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Association for Women in Communications

American professional organization


Summary

American professional organization

FieldValue
nameAssociation for Women in Communications
captionThe Association for Women in Communications logo
This logo was used from 1972-2018
logoAWC.FullColor (1).jpg
logo_captionLogo used since 2018
abbreviationAWC
formerlyTheta Sigma Phi (ΘΣΦ)
Women in Communications, Inc.
formation
founding_locationUniversity of Washington
dissolved2023
typeNonprofit
purpose
headquarters4730 S. National Avenue, Suite A1
location_citySpringfield, Missouri
location_countryUnited States
membership3,000
membership_year2022
publicationthe Communiqué
awardsThe Matrix Awards
website

This logo was used from 1972-2018 Women in Communications, Inc. The Association for Women in Communications (AWC) was an American professional organization for women in the communications industry. It was formed in 1996 when Women in Communication (aka Theta Sigma Phi) went defunct. AWC operated until it went defunct in 2023.

History

Theta Sigma Phi, an honorary society for journalism, was established in 1909 at the University of Washington. By 1950, the group had grown to 47 campus chapters and 29 alumnae groups. In 1972, Theta Sigma Phi was renamed to Women in Communications, Inc. (WICI). WICI was dissolved in 1996.

The Association for Women in Communications was formed in 1997 as a new nonprofit organization that would continue the legacy of WICI. The Association for Women in Communication was overseen by a new board and was managed by Club Management Services in Springfield, Missouri. AWC ceased operations at the national level in 2023. Several of its chapters continued to operated as a local organization.

Activities

The society's publication was Communiqué, an electronic newsletter. It presented the Clarion Award, the Headliner Award, and The Matrix Awards. The latter two were originally initiated by Theta Sigma Phi.

Foundation

The nonprofit AWC Matrix Foundation was established in 1998 as an educational affiliate. The AWC Matrix Foundation promoted the advancement of women in the communications profession by providing funds for education, research, and publications. The foundation's three initiatives were:

  • Professional Certification Program – recognized excellence in all areas of communications; provided an opportunity to demonstrate communication and management skills and enhance employment/client potential.
  • Edith Wortman First Amendment Award – honored professional communicators for their efforts relating to First Amendment issues.
  • Barbara Erickson Scholarship Fund – allowed college students to attend the AWC National Professional Conference.

Chapters

Following are the chapters of the Association for Women in Communication, with active chapters indicated in bold and inactive chapters in italics.

ChapterCharter date and rangeLocationStatus
Bloomington/NormalBloomington, Illinois and Normal, IllinoisInactive
BGSU2011Bowling Green, KentuckyInactive
DetroitDetroit, MichiganInactive ?
LubbockLubbock, TexasInactive
New York19xx ?–1998New York City, New YorkWithdrew (local)
Pittsburgh19xx ?Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaInactive
San FranciscoInactive
Santa Barbara2006–2023Santa Barbara, CaliforniaWithdrew (local)
SeattleSeattle, WashingtonInactive
South FloridaSouth FloridaInactive
Springfield, IL1985–2023Springfield, IllinoisWithdrew (local)
Springfield, MOSpringfield, MissouriInactive
Tulsa19xx ?–2023Tulsa, OklahomaWithdrew (local)
UW MadisonMadison, WisconsinInactive ?
Washington, D.C. Metro AreaWashington, D.C.Inactive

Notable members

NameChapterNotabilityAwards
Rita Cosbynews anchor for Fox News, MSNBC, and NewsmaxHeadliner Award 2002
Margaret Larsonbroadcast journalist and television presenterHeadliner Award 2004
Ann LiguoriSouth Floridasports broadcasterHeadliner Award 2001
Harriet MonroeHonoraryPoet and founding publisher and editor of Poetry magazineLifetime Achievement Award 2001
Hall of Fame 2003
Gail Sheehyauthor, journalist, and lecturerHeadliner Award 2000
Barbara SherauthorHeadliner Award 1998

References

References

  1. Kopecki, Dawn (1996). "Makeover gives group new identity, no staff". [[The Washington Times]].
  2. (14 May 1920). "Journalism Sorority has a large program". University Daily Kansan.
  3. "History of The Association for Women in Communications".
  4. (2017-06-16). "AWC-SB – OUR STORY".
  5. [http://www.artnews.com/2010/07/01/artnews-wins-a-clarion-award/ ARTnews Wins a Clarion Award], in ARTnews 07/01/10.
  6. "About Clarion Awards". The Association for Women in Communications.
  7. (2022-02-27). "Headliner Award". The Association for Women in Communications.
  8. "Overview: The Annual NYWICI Matrix Awards". New York Women in Communications, Inc..
  9. "May 14, 2009--Michelle Singletary and Kate Perrin to Receive 2009 Matrix Awards for Professional Achievements".
  10. (2022-02-15). "Find a Chapter".
  11. "Association for Women in Communications".
  12. "About Us".
  13. "About".
  14. Wyeth, Deirdre. "Our History".
  15. (1999-04-23). "PG Sweeps Matrix Awards". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  16. "Home".
  17. "Home".
  18. "Association for Women in Communications Madison".
  19. Burt, Elizabeth V.. (2000). "Women's Press Organizations, 1881-1999". [[Greenwood Publishing Group]].
  20. Sterling, Christopher H.. (2003). "Encyclopedia of Radio". [[Taylor & Francis]].
  21. Bulkeley, Christy C. (2004). "Whose news? Progress and status of women in newspapers (mostly) and television news. - Seeking Equity for Women in Journalism and Mass Communication Education: a 30-year update". Taylor & Francis.
  22. (2009). "The Association for Women in Communications Celebrates 100 Years of Championing Women in Communications". [[Women's Health Weekly]] via [[HighBeam Research]].
Wikipedia Source

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