', an investigative reporter in ''The Plain Dealer'' statehouse bureau, and a staff writer for both ''The Dallas Morning News'' and ''The Denver Post''. ==Early life== Mark Tatge was born in Chicago, the descendant of German and Irish immigrants who grew up on the north side of Chicago in the Portage Park neighborhood. His father was a talented research chemist who had developed and patented new ink and printing processes for the two Chicago companies he worked for - Uarco () and Black Products. Tatge attended Catholic schools, including St. Viator High School in suburban Arlington Heights, Ill. Tatge graduated from high school and enrolled in Western Illinois University, studying social work. He planned to get a job after graduation working in the criminal justice system with juvenile delinquents. On the side, Tatge wrote for his school newspaper the Western Courier () and WIU's Sports Information office. Tatge also freelanced for daily newspapers while at WIU, including the ''Galesburg Register Mail'' () and ''Peoria Journal Star''. Upon graduation, Tatge went to work running a small weekly and a small daily newspaper in Wisconsin. He moved up the ''Wisconsin State Journal'' in Madison where he attended graduate school at the UW-Madison while working on the night copy desk. Tatge is a past Kiplinger Fellow in Public Affairs Reporting () at Ohio State University where he completed his master's degree in journalism. The fellowship was named after W.M. Kiplinger, W. M. Kiplinger editor and founder of the Kiplinger Letter. Kiplinger was one of OSU's first journalism graduates (1912) and he also founded Kiplinger's Personal Finance (). Following in Kiplinger's footsteps, Tatge found that economics, not politics, was more fascinating. Upon graduation, Tatge embarked upon a career in business journalism. Tatge went on to complete his MBA at Ohio University. He holds a bachelor's degree from Western Illinois University. Tatge is chief executive of an editorial consulting/content management company, Deadline Reporter LLC. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mark Tatge」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|