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10 for 10: In its milestone year, CMDI welcomes nearly a dozen new faculty

Professor Kevin Hoth stands in an outdoor setting wearing business attire.

Kevin Hoth is one of 10 new faculty at CMDI this fall, though he's been lecturing at the university since 2011. ā€˜It feels like a perfect home for me; I’m very grateful to be with such a forward-thinking department,’ he says. Photo by Hannah Howell.

Kevin Hoth probably knows what it’s like for a longtime AAA pitcher to at last get the call to join the big leagues.

Hoth has been teaching at CU Boulder since 2011—originally as part of the ATLAS Institute—but this fall, he joins the critical media practices department at the College of Communication, Media, Design and Information as an assistant teaching professor.

ā€œI’m so excited to have this department as my home on a more permanent basis,ā€ said Hoth, previously a lecturer in critical media practices. ā€œIt feels like a perfect home for me; I’m very grateful to be with such a forward-thinking department.ā€

Hoth is one of 10 new professors to join CMDI this fall, bringing experience in artificial intelligence, surveillance studies, technology, journalism and more to the college. Coincidentally, the college is celebrating the 10th anniversary of its founding this year.

Lori Bergen, founding dean of CMDI, said while the quantity of new faculty is impressive, it’s the quality that helps this group stand out.

ā€œI am so impressed with the credentials our new faculty are bringing to the college,ā€ Bergen said. ā€œWhether it’s their published work, varied research interests or boundless enthusiasm for teaching young people and preparing them for professional and person success after college, I know we have an impressive group that will create a lasting impact on the college and university.ā€

The full lineup of new faculty:

  • Ian J. Alexander, assistant professor, media studies. He researches the implementation and effects of media technologies in U.S. prisons.
  • Yiran Duan, teaching professor, information science. Duan studies how different types of users shape the flow of information using machine learning models, inferential statistics and data visualizations.
  • Kevin Hoth, assistant teaching professor, critical media practices. Hoth is a fine art photographer who has won multiple grants for his work.
  • Seonah Kim, assistant teaching professor, media studies. She studies global discourses around racial and gender identity in media that are shaped by structural inequality.
  • Julia Proft, teaching professor, information science. Proft brings experience in software engineering in educational technology to the college.
  • Mehak Sawhney, assistant professor, media studies. Her research interests include sound and media studies, surveillance studies, and environmental humanities.
  • Victoria Pihl SĆørensen, assistant teaching professor, media studies. SĆørensen conducts research at the intersection of media studies, cultural studies, gender studies, and the history and philosophy of science and technology.
  • Ilana Trumble, teaching professor, information science. Trumble also is returning to Boulder, having earned her bachelor’s degree here in 2014. She is an expert in statistics and data science.
  • Hong Tien Vu, associate professor, journalism. Vu brings a decade of experience in journalism from living in Vietnam, including a stint with The Associated Press, to the classroom. He also is director of the college’s Center for Environmental Journalism.
  • Cody Walizer, assistant teaching professor, communication. Walizer has been teaching game studies, sports communication and related topics at CMDI since 2022. He specializes in debate and game studies.

Alexander said he’s excited to join the college as part of such a large group of newcomers.

ā€œIt almost feels like a cohort, which is really exciting,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd at the same time, there are folks in the media studies department who have been around awhile, so it feels like I get to join a new group, and also a good, established one.ā€

Headshot of Ian Alexander

Alexander brings particularly interesting research to CMDI. His work studies the introduction of media technologies—radio, telephone, tablets—into the U.S. carceral system. Through his research, he’s interviewed incarcerated people over phone and video call to better understand how technology advances have been used to isolate politically active people trying to create community within—or among—prisons, or to broadcast to communities in the event of an escape.

The newest tool he’s interested in are tablets, PDFs and video visit systems, which are starting to replace letters from home and legal communications. Ģż

ā€œI look at these technologies as tools of struggle, oppression, isolation and manipulation—but also as tools of connection,ā€ he said. ā€œSo, for instance, the way people inside are using them to make radio shows or podcasts, produce literature, or build solidarity and community and raise political consciousness.ā€

It’s work that is historical in its approach, but is worth studying in the current moment—both as the nation dramatically increases investment in policing and incarceration, and with generative artificial intelligence strongly reshaping how we communicate.

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Ģżā€œIt feels like I get to join a new group, and also a good, established one.ā€

Ian J. Alexander, assistant professor, media studies

ā€œLike many people who study systems of structural oppression, I wish it were less relevant,ā€ Alexander said. ā€œBut beyond just the massive expansion of ICE, and the so-called Alligator Alcatraz, there’s a larger question around what social and political function prisons serve—and what the state is saying about itself through its carceral system.ā€

Proft, who was a lecturer in the information science department in the spring, said she’s excited to bring her industry experience to the classroom, especially since she worked in educational technology.

ā€œI enjoyed that work, but the impact I was able to have was pretty far removed from the actual students,ā€ she said. ā€œI really value having that smaller, but closer, connection to the students.ā€

Information science, she said, is a comfortable fit for its attention to creating human impact. That’s something she felt she missed while studying computer science.

Headshot of Julia Proft

ā€œI think information science is one of those things where you ask people what it is, and you get tons of different answers,ā€ she said. ā€œBut I think having that diversity—whether it’s technical, or business, or design applications—is really important, because that brings back the more human aspects of technology. So we get away from talking about computing as a topic divorced from anything else in the world.ā€

She said A.I. and large language models are a topic she’s excited to explore with her students, some of whom consider the advent of LLMs as an invitation to not have to learn to code anymore. Crucially, students must learn to use these tools—but they must be taught that they are tools, not shortcuts.

ā€œWhen you learn to code, you’re developing a problem-oriented mindset, and learning how to approach and solve those problems,ā€ Proft said. ā€œIf they’re leaning on LLMs to generate code, they don’t think about what the code is actually doing, which means when something goes wrong, they can’t address it.ā€

Hoth, as a fine art photographer, has given plenty of consideration to A.I.’s disruptive impact on the creation of images.

ā€œEspecially in media production, A.I. is a huge concern,ā€ he said. ā€œBut I don’t put my head in the sand and say, ā€˜You can’t use any of this, we’re not going to talk about it.’ We have to talk about it. We have to integrate it into our teaching and our practices. But I have to show them where the line is.ā€

Hoth mentioned a conversation with a past student, who used A.I. to touch up nighttime photos in a project he did that took him around the state.

ā€œI liked that he wasn’t afraid to share that with me,ā€ Hoth said. ā€œIn this case, these were meant to be creative pictures—he’s not a documentary photographer—and so we discussed, you couldn’t put this in the Denver Post or New York Times, but with limited usage on a creative project, this kind of tool is OK.ā€

A major lesson in his classes, outside of technology, is that the right kind of failure is required for growth. He often shares failures from his own career to show how getting things wrong can be helpful.

ā€œThe learning environment should be a place of safety, in terms of play and also of learning how to fail well,ā€ he said. ā€œIf you put forth your best effort, you’re trying something new and you fail, that’s commendable. That’s how you get to great things.ā€

Joe Arney covers research and general news for the college. Contact joe.arney@colorado.edu.Ģż