Communication
In conjunction with other departments, the Communication Department also provides coursework leading to Public Relations, Sports Media, and Advertising minors and the Women in Leadership Certificate.
Goals
- Create messages and acquire skills in media production appropriate to the audience, purpose, and context.
- Demonstrate knowledge of theories and methods to critically analyze media messages.
- Demonstrate knowledge and skills related to career preparation in the field of Communication.
Mission
The mission of the Communication Department is to develop students' professional competence in various aspects of modern professional communication, including broadcast journalism and digital media production. The curriculum also serves those who, upon graduation, want to pursue graduate-level study in the fields of communication, media studies, and related areas of academic inquiry. The department core emphasizes coursework in critical thinking, and digital video production skills, while also providing an understanding of how communication and media affect identity and culture. It also offers instruction in skills and knowledge in the human communication contexts of public speaking, interpersonal communication, and intercultural communication. The major culminates in a Capstone in Communication project course which provides preparation for transition to a career or graduate study.
Majors, Minors and Certificates
Courses
COMM100: Communication, Media, and Society
Credits 3COMM110: Journalism 1
Credits 3COMM120: Introduction to Media Production
Credits 3COMM130: Introduction to Media Studies
Credits 3COMM200: Rhetoric and Society
Credits 3This course provides an introduction to the roots of modern public communication by exploring three basic questions: How do we come to hold our beliefs? How are we persuaded to maintain our beliefs? How are we persuaded to change them? After looking at the ancient quarrel between Plato and the Greek Sophists, the course traces the path of rhetoric into the twentieth century, examining rhetorical areas of social action such as mass movements, propaganda, cults, and brainwashing. Investigates the arguments made by those who claim the modern mass media hold great powers of persuasion over their audiences. Prerequisite: GLE110 First Year Composition; every Spring.
COMM201: Independent Study
Credits 1 6COMM202: Internship in Communication
Credits 1 6Internship in Communication (1-6 credits). These field-based experiences allow students to work with media specialists in a professional setting to enhance their employment potential upon graduation, ideally with pre-approval by a Communication faculty internship advisor. An agreement is drawn up and approved by the student, the supervisor, the Communication faculty internship advisor, and the Dean or their designee. Students should consult with the faculty internship advisor on the academic requirements before starting the internship. The course grade is assigned by the Communication faculty internship advisor in consultation with the supervisor. Credits are based upon the work hours completed (minimum of 40 hours per credit); a maximum of 6 credits may be earned per term. A student may take up to 15 credits towards graduation credit. Prerequisites: completion of COMM210, COMM221, and COMM230, or permission of faculty advisor.
COMM210: Journalism 2
Credits 3Students polish reporting and writing skills while exploring such topics as the “new media” and tackling journalism’s latest dilemmas. Prerequisite: COMM110
COMM211: Broadcast Journalism I
Credits 3This introductory course has a strong focus on writing for radio and television news. Emphasis on researching and writing multiple radio and on-camera reads to strengthen these skills. Each student will also gain experience in digital photography, image editing, writing and producing digital slide shows. Prerequisite: COMM110 and COMM120, or permission of instructor.
COMM221: Multi-Camera Production
Credits 3This intermediate course is designed to further the students’ understanding of studio-based video production. It focuses on honing the students’ abilities to produce, direct, and crew multi-camera television productions. The students will create two television shows, and take them from conception to “on-air” delivery in a live-to-tape format. By working at various crew positions the student will learn both the technical duties and the group dynamics that go into producing successful programs. Prerequisite: COMM120 or by permission of instructor
COMM230: Interpersonal Communication
Credits 3COMM231: Diversity and Media
Credits 3COMM232: Understanding Film
Credits 3COMM234: Film Genres
Credits 3COMM235: Intercultural Communication
Credits 3COMM240: Public Speaking
Credits 3COMM301: Independent Study in Communication
Credits 1 6COMM302: Internship in Communication
Credits 1 6Internship in Communication (1-6 credits). These field-based experiences allow students to work with media specialists in a professional setting to enhance their employment potential upon graduation, ideally with pre-approval by a Communication faculty internship advisor. An agreement is drawn up and approved by the student, the supervisor, the Communication faculty internship advisor, and the Dean or their designee. Students should consult with the faculty internship advisor on the academic requirements before starting the internship. The course grade is assigned by the Communication faculty internship advisor in consultation with the supervisor. Credits are based upon the work hours completed (minimum of 40 hours per credit); a maximum of 6 credits may be earned per term. A student may take up to 15 credits towards graduation credit. Prerequisites: completion of COMM210, COMM221, and COMM230, or permission of faculty advisor.
