
Rich West is Professor in the Department
of Communication Studies at Emerson College in Boston. At Emerson, he has
served as the Department Chair for several years, as the Acting Director of the
Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies, and as the Project
Director of the Center for Innovation in Teaching and Learning. He is past
President of the Eastern Communication Association, where
he received the Past Officer's Award and was recognized as a
"Distinguished Research Fellow" in the Association. Rich is also the
former Director of NCA's Educational Policies Board. Both Illinois State
University (B.A./M.A.) and Ohio University (Ph.D.) have recognized him as an
Outstanding Alum in Communication Studies. Rich's research has appeared in
Communication
Education,
Communication Studies,
Communication Quarterly,
Day
Care and Early Education,
Communication Reports,
Journal of
Family Communication, among others. He has written extensively in the area
of classroom communication and has been recognized as a "Leading
Scholar" in Classroom Communication by the Communication Institute for
Online Scholarship (CIOS). Rich's principle co-author is Lynn Turner. Together
with Lynn, he has co-authored 5 books in multiple editions (
Gender and
Communication, Understanding Interpersonal Communication: Making Choices in
Changing Times, Perspectives on Family Communication, and Introducing
Communication Theory: Analysis and Applications, IPC: Interpersonal
Communication). He is also co-editor of
The Family Communication
Sourcebook and the co-editor of the upcoming
Sage Handbook of Family Communication. In addition, Rich has (co)
authored dozens of articles and book chapters and is a current member of 7
journal editorial boards. Rich's
research has been featured in a number of media outlets including
USA Today,
Christian Science Monitor,
NPR,
Toronto Globe &
Mail, CNN International,
Austin Statesman (TX), among others. When
he has some free time, he enjoys working on his 105 year-old summer home in
Maine, but privately admits that he would rather hire people than do the work
himself!