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Among the most pressing challenges in higher education today is the mismatch between the speed of technological change and the stagnation of academic response. This is acutely visible in the field of mass communication education in Pakistan. While the digital revolution reshapes journalism, public relations, advertising, and media production, media faculties across the country continue to function without any concrete policy frameworks, working papers, or curriculum blueprints that address the digital and artificial intelligence (AI) transformation.
Despite bold claims and conference slogans about “embracing digital media,” most departments lack clear roadmaps for integrating these changes into pedagogy, research, or institutional strategy. There is a dangerous assumption that merely teaching students how to use social media or edit videos qualifies as “digital media education.” The reality demands far more.
Global Best Practices: Where We Are Falling Behind
Globally, mass communication education is undergoing a paradigm shift. Top journalism schools like the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism (USA), Sciences Po School of Journalism (France), and the University of Hong Kong have incorporated digital storytelling, coding for journalists, AI ethics, data journalism, and audience analytics into their core curricula.
These institutions are not only updating their syllabi—they are also building innovation labs, collaborating with tech companies, launching interdisciplinary programs, and producing policy-relevant research on digital transformations in media. Stanford and MIT are exploring the role of AI in combating misinformation. The University of Oxford’s Reuters Institute publishes regular research on digital news consumption patterns.
Pakistan’s media schools, in contrast, are struggling even to provide students with high-speed internet in classrooms.
We can continue business as usual, producing graduates ill-equipped for today’s fast-paced, tech-driven media landscape, or we can take bold, strategic steps to reform, innovate, and lead
The Infrastructure Gap
The first challenge is infrastructural. Most public universities do not have access to modern media labs, podcast studios, or data analytics tools. Learning management systems (LMS), video streaming platforms, or AI tools like GPT or Adobe Firefly are unfamiliar to both students and faculty. Digital journalism courses often rely on outdated software or pirated versions of editing tools, which neither encourage innovation nor teach ethical tech practices.
Additionally, basic equipment such as DSLR cameras, podcasting kits, or mobile reporting gear is either unavailable or restricted to thesis students. Without a baseline of digital infrastructure, students graduate without ever using tools now considered essential in any media job market globally.
The Mindset Defici
However, the more deeply rooted problem is attitudinal. A large segment of media faculty members in Pakistan remain uncomfortable with technology, let alone AI. There is widespread resistance to change, fear of redundancy, and a lack of motivation for retraining. Syllabi are often reused for years with little or no update. For many educators, “digital media” is reduced to PowerPoint slides and Facebook awareness campaigns.
There is also a general undervaluing of interdisciplinary collaboration. While digital media demands joint efforts between computer science, design, business, and journalism departments, our universities continue to operate in disciplinary silos. This has led to the isolation of mass communication from emerging knowledge hubs within their own campuses.
AI in Media Education: The Missed Opportunity
Artificial Intelligence presents both a challenge and an opportunity. Globally, AI is transforming media workflows: writing scripts, detecting fake news, personalizing news feeds, editing videos, and translating content in real time. While countries like the US, UK, and China are debating AI ethics in journalism, media education in Pakistan remains almost silent on the topic.
Few Pakistani students graduate with an understanding of how algorithms shape media exposure, how deepfakes threaten credibility, or how AI chatbots can support newsrooms. There are no courses on AI literacy, machine learning in media, or ethical considerations in automated journalism.
Introducing AI modules in undergraduate and postgraduate courses can empower students to work with, rather than against, technology. For example, integrating tools like ChatGPT for research assistance, Synthesia for video generation, or Descript for podcasting can revolutionize practical training. But for this, we must first equip educators through intensive faculty development programs.
Policy Vacuum and Institutional Stagnation
Perhaps the most critical issue is the absence of policy. Among all faculties and departments offering mass communication in Pakistan, none have produced a concrete working paper or strategic framework for digital media education in the AI era. University curriculum committees meet infrequently and are often bogged down in bureaucratic formalities rather than innovation.
There is no coordinated effort at the national level, either by the Higher Education Commission (HEC) or journalism associations, to conduct a needs assessment, map skill gaps, or forecast future demands. Without national guidelines, each university continues to experiment—or stagnate—in isolation.
Compare this with India, where the University Grants Commission (UGC) issued a policy framework on digital media education. Or with South Africa, where journalism schools are mapping curriculum changes with community media needs. Pakistan urgently needs a consortium of media educators and practitioners to create a national roadmap that aligns academic instruction with global trends and local realities.
Recommendations: Moving Forward Strategically
To move forward, Pakistan must adopt a structured and forward-looking approach to mass communication education. Some key steps include:
Mass communication education in Pakistan stands at a crossroads. We can continue business as usual, producing graduates ill-equipped for today’s fast-paced, tech-driven media landscape, or we can take bold, strategic steps to reform, innovate, and lead.
By embracing digital transformation, grounding it in local realities, and empowering both educators and students, we can ensure that our media education not only survives but thrives—in the digital era.
The author has served as Dean of Mass Communication at Beaconhouse National University (BNU) and the University of Central Punjab (UCP). He is currently a Professor at the University of Central Punjab.
The Friday Times is Pakistan’s first independent weekly, founded in 1989.TFT offers a diverse range of perspectives on national and international issues.
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