NPR’s Top News Executive Nancy C. Barnes Urges Graduates to Embrace Change, Not Fear It

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

  

Keynote convocation speaker Nancy Barnes (left) advised graduates to “hold fast to your principles and find your guiding compass in this time of disruptive change.” Student speaker Bryce Newberry said, “We’re so lucky to be graduating from a school that will make us leaders in the industry, no matter where and what the job entails.” (Photo: Victor Ren)

Nancy C. Barnes, senior vice president for news at National Public Radio, told new journalism graduates from Arizona State University they need to be prepared to celebrate change, not resist it.

Barnes was the keynote convocation speaker at the graduation ceremony Tuesday for the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Comerica Theatre in downtown Phoenix, where 313 students received degrees with more than 2,400 guests in attendance.

Barnes, who also has led newspapers in Houston, Minneapolis and Raleigh, North Carolina, said she entered journalism at a time of typewriters and dial-up landlines. Since then, both the technology that reporters use and the way audiences consume information have been transformed, she said, and the pace of change is only likely to accelerate.

“Success will depend on your ability to lean into change, to bravely and, indeed, happily, face the future, and not rage against it,” she said. “At the same time, she advised graduates to “hold fast to your principles and find your guiding compass amid all of this disruptive change.”

Journalists, she said, bear a heavy responsibility to “hold up our responsibilities to the First Amendment and (to) tell the American people not what they want to hear, but what they need to hear and to know to live in our free society.”

Barnes, who took the top news position at NPR last fall, also encouraged the graduates to live a “life of adventure.”

“Make it a spectacular one – one that when that blink of an eye comes and you are living in that future that looks like today’s science fiction, reflecting back on your lifetime, you will feel that it was a life to be proud of, a life that imbued you with hope, optimism, love and adventure.”

Of the school’s 313 graduates, 292 received bachelor’s degrees, with 149 earning a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism and Mass Communication and 57 earning a Bachelor of Arts in Sports Journalism. Eighty-five students received a Bachelor of Arts in Mass Communication and Media Studies. One student earned a new Bachelor of Science in Digital Audiences degree.

The Cronkite School also graduated 19 master’s degree students. Of those, 12 earned a Master of Journalism and Mass Communication, three received a Master of Arts in Sports Journalism and four a Master of Science in Business Journalism.

Two students, Jamie Bowen and Kristin Pellizzaro, received doctoral degrees.

Student speaker Bryce Newberry reflected on the deep sense of community he and other students have experienced at Cronkite.

New graduates, Lexi Diama (left) and Yvonne Arbolla (right), show their school spirit on graduation night. (Photo: Victor Ren)

“We’re lucky to have gone to a school where we were a team,” he said. “Like any family, we inspire each other and lift each other up at every milestone.”

He encouraged fellow graduates to keep that spirit alive as they enter the workforce. “Do as you’ve done here … and celebrate everyone’s success.”

About half of the graduating class earned high academic honors. Seventy-one students graduated summa cum laude with grade-point averages of at least 3.8; another 40 graduated magna cum laude with GPAs of 3.6 to 3.79; and 36 graduated cum laude with GPAs of 3.4 to 3.59.

In addition, 24 students were inducted into Kappa Tau Alpha, a national college honors society that recognizes academic excellence and promotes scholarship in journalism. The top 10 percent of the graduating class is inducted into the society each semester.

Seventeen students received the ASU Alumni Association’s Moeur Award, which is presented to graduates with the highest academic standing who have completed their degrees over eight consecutive fall and spring semesters at ASU.

Austen Bundy, a recipient of the Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award, poses for a photo with his parents, Lucrecia and Scott Bundy, after the Cronkite convocation ceremony at Comerica Theatre. (Photo: Victor Ren)

Graduate Cydeni Carter (center) shares a moment with her grandparents, Ronald and April Brooks, who drove down from Prescott, Arizona to attend convocation. (Photo: Victor Ren)

STUDENT AWARD WINNERS

Outstanding Graduate Student

Ashley Mackey

Outstanding Journalism Dual-Degree Student

Alicia Gonzales

ASU Alumni Association Outstanding Graduate

Kelsey Mo

Outstanding Undergraduate Students

Mia Armstrong

Austen Bundy

Lillian Donahue

Samie Gebers

Ethan Millman

Keri Orcutt

Imani Stephens

Outstanding Online Student

Shelley Fry

Highest Grade Point Average in Journalism

Kelsey Mo

Highest Grade Point Average in Media Studies

Amber Shepard

Top Innovator Award

Kayla King-Sumner

Cronkite Spirit Award

Jordan Elder

Chancellor Johnson

Kappa Tau Alpha National Honor Society

Mia Armstrong

Allison Barton

Jamie Bowen

Charles Bramlett

Gabriela Calles Monsivais

Jordan Elder

BrieAnna Frank

Madeleine Holler

Marguerite Mackrell

Kelsey Mo

Jaime Muldrew

Bryce Newberry

Keri Orcutt

Kirstin Pellizzaro

Daniella Rudoy

Case Smith

Skyler Snider

Rebecca Spiess

Imani Stephens

Adin Tarr

Ashlee Thomason

Jakob Wastek

Robert Werner

Jade Nicole Yeban

Moeur Award

Mia Armstrong

Allison Barton

Charles Bramlett

BrieAnna Frank

Madeleine Holler

Marguerite Mackrell

Kelsey Mo

Jaime Muldrew

Bryce Newberry

Keri Orcutt

Rilee Robinson

Daniella Rudoy

Nicholas Serpa

Case Smith

Jakob Wastek

Robert Werner

Alexandra Wolfe

Student Speaker

Bryce Newberry