Note: As of August 2022, students are no longer being admitted to the communications major.
Program description
With the rapid development of digital technologies over the last decade, the field of communications has seen unprecedented growth and convergence in media, both technologically and structurally. The communications degree program addresses strongly articulated employer requirements for the workplace through an integrated program model. The degree provides the basic theoretical foundations of the discipline, allows for appropriate branching outside the traditional curriculum, and draws from courses in the disciplines of information sciences and technology, English, and business.
Available options
The degree in communications provides two options: corporate communications and digital journalism.
Corporate Communications
The corporate communications option prepares students to compete in a global society in fields such as public relations, speech writing, strategic communications, and social media management.
Digital Journalism
The digital journalism option offers graduates a competitive advantage by complementing traditional options (newspaper, magazine, radio, TV) with convergent course work designed to prepare students for professional journalism in the digital age.
What is Communications?
Communications is an academic discipline that deals with the creation and distribution of mass communication messages through media such as books, newspapers, television, radio, film, video games and the internet. Mass communications use writing, photographs, video, and interactive content to give information. Communications also concerns the study of how we communicate in different ways with diverse audiences through marketing, advertising, public relations, journalism, film and other media.