St. Bonaventure University

Content Creation Program


The Bachelor of Arts in Content Creation program at St. Bonaventure prepares students to thrive in today’s digital-first communication world. You’ll learn to craft compelling stories, manage online communities, and produce multimedia content that informs, entertains and inspires.

Logo for the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

The Content Creation major joins seven other Jandoli School of Communication majors, which are accredited by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications.



Students create content.

Why Study Content Creation at St. Bonaventure?


Hands-on learning from day one.
Work with campus media outlets, student-run agencies and real clients to build a professional portfolio before graduation.

400 hours of internships.
Gain significant industry experience through 400 hours of required internships in roles such as content creator, social media coordinator, or digital marketing intern.

Faculty who know the industry.

Learn from professors with professional experience in journalism, marketing, public relations and multimedia production. You’ll be mentored by experts dedicated to helping you grow as a creator and communicator.

Modern tools for digital storytelling.

Produce and edit your work using the Jandoli School’s state-of-the-art studios, video labs and creative collaboration spaces.
 
Bona alumni as your magnetic force forward.
St. Bonaventure alumni include Pulitzer Prize winners and Emmy, Sports Emmy, duPont-Columbia, Edward R. Murrow, George Polk and Peabody award honorees, plus a National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame inductee, a three-time National Sportswriter of the Year and a three-time New York Sportswriter of the Year.


Internships equip you to meet a fast-evolving marketplace.


The creator economy is surging: full-time digital creator jobs in the U.S. soared from approximately 200,000 in 2020 to 1.5 million in 2024 — a 7.5 × increase — according to a recent report by the Interactive Advertising Bureau and Harvard Business School

As content creation and visual storytelling become central across industries, this program positions you directly for that growth.

In our BA in Content Creation, you will complete 400 hours of internship experience — a requirement consistent across all majors in the Jandoli School. The school’s dedicated internship coordinator will guide you in securing meaningful placements both on campus and off. Meanwhile, you’ll also gain hands-on opportunities through our many campus media outlets.



Program Information


Bachelor of Arts in Content Creation


  • Communication minor


    Learning objectives


    News-Publications-Research- Banner

    Jandoli School of Communication to livestream Oct. 22 debate by 57th Senate district candidates

    Oct 18, 2019, 08:44 by Tim Geiger
    A partnership among various arms of St. Bonaventure University’s Jandoli School of Communication will yield a live debate between the two candidates vying to replace Catharine Young as the next state senator from New York’s 57th Senate district.

    By TAPINTO Greater Olean Staff

    A partnership among various arms of St. Bonaventure University’s Jandoli School of Communication will yield a live debate between the two candidates vying to replace Catharine Young as the next state senator from New York’s 57th Senate district.

    The debate between Republican and Conservative candidates George Borrello and Democratic Candidate Austin Morgan will take place at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 22, in the Bob Koop Broadcast Lab on the St. Bonaventure campus.

    It is sponsored by TAPInto Greater Olean, a hyper-local news outlet staffed by students in the Jandoli School’s Journalists’ Workshop courses, and the new Jandoli Institute, a media and public policy research center founded by Dr. Richard Lee, an associate professor and the institute’s executive director.

    Lee, who team teaches the Journalist’s Workshop course with his wife, Anne, a lecturer, will serve as co-moderator of the debate with senior journalism student Cameron Hurst. Students from the campus television station, SBU-TV, under the leadership of lecturers Anna Bulszewicz and Michael Spong, will produce and livestream the debate via SBU-TV’s Facebook page, @SBUTV9.

    “This debate is the perfect example of how the Jandoli School is a key voice in Western New York,” said Aaron Chimbel, dean of the Jandoli School. “It is impressive to see the entrepreneurial spirit of our students, staff and faculty to collaborate across media entities to provide the citizens of this area important information about the state Senate candidates.”

    “TAPInto Greater Olean and the Jandoli Institute share a common goal, namely to educate and inform the citizenry,” Lee said. “By sponsoring this debate, we are taking a big step forward toward this common goal.”

    The 57th Senate district, which encompasses Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Allegany and parts of Livingston counties, has remained without a representative since the March resignation of Young, a 1982 St. Bonaventure journalism graduate who had served as state senator since 2005. The winner of the Nov. 5 special election will fill the vacancy for a year before the 2020 general election, when voters elect a state senator for a full two-year term. 

    Borrello, who serves as Chautauqua County executive, said he is pleased to visit campus to take part in this debate. 

    “I am grateful for this opportunity to come to the beautiful St. Bonaventure campus to share my thoughts, plans and experiences,” said Borrello, whose name will appear on the Republican, Conservative, Libertarian and Independence lines. “I look forward to engaging with this wonderful community.”

    Austin Morgan, who received his degree in human development from Cornell University in May and will appear on the Democratic and Working Families lines, said he is also excited to be part of one of the Jandoli Institute’s initial activities and to participate in the debate.

    “The more voters who hear our message, especially students who might be voting for the first time, and the more voters we can bring into the political process, the better our region and our state is for all of us,” he said. “When we have a strong, independent media landscape that lifts up the truth, our politics and our representatives are made stronger for it.”

    The debate will be conducted without a live audience. It will be livestreamed through SBU-TV and posted online afterward on TAPInto Greater Olean’s website www.tapinto.net/towns/greater-olean/.