The Department of Communication emphasizes the study of the nature, diversity, and impact of communication on the evolution of individuals, groups, and institutions within society. The undergraduate major in communication provides a broad, theory-based education and allows for concentration in a specific area, such as public relations, health communication, interpersonal/intercultural communication, mediated communication, and organizational communication. Coursework in the department is also useful for students whose primary interests are in such fields as political science, computer science, management, psychology, English, journalism, or sociology. Courses in communication cover both ideas and applications in preparation for communication careers in business, education, or government, or for the pursuit of graduate degrees in communication and other social science fields.
Graduates from the undergraduate program in communication are expected to achieve these learning goals:
- Understanding of fundamental communication perspectives, theories, and concepts.
- Ability to use communication theories and concepts to analyze human behavior, including interpersonal, family, group, health, organizational, and mediated settings.
- Proficiency in gathering and using evidence to study and understand communication processes and consequences, including asking questions and systematically attempting to answer them, as well as understanding the value and limitations of research processes and conclusions.
- Competency in written, oral, mediated, (e.g., email, text messaging), and visual communication for varied purposes (including acknowledgment, apology, clarification, description, explanation, persuasion, request), in varied styles (including technical, formal, casual, intimate), and in varied settings (including academic, business, civic, institutional, relational, ritual).
- Ability to apply communication theories and concepts to social, professional, and civic life (including issues of diversity, ethics, and civic engagement).