COMM310: Convergent Journalism
Credits 3COMM311: Broadcast Journalism II
Credits 3Concentrates on writing to video, fundamentals in gathering sound and shot selection for news video, producing video reporter-packages, voice-overs, and enterprise reporting. Prerequisite: COMM211
COMM321: Single-Camera Production
Credits 3This intermediate course is designed to further develop the students’ conceptual and technical skills in single-camera video production. Students will take part in all stages of the production of ENG (Electronic News-Gathering) and EFP (Electronic Field Production) programs. Each student will gain experience in the pre-production (planning, writing, scheduling, casting), production (shooting, recording), and post-production (editing, audio sweetening) of various single-camera genres. Prerequisite: COMM220 and COMM221 or permission of instructor. Every other Spring Semester.
COMM323: Writing for the Electronic Media
Credits 3Students learn how to write short-form messages for the broadcast media. Students write and critique radio and television news segments, public service announcements, and spot advertisements. Students also learn the basic script formats for longer form non-fiction and fiction programs. Prerequisite: COMM110 and COMM120, or permission of instructor.
COMM324: Audio Production
Credits 3Designed as an introduction to the basic theories and practices of audio production. Exploration of basic production techniques for radio production and audio in lm/video and new electronic media through a series of production exercises and assignments designed as concept building blocks. Prerequisite: COMM221 or permission of instructor. Every other Fall Semester.
COMM330: Media Criticism
Credits 3COMM333: Media and Culture
Credits 3Seeks to foster a greater appreciation and understanding of the impact that the mass media exert on society. Emphasizes especially the power of mediated imagery with regard to race, gender, and class and the ways in which media representation can serve to either reify or subvert existing practices of social stratification and control. Prerequisite: COMM130.
COMM334: Media Theory
Credits 3Engages specific models and concepts that guide both the production and the consumption of mass-mediated messages. To perfect media literacy skills, students will explore the body of research which describes the specific and cumulative effects that the mass media exert on individual media consumers and on society at large. Prerequisite: COMM130
COMM336: Gender and Media Representation
Credits 3This course is devoted to the critical analysis of representations of gender in normative mass media content. It explores the ways in which popular cultural representations reinforce, create, and challenge societal gender roles through the examination of various mediated forms from advertising and television to film and broadcast news coverage. Prerequisite: COMM130 or permission of instructor.
COMM337: Children and the Media
Credits 3This course will explore the use of media in the U.S. by young audiences and will discuss the impact on children and teens. Students will examine research studies about media impact and how it relates to concerns of parents, teacher, and non-profit organizations. Prerequisite: COMM130 or permission of instructor.
COMM345: American Political Culture & Media
Credits 3This seminar is designed to provide students with an opportunity to develop a greater appreciation for, and deeper understanding of, the relationships among political culture, media ownership, media presentation and media consumption. Such appreciation is intended to enable a more developed awareness of the complexity of the relationships among political culture, media and ourselves and, in turn, enable us to become more purposeful and intentional in our relationship with those institutions. Prerequisites: COMM100 or SO101, or permission of instructor.
COMM400: Capstone in Communication
Credits 3COMM401: Independent Study in Communication
Credits 1 6COMM402: Internship in Communication
Credits 1 6Internship in Communication (1-6 credits). These field-based experiences allow students to work with media specialists in a professional setting to enhance their employment potential upon graduation, ideally with pre-approval by a Communication faculty internship advisor. An agreement is drawn up and approved by the student, the supervisor, the Communication faculty internship advisor, and the Dean or their designee. Students should consult with the faculty internship advisor on the academic requirements before starting the internship. The course grade is assigned by the Communication faculty internship advisor in consultation with the supervisor. Credits are based upon the work hours completed (minimum of 40 hours per credit); a maximum of 6 credits may be earned per term. A student may take up to 15 credits towards graduation credit. Prerequisites: completion of COMM210, COMM221, and COMM230, or permission of faculty advisor.
COMM420: Advanced Media Production
Credits 3Students propose extended video projects (dramatic, documentary, or experimental). Students then write, design, produce, direct, and post-produce their projects. Builds on skills learned in intermediate production courses. Prerequisite: COMM321.
COMM430: Advanced Media Studies Seminar
Credits 3Focuses on the complex diversity of modern communication forms, their multiple levels of personal engagement, and resulting multi-dimensionality in self-conceptions that they demand of the individual. COMM130