Annenberg School for Communication

The Annenberg School for Communication is a vibrant, diverse, and close-knit community of scholars at the forefront of today’s media landscape who engage with the major issues of communication in our world.

Communication has never been more important—or imperiled. The same radically shifting information environment that gave rise to multiple media channels and social networking opportunities also results in news deserts, echo chambers, and misinformation, which challenge the very fabric of democracy.

Our faculty and students work collaboratively on questions ranging from how the brain processes media messages to how the structure of online social networks and larger media systems influence the quality and accessibility of public information. Connecting these diverse approaches is the search for understanding how communications can shape—and ultimately improve—individual and collective decision-making.

Highlighted Priorities

  • Supporting the educational and research missions of our faculty and centers in the areas of media policy; journalism; and health, political and global communication.
  • Expanding the boundaries of scholarship by integrating media, arts, and technology into communication research.
  • Generating new forms of knowledge that can serve the public interest through the analysis of digital data, online social networks, and new forms of information and communication technologies.
John Jackson

“Philanthropy established the Annenberg School more than 60 years ago, and the generosity of donors sustains our ability to ask and answer some of the most crucial questions facing our society.”

- John L. Jackson, Jr.
Walter H. Annenberg Dean and Richard Perry University Professor

Tim Wortham, Jr.
Senior Director of Institutional Advancement

(215) 746-0320
timothy.wortham@asc.upenn.edu
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Did You Know?


Annenberg Creative offers multimodal grants to support student scholarship that connects media theory to practice using modes of production such as film, podcasting, and VR.

Annenberg Creative

Student in classroom