The School of Communication offers a program of study leading to a B.A. degree and a minor in Communication. Many communication majors pursue, with the school's encouragement, a double major with another discipline or select a minor area to complement the major. Through careful planning, students can easily complete these options within four years.

Students should consult with the undergraduate academic advisor at least once each semester to get school course clearance and to explore course selections within the major, the minor, general education offerings and electives.

Transfer Credit

Requests for transfer credit are evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Some lower division courses are transferable from accredited institutions, but upper division courses must be reviewed by the school to determine eligibility toward the major. No more than 50 percent of the upper division requirements may be transferred from another college or university.

Bachelor of Arts in Communication

Required coursesUnits
COMM 200Communication as a Social Science4
COMM 201Communication as a Liberal Art4
and three of the following four:
COMM 102Human Communication Principles and Practices4
COMM 202Introduction to Communication Technology4
COMM 301LEmpirical Research in Communication4
COMM 322Argumentation and Advocacy4

Grades of C or better in COMM 200 and 201 are required in order to proceed to those upper division courses listing COMM 200 and 201 as prerequisites and to complete the degree. Students must complete six additional upper division courses (24 units). No more than four units of COMM 380 may be counted toward the department major. Communication majors follow the general education requirements for social science majors in the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

Qualified nonmajors (generally, students with junior/senior status, a minimum 3.0 grade point average and a declared major elsewhere at the university) with appropriate academic preparation may be permitted to enroll in communication electives without fulfilling prerequisite requirements. Application for a waiver should be made to the school's undergraduate advisor.

By design, many courses in the curriculum tend to cluster into different areas of study. These areas represent important foci in the communication discipline and are areas in which the school's faculty possess special expertise. Three such areas of study are described below. They are not mutually exclusive, nor do they exhaust the curriculum; rather, they represent partially overlapping areas of unusual depth. Students may specialize in one of these areas or may design individual programs of study by choosing other combinations of electives that best meet their needs and career objectives.

Media, Law, and Politics Option

This option is most attractive to students interested in careers in government and public service, the law, and political and legal consulting, as well as advanced graduate study. Students examine communication processes in the public sphere and learn how to participate competently in these practices. Courses emphasize the role of persuasion in the political and legal processes; the techniques used by individuals, institutions and social movements to influence public affairs; the history, design, implementation and evaluation of political campaigns; the role of public opinion; ethical issues in public communication, including the influence of media in the political and justice systems, the role of the First Amendment and the changing nature of freedom of expression in a mass-mediated environment, and problems of public participation. Relevant courses include:

COMM 302Persuasion
COMM 310Media and Society
COMM 330Rhetoric in Classical Culture
COMM 335Rhetoric in Contemporary Culture
COMM 370The Rhetoric of Ideas: Ideology and Propaganda
COMM 388Ethics in Human Communication
COMM 402Public Communication Campaigns
COMM 411Communication Criticism
COMM 412Communication and Social Movements
COMM 421Legal Communication
COMM 489Campaign Communication
JOUR 462Law of Mass Communication

Organizational and Interpersonal Communication Option

This option is most attractive to students interested in careers in business, management, human resources and development, corporate communications, and consulting, as well as advanced graduate study. Courses emphasize: interpersonal communication processes that affect and reflect personality, motives, beliefs, attitudes and values; communication's role in the development, maintenance and disintegration of social, family and intimate relationships; managing interpersonal conflict; communication between superiors and subordinates and in teams; communication's role in determining organizational culture; managing information in organizations; and the role of information technology in processes of globalization. Relevant courses include:

COMM 210Business and Professional Communication
COMM 304Interpersonal Communication
COMM 308Communication and Conflict
COMM 315Health Communication
COMM 320Small Group and Team Communication
COMM 321Communication in the Virtual Group
COMM 345Social and Economic Implications of Communication Technologies
COMM 385Survey of Organizational Communication
COMM 480Nonverbal Communication
COMM 486Human and Technological Systems in Organizations
COMM 487Communication and Global Organizations

Communication and Culture Option

This option will be attractive to a broad range of students whose careers have an international or multicultural dimension, from those interested in foreign service, travel and consulting to those seeking careers in entertainment and the arts. In addition, students taking this option will be well prepared for advanced graduate study. Courses emphasize: communication as an essential component of culture and cultural production; cultural forces that shape communication practices; cultural barriers to communication; gender and diversity issues in human and mass communication and cultural production; media representations of race, ethnicity and gender; the production of meaning in diverse modes such as art, religion, popular culture and technology; and cultural criticism. Relevant courses include:

COMM 240Communication Technology and Culture
COMM 324Intercultural Communication
COMM 330Rhetoric in Classical Culture
COMM 335Rhetoric in Contemporary Culture
COMM 340The Cultures of New Media
COMM 345Social and Economic Implications of Communication Technologies
COMM 360The Rhetoric of Los Angeles
COMM