51±ŹÁÏ

51±ŹÁÏ

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 . 

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

      For non-majors, the minor in Communication provides a solid background in the fundamentals of effective communication.


    Learning objectives


    News-Publications-Research- Banner

    Siena/SBU Survey: Half of Americans to watch some of March Madness

    Mar 13, 2026, 15:35 by Thomas Missel
    Nearly half of Americans (49%) say they plan to watch college basketball games during March Madness, according to a new survey of United States residents released today by the Siena Research Institute (SRI) and 51±ŹÁÏ’s Jandoli School of Communication.

    Nearly half of Americans (49%) say they plan to watch college basketball games during March Madness, according to a new survey of United States residents released today by the Siena Research Institute (SRI) and 51±ŹÁÏ’s Jandoli School of Communication. 

    Over a quarter (28%) will fill out at least one bracket for the men’s tournament while 18% will fill out a women’s bracket. Similarly, 28% of Americans plan to join a pool with friends, family, or at the office and a quarter of Americans will bet on tournament games through online sportsbooks.  

    “March Madness is upon us. Half of us will watch the games and over a quarter will fill out a bracket or two, join a pool, or place bets online,” said Don Levy, SRI’s director. “Of those planning to watch the games, nearly 40% say that they will take time off from work or other activities to watch the games. While the country won’t stop for the ‘Madness,’ many, especially young men, will watch, stress over their bracket, bet, and play hooky.”

    Ahead of the announcement of the full lineup of tourney teams on March 15, respondents were asked to predict the winner of the men’s and women’s tournaments. 

    Out of more than 300 teams across the country, the most popular pick for a men’s tournament winner was Duke, selected by 5% of respondents, and for the women’s tournament, UConn was the most popular choice, predicted by 6% of respondents. 

    “Although Duke is mentioned most often as a probable winner in the men’s tournament, other teams, including the University of Michigan, UConn, Michigan State, Ohio State, and the University of Arizona all draw support from fans,” said Aaron Chimbel, dean of the Jandoli School of Communication. “And as always, Cinderellas can surprise us and bust brackets. On the women’s side, UConn is the favorite, but Duke and South Carolina, according to fans, are teams to watch.”

    Men (61%) are more likely than women (37%) to watch the games. Younger men (18-49) will watch at a rate of 69%, and half of those younger men will fill out a men’s bracket, join a pool, and bet on games through a sportsbook. A quarter of younger men will not only watch the games but take time off from work to do so.

    Forty-two percent of respondents say that they are “very” or “somewhat” familiar with the recent changes to the policies governing how college athletes can be paid for the rights to their names, images and likenesses (NIL). 

    A clear majority of Americans (62% to 20%) say that they approve of allowing college athletics to pay student athletes directly, and a plurality of 42% say that college athletes being allowed to sell their NIL rights is good for sports, a trend which continues from the previous two years of the survey. However, 58% add a caveat, agreeing that college athletics programs should be required to place a hard cap on the salaries paid to individual athletes through revenue-sharing/NIL rights.

    A majority (59%) say payments for college athletes do not make a difference towards their level of interest in college sports, though if anything, they are likely to make a respondent “more” or “somewhat more” interested (24%), rather than “less” or “somewhat less” interested (16%). 

    Still, majorities say that recent NIL policy changes have had no effect on their loyalty to a college athletics team (59% to 29%), the frequency with which they attend games in person (66% to 24%), or their financial contributions to college athletics (66% to 22%).

    In-depth details on the survey can be found here.

    _________

    This American Sport Fanship Survey was conducted February 16-27, 2026, among 3,084 responses drawn from a proprietary online panel (Lucid/Cint) of United States Residents. Interviews conducted online are excluded from the sample and final analysis if they fail any data quality attention check question. Duplicate responses are identified by their response ID and removed from the sample. Three questions were asked of online respondents including a honey-pot question to catch bots and two questions ask the respondent to follow explicit directions. The proprietary panel also incorporates measures that “safeguard against automated bot attacks, deduplication issues, fraudulent VPN usage, and suspicious IP addresses.” Coding of open-ended responses was done by a single human coder. Data was statistically adjusted by age, region, race/ethnicity, education, and gender to ensure representativeness. The probability of being included in any given online survey sample is unknown, very difficult to ascertain, or simply zero (non-internet users). Further, the nature of use of the internet is not uniform within the population, so this limits one's ability to calculate the likelihood of reaching a person through an online poll. Instead of a margin of error, we calculate the credibility interval. In this case, the poll has a credibility interval of plus or minus 1.9 percentage points. Statistical margins of error are not applicable to online polls. All sample surveys and polls may be subject to other sources of error, including, but not limited to coverage error and measurement error. Where figures do not sum to 100, this is due to the effects of rounding. The Siena Research Institute, directed by Donald Levy, Ph.D., conducts political, economic, social, and cultural research primarily in NYS. SRI, an independent, non-partisan research institute, subscribes to the American Association of Public Opinion Research Code of Professional Ethics and Practices.