St. John’s Journalism Professor Is Named Ombudsman at Stars and Stripes

February 11, 2009

Journalism Professor Mark J. Prendergast has been named Ombudsman for Stars and Stripes, the government-owned newspaper that reports independently on and for the U.S. military community around the world. His three-year term at the newspaper began on January 13, 2009.

Professor Prendergast characterizes his new role as ombudsman as that of a “watchdog,” who will ensure “that Stars and Stripes operates according to commonly understood journalistic values and practices and remains free from censorship or news management by the Pentagon.” He will also write special columns on the various issues that arise in the field of journalism.

“It’s an independent, autonomous position that is devoted to monitoring the First Amendment rights of the newspaper and its relationship with the military at all levels,” Prendergast explains, adding that his responsibility also extends to the newspaper’s website.

“It’s not meant to be a confrontational position,” he points out. “It’s meant to be a channel outside the editorial and governmental hierarchies to ensure editorial independence of the staff and to give readers the honest reporting they are expecting.”

Prendergast’s appointment came after an extensive search was conducted by a team that included a representative from the Society of Professional Journalists as well as one from the American Society of Newspaper Editors. The team received more than 75 applications, interviewed several candidates and forwarded three recommendations to Robert T. Hastings, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs at the Department of Defense, who interviewed each and ultimately selected the St. John’s professor. 

“This is an enormous honor for Mark, for the journalism program, for the College of Professional Studies, and for St. John’s,” says CPS Dean Kathleen Vouté MacDonald. “The students in his classes will benefit immensely. We are all so proud of him!”

An Associate Professor in the Communications, Journalism and Media Studies in the College of Professional Studies, Prendergast holds a master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Like many of those teaching in CPS, he brings a wealth of experience to St. John’s after spending more than 30 years in his field. Previously, he worked at a number of daily newspapers, including The New York Times (where he was an editor on the news desk at the time the paper received the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for its comprehensive post 9-11 coverage), New York Daily News, and the Washington Post.

During an illustrious career that began as a part-time base correspondent in Fulda, West Germany for the U.S. Army newspaper V Corps Guardian, he has been reporter, photographer, columnist, bureau chief and freelancer and been assigned to metropolitan, national and international beats. His resume notes he has reported from “some 20 countries and 20 U.S. states, territories and districts” and “covered wars, revolution, natural disasters, mass murder, the Olympics, a U.S. papal tour, police courts, politics, campaigns, conventions and government, from city hall to the statehouse, from Congress to the White House and foreign capitals.”

In addition, with the advent of the worldwide Web, he worked on the Times’ Continuous News Desk, where he chose stories for the paper’s Web site on deadline and for which he edited, rewrote and occasionally reported breaking news. He has been honored with a number of awards and accolades from the news media and professional associations and journals.

“Based on his experience as a journalist, an editor and reporter at the New York Times, as a U.S. Army veteran who saw action in Vietnam, served in Europe and lived abroad, I don’t believe there is anyone in the world who would be as good in this position,” says Frank R. Brady, Ph.D., Professor and Chair of the Communications, Journalism and Media Studies in CPS. “Mark Prendergast’s appointment brings a great deal of prestige to this University.”

Prendergast pursued the ombudsman position with the support of Dean MacDonald and Journalism Program Director Judith Cramer, Ph.D., who calls the appointment “quite a feather in our collective cap.

“I think it's terrific for Professor Prendergast and for our journalism program,” Dr. Cramer says.  “It stretches Professor Prendergast professionally and he is able to share his new learning and experiences with our students and faculty.  We're very pleased for him.”

Asked why he applied for the position, he explains that the Stars and Stripes job “joins two great influences in my life—my three years in the Army and my 30 years in journalism, during which I covered conflicts in Central American and the 1991 Persian Gulf War.”

Secondly, he points out that “a crucial element of the journalistic model is integrity. As I view it going in, not only am I a monitor of journalism practice but also of journalists in two disparate respects. I will be the leading advocate of their right to do their job according to professional standards, and I will hold them to those standards, as well. That unique double challenge appeals to me.”

An ombudsman, he adds, is a “very useful tool to bring transparency and openness” to an organization.
 
Students Benefit
He tries to instill that integrity and professionalism in his students in the College of Professional Studies. “What we [journalists] do, how we do it, and why we do it are areas that I cover with them. And then we explore it from a student’s perspective, the teacher’s perspective, and the ombudsman’s perspective.”

During his three-year term as ombudsman, he hopes to “write with real frequency and research will be at the heart of that.” In anticipation of that research, he asked Stars and Stripes to approve an internship at St. John’s, which they promptly did. He expects to select a different intern each semester.

“The internship will be research intensive and will become a learning tool. Whether they go directly into the field or on to the graduate level, they’ll know how to research an issue.”

While the Journalism professor expects to travel—both to Washington, DC as well as to   anywhere his main constituency, America’s G.I. Joes and Janes, are stationed—he says most of that travel can be accomplished during St. John’s semester breaks. In the meantime, he’s teaching four courses on campus this semester and enjoying every minute of it.

“I am so energized when I walk into that classroom,” he explains. “I love the interaction that I have with students. It teaches critical thinking, that arguing in the classroom, the back-and-forth dialogue.”

He’s also looking forward to teaching “International Reporting” next fall, after he returns from his international travel this summer and says “Stars and Stripes will inform that course for sure.”