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The Quinnipiac Chronicle, Volume 95, Issue 19

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MARCH 5, 2025 • VOLUME 95 • ISSUE 19

The official student newspaper of Quinnipiac University since 1929

By AVA HIGHLAND Associate News Editor

Quinnipiac School of Communications launches QU in NYC program

In fall 2025, the Quinnipiac University School of Communications is launching a semester-long program: QU in NYC. Students will experience New York City culture while holding an internship as well as attending events and programs. The program serves as the New York version of QU in LA, which still remains as an option for students. “There’s so much media and communications that takes place in New York, it’s kind of the epicenter for the industry,” Nadine Barnett Cosby, dean of the School of Communications, said. With so much to learn from the culture and resources in the city, students are given an opportunity they may have otherwise not had. “I think a huge benefit is to be able to gain experience at communications and media companies in New York City while they’re still students,” Barnett Cosby said. “Offering that opportunity for students to experience that rich global culture of New York is always a benefit, really for anyone.” Students are required to secure an internship, as well as have at least 57 credits, a 3.0 GPA and pass COM 201. These requirements ensure they are at a steady pace, academically speaking. “We don’t want to add on to their academic load,” Barnett Cosby said. “So it’s making sure they’re in good standing academically with their GPA.” Outside of their internship, students will also be able to further explore the city and communications field through programming, events, talks and workshops. Holding these internships in New York will give students the kind of hands-on and real world experience they will need for their early career just TYLER MIGNAULT/CHRONICLE

See NEW YORK Page 2

New Master’s in Informatics program welcomes all undergraduate majors By ALEXANDRA MARTINAKOVA Editor-In-Chief

Quinnipiac University revealed its new Masters of Informatics program, which, starting fall 2025, is open to students with any prior bachelor’s degree. “It’s a very broad field that opens a lot of doors,” said Chetan Jaiswal, associate professor of computer science and now the program director. “It’s data and information related to several different aspects.” Informatics is defined as the study, design and development of information technology that generates, stores, processes and presents information, according to Egnyte Enterprise. Quinnipiac’s program consists of 30 credits that students can take across one or two years. “The launch of the MS in Informatics program at Quinnipiac’s School of Computing and Engineering marks an exciting step forward in preparing our students for the date-driven future,” wrote Taskin Kocak, dean of the School of Computing and Engineering in an email to The Chronicle. “We have been working two years to develop this truly interdisciplinary program, bringing together four schools, to offer a diverse and comprehensive curriculum. We are thrilled to offer this opportunity

and look forward to seeing the impact our graduates will make.” According to Quinnipiac’s website, this program provides students with hands-on projects and exposure to real-world challenges that promote collaborative, interdisciplinary learning opportunities. To start off, students coming into this program will take three mandatory courses to learn programming, how to store and manage data and data information, security and ethics. After that, the student gets a choice from three different concentrations — health, legal and data. Health informatics is a relatively new interdisciplinary field in the healthcare industry that uses information technology to organize and analyze health records for improved healthcare outcomes, according to Northeastern University. Legal informatics refers to the application of computer techniques and emerging technologies within the field of legal practice, which includes the use of law firm management software, legal process automation, predictive jurisprudence and much more, according to LegalProd. Quinnipiac is one of the few universities that offer this specific subfield of informatics as a masters program.

“We’re the third or fourth school that is actually offering this,” Jaiswal said. “This is a brand new thing. It’s connected to technology, that gives it a much stronger foundation. It’s very ambitious and very futuristic.” Since it combines different disciplines, the faculty for this program will be made up of professors with backgrounds in law, health sciences, computing, data and cybersecurity. This program is what has been missing from Quinnipiac, according to Jaiswal. “I think that data and information should be a part of everyone’s curriculum no matter what your major is,” Jaiswal said. “Because we are living in this age where data and simple programming should be part of everyone’s curriculum. We want to make sure that our graduates are equipped with all these new technologies and literacy in terms of data itself, because data is money. We didn’t have any master’s program that deals with data as a general concept.” The demand for this has been great, since it is one of the few STEM master’s programs that does not require a STEM bachelor’s degree. “I think everyone should do this master’s program because no matter what your domain is, you’re always going to be dealing with data,” Jaiswal said. “I think ev-

eryone has a part to play in this program. It touches the life of every major. It has a potential to be very, very successful.”

PEYTON MCKENZIE/CHRONICLE

Chetan Jaiswal, associate professor of computer science, is now the program director for the Informatics program as well.


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