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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Examination and analysis of the processes and products of various media industries, theories, methodologies, and aesthetics, with a focus on understanding and learning to critique the ways in which the media, their texts, and audiences exist within a set of increasingly complex relationships.
Prerequisite:
COMM 220, COMM 101, or JRNL 250 (formerly ENGL 250).
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3.00 Credits
Producing For Digital Media is designed to provide career-ready digital media producing experiences, practicing the many facets of digital content creation for the converged environment including producing in the live television studio, shooting and editing on location, creating in the media production workspace, and publishing to the web.
Prerequisite:
COMM 121 and COMM 321 or COMM 325.
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3.00 Credits
Basic news writing and reporting, stressing electronic media.
Prerequisite:
ENGL 110 or permission of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Emphasis on the writing of dramatic scripts with selective production.
Prerequisite:
ENGL 110
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3.00 Credits
The course focuses on the role of the media in the creation and reproduction of culture. It examines how gender, race and class are constructed in media texts, and how women in various social and cultural positions negotiate their own meanings in relation to media portrayals.
Prerequisite:
junior status, COMM 100, ENGL 110.
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3.00 Credits
Examines theoretical explanations for the social construction of gendered identity. Considers everyday communication practices and contexts to identify how gender, communication and culture intersect to form the complex matrix of meaning which impacts individuals and society.
Prerequisite:
COMM 100, ENGL 110 and junior standing.
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3.00 Credits
This course focuses on the implications, for individuals and for society as a whole, of the most important new information and communication technologies. Students will acquire an understanding of the role technologies have played in their lives and the impact they have in their future careers.
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3.00 Credits
Focuses on the history and theory of documentary films. Through readings, screenings, and discussions, the course will provide students with a historical and theoretical understanding of documentary filmmaking and prepare them for more advanced production courses. The students will also explore their own documentary ideas and develop an outline and treatment.
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3.00 Credits
Hands-on practice in writing news releases for print and broadcast, brochure and newsletter copy, and pitching story ideas to trade editors.
Prerequisite:
COMM 251, ENGL 110.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines communication challenges faced by public relations practitioners, public information officers, first responders, public health officials, business, government and community benefit leaders, as well as others involved in local, state, and national crisis, emergency, disaster and risk situations. With a focus on appropriate communication message/response strategies and effective use of various communication channels, the course covers theoretical foundations helpful for developing communication plans for pre-, current-, and post-event communication.
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