Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How about Jiangsu Media School?

How about Jiangsu Media School?

Jiangsu Media School, sponsored by Jiangsu Radio and Television General Station (Group), is the only provincial public full-time general secondary specialized school that specializes in training middle and senior skilled talents in radio, film and television.

The school vigorously develops counterpart exchanges and international cooperation with brother universities. On 20/0/6, Kloc began to study and exchange with Norwegian Olesen Middle School. On 20/0/7, it signed an intention of cooperation with Anglia Rosjinda University in the UK, providing overseas study channels for students majoring in photography and fine arts in our school.

Adhering to the tenet of "truth, goodness and beauty" and the educational goal of "faithfulness, expressiveness and elegance", the school is committed to creating a school culture of seeking truth, being kind, being eager to learn, respecting beauty and being beautiful, and cultivating middle-and high-level technical and skilled talents who are honest and trustworthy, integrated with knowledge and practice, with up-to-standard skills and elegant quality. Based on the characteristics of running a school, the school has delivered a batch of outstanding graduates for the province's radio and television system and film and television media enterprises and institutions for more than 30 years, and has made outstanding contributions to the prosperity of Jiangsu's radio and television media and cultural industries.

Rename history:

The predecessor of Jiangsu Media School was the Jiangsu People's Broadcasting Teacher Cadre Training Course founded by 1955. 1984 Jiangsu radio and television workers secondary specialized school was established; On May 1984, Communication University of China (formerly Beijing Broadcasting Institute) set up Jiangsu Correspondence Station here; 1989 Jiangsu provincial people's government approved the establishment of Jiangsu radio and television school to recruit full-time general secondary schools for the whole province; 1992 officially changed its name to Jiangsu Radio and Television School.

In 200 1 year, the distance education center of China Communication University (formerly Beijing Broadcasting Institute) established the Jiangsu Learning Guidance Center here, and in the same year it began to recruit online college students. Five-year higher vocational education began in 2002; In 2004, it became the first batch of five-year higher vocational colleges in Jiangsu United Vocational and Technical College. 20 18 was renamed Jiangsu Media School.