300
Survey course on the visual documentary tradition. May be used to satisfy general distribution requirements in the humanities if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
COM 232 or consent of instructor.
This course introduces students to theory, research and applied practice in the study of organizational communication. Students will explore the role human communication plays in structuring, maintaining and changing organizations, and they will explore specific issues within the study of organizational communication including socialization, decision-making, conflict, stress and burnout, cultural diversity and external communication.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
COM 224.
Students will develop critical perspectives on media consumption and creation while learning intermediate skills in design and imagining for visual communication in print, web, social media, and time-based media. The course focuses on conceptual thinking and problem-solving in the development and production of digital media projects.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ART 110 or
FMX 210; plus at least one of the following:
COM 222,
COM 224,
COM 225,
COM 232,
COM 283; or consent of instructor.
Emphasizes formal aspects of studio video-production operations, including camera switching, lighting, sound and accessory equipment and remote-location production for integration into a studio program. This course provides production support for WUTV programming. May be used to satisfy general distribution requirements in the humanities if not used for the communication major. Laboratory fee required.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
Prerequisites
COM 225 or
COM 226 and one of the following:
COM 242,
JOU 221, or FMX 241.
This studio course introduces students to Web design techniques, technologies and theories, including HTML, CSS and Web design software. Almost all work is performed at a computer. Laboratory fee required.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ART 110,
FMX 210,
JOU 221 or consent of instructor.
This course explores the social, political, economic, and cultural effects of emerging communication technologies. Areas covered include the design and affordances of new technologies, how they are used by consumers and organizations, and how they are addressed by laws, policies, industries, and powerful social and cultural institutions.
Credit Hours: 4
(SS)
Prerequisites
COM 224.
This course covers the elements of broadcast news writing and production, including the structure of radio and television news and feature stories, research and interviewing techniques, "package" production and ethical considerations. May not be used to satisfy general distribution requirements.
Credit Hours: 4
(W)
Prerequisites
COM 225 or
JOU 101
Communication and Law is the study of concepts, policies, laws and court decisions that affect communication in our society. Through text, scholarly and popular articles, sound and video recordings, court decisions, lectures and class participation, we explore critical legal principles of civilized democratic society and the range of laws that protect or restrain communication within it. In addition to examining such principles and laws for their own merit (or lack of it), the course provides a practical basis upon which students who seek to become communications professionals can identify legal issues that will influence their professional conduct.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
COM 224 or
JOU 101
This is a survey of traditions of television criticism. The class covers key areas of television research and criticism, including narrative, aesthetic, production-oriented, economic, audience-centered, and ideological approaches to TV. The class will address questions related to TV as a technology, the broadcast and post-network eras of TV, the globalization of media programming, as well as a wide range of TV genres and their conventions.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
COM 224.
Live stream multi-camera video productions straight to social media. Students will produce a bi-monthly entertainment and information talk show that combines pre-recorded segments with live hosts, guest interviews, and in-studio demonstrations. Students are responsible for pitching stories, booking talent, writing scripts, and operating equipment. This course is modeled on Daytime, a nationally syndicated program produced in Tampa. Laboratory fee required.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
COM 303 or consent of instructor.
Examines the cultural, political, economic and ethical issues surrounding a complex, international communication movement known as the New World Information Order. Explores all aspects of the topic, with an emphasis on threats to the national sovereignty of developing countries, the bias of international news agencies and cultural imperialism. May be used to fulfill Third World requirements. May be used to fulfill general distribution requirements for the social sciences if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(IG) (NW) (SS)
Prerequisites
COM 224, junior or senior standing, or consent of instructor.
Students study and view tapes and films produced as part of the non-commercial independent movement. May be used to satisfy general distribution requirements in the humanities if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
Prerequisites
COM 232 or permission of the instructor.
Covers the elements of writing feature film scripts including character development, dialogue and dramatic structure. May not be used to satisfy general distribution requirements.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (W)
Prerequisites
COM 226 or COM 240.
Credit Hours: 1-4
This course explores practice and theory of writing for interactive media, including hypertext and hypermedia, narrative games, critical games, and location-based media. May not be used to satisfy general distribution requirements.
Credit Hours: 4
(W)
Prerequisites
One of the following:
COM 225,
COM 226,
WRI 200,
WRI 220, or
FMX 240
This course is an introduction to the mechanics of writing for television. From idea through final draft, students learn the process of developing scripts for television. The structural demands of commercial television and cable are explored. The student obtains a grounding in the historical development of marketable TV genres. The selling and buying of a script are analyzed, as well as strategies for creating a teleplay by oneself or with a staff of writers. May not be used to satisfy general distribution requirements.
Credit Hours: 4
(W)
Prerequisites
COM 226,
FMX 240, or consent of instructor.
Students will learn how to use social media for strategic purposes, develop effective content, and measure success through analytics.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ART 110 or
FMX 210; and one of the following courses:
COM 224,
COM 283,
COM 284,
JOU 101
This variable credit internship course is designed for Communication, Media, and Culture (COM) majors and advertising and public relations (AD/PR) majors. Key assignments include learning objectives, orientation seminar, informational interview, reports, and evaluations. Cannot be used to meet the 300-or-above-level requirement in either the COM or AD/PR major and may not be used to satisfy general distribution requirements. Credits (1-4) vary according to the number of hours worked at the internship host site.
Credit Hours: 1-4
Prerequisites
Junior or senior standing, minimum GPA of 3.0 in major and consent of instructor.
A search for the defining characteristics of a director's works, including issues of thematic motifs and visual style. May be used to satisfy general distribution requirements in the humanities if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
COM 260 or
COM 261 or consent of instructor.
This course will be an investigation into the thematic, theoretical, technical and structural concepts that contribute to our understanding of film genre. Students, through weekly informal writing as well as significant research-based formal papers, will sharpen their analytical, critical and research skills. Specifically, they will employ the methodology of critical inquiry and utilize appropriate vocabulary and processes to engage, through analysis, research, writing and discussion, in the dialogues of our discipline. May be used to satisfy general distribution requirements in the humanities if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
COM 260 or
COM 261 or consent of instructor
The course is designed to introduce intermediate research methodologies to a student's critical analysis of large-scale media events. It involves the practical analysis of a media event, including circumstances, details, historical perspective and reactions by journalists, officials and the public. Archival coverage, documentaries, feature films, print articles and Internet sites relating to a singular or series of events will encompass a majority of the analysis. Particular attention will be given to events with international implications. Students will review the previous exposure of related topics in an effort to compare the attention given to a subject in a comparison of "before and after." May be used to fulfill general distribution requirements for the social sciences if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(SS)
Focuses on the politics of representing women, particularly in film, television, advertising, popular literature and the popular press. The critical background includes texts on political economy, semiotics, feminist theory and cultural studies. The student completes a major research project during the course. May be used to fulfill general distribution requirements for the humanities, but not for the social sciences if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
Prerequisites
COM 232 or consent of the instructor.
This course familiarizes students with key theories, techniques, and media forms that will enable them to produce creative, well-researched and thought-provoking projects that embody critical media practice. Each student will select and examine an issue of social importance, and research media platforms and rhetorical approaches suitable for that issue. Combining scholarship with media skills, the student will create a final media project. Laboratory fee required.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
COM 242
This lab course involves strategic concept development, copywriting, and media production, as well as ethical considerations related to these practices.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
COM 283, plus either
ART 110 or
FMX 210
This course involves training in theory, form and style for writing public relations materials for all stages and types of public relations campaigns. This course is designed to provide students with a broad range of public relations writing skills utilized in the industry.
Credit Hours: 4
(SS) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
COM 225 or
COM 284, or consent of instructor.
“For-profit” brands and companies have crossed-over to the traditionally “non-profit” territory, using their platforms in advertising and public relations (ADPR) to discuss social issues so as to promote social good and to achieve commercial success. This emerging market of prosocial consumers lead to changes in the practice of doing social good in ADPR. This demands our future ADPR practitioners to have the diversity/multicultural literacy that guides them to make appropriate and conscious decisions when applying multicultural and prosocial strategies. In this course, we will cover prosocial strategic decision-making, multicultural targeting/messages/markets, consumer diversity psychology, critical social issues, and related practices in ADPR.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
COM 224
For Honors Program students only. This course is an exploration of the concept of "ethnicity" and how it may be expressed through literature and film. May be used to satisfy general distribution requirements in the humanities if not used for the major.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
Research or creative project under the auspices of a communication instructor. Students may take a maximum of 8 credit hours of independent study to fulfill the requirements of the major.
Credit Hours: 1-4
Prerequisites
Junior or senior standing,
COM 224,
COM 225 or
COM 226, and
COM 232 and minimum GPA of 3.0, or consent of instructor