Average
Professor D'Angelo was a nice guy. However, his class was so dry and hard to follow. His in-class discussions were often far from what is on the tests. He also changed due dates frequently. His instructions for papers were vague as well. Aside from that, he's bad at planning the layout of the class in terms of what will be our activity week by week. We only had our second of four exams, with four classes left.
Awful
I wouldn't recommend this professor. He isn't in the best interest of his students and he isn't helpful at all. His papers are very hard to pass because he doesn't explain anything. Same goes with this tests.
The College of New Jersey - Communication
Professor
Paul worked at The College of New Jersey as a Professor
Associate Professor
I teach courses in Media Institutions, Media Research, Political Communication, Communication Theory, and Media Effects.
I do research on news framing--how issues are contextualized by journalists, politicians, and policy adovcates.
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Mass Communication/Media Studies
Politics and the Life Sciences, Vol 32, No 2, pp. 100-125
Full citation: D'Angelo, P., Pollock, J.C., Kiernicki, K., & Shaw, D. (2013). Framing of AIDS in Africa: Press-state relations, HIV/AIDS news, and journalistic advocacy in four sub-Saharan Anglophone newspapers. "Politics and the Life Sciences", 32(2), 100-125.
Politics and the Life Sciences, Vol 32, No 2, pp. 100-125
Full citation: D'Angelo, P., Pollock, J.C., Kiernicki, K., & Shaw, D. (2013). Framing of AIDS in Africa: Press-state relations, HIV/AIDS news, and journalistic advocacy in four sub-Saharan Anglophone newspapers. "Politics and the Life Sciences", 32(2), 100-125.