Communication Major
The study of communication is at least as old as written language itself. The first "scholar" of communication is also the first named historical author, the ancient Mesopotamian priestess, princess, and poet Enheduanna. As a vibrant component of a liberal arts education—since "rhetoric" was established as a key component of the trivium of subjects that made up a classical Greek education—the study of communication has changed over the centuries. Today, students engage communicative inquiry as a method of developing the portable skills that will serve them in their collegiate studies and beyond. Through examining the collaborative construction and negotiation of meaning, between self and others, as it occurs within cultural contexts--students who earn a major in Communication will be able to construct effective messages in oral and written forms, as well as engage in collaborative work as important members of groups, while adjusting their communicative strategies to account for the various audiences, contexts, and diverse organizations and cultures they will experience over their lives.
Major Requirements
33 credits
Communication Foundations (9 credits)
Core
COM-100 | Communication & Culture | 3 credits |
COM-101 | Foundations of Public Advocacy | 3 credits |
Methods
COM-250 | Criticism as Praxis | 3 credits |
Communication Topics (21 credits)
The Penumbra
The Penumbra courses together provide an overview of communication inquiry. Students will need to complete at least one section from each communication topics course. Additional sections, with different titles, can count towards the elective requirement.
COM-350 | Topics in Public Controversy | 3 credits |
COM-360 | Topics in the Philosophy of Communication | 3 credits |
COM-370 | Topics in Identity and Power | 3 credits |
Electives
Students need to complete a minimum of 12 credits of COM classes that are not previously counted toward their degree. Students may count additional sections of Topics courses in this category. COM-290 Competitive Forensics and COM-490 Advanced Forensic Competition can count for up to 4 credits each.
Capstone (3 credits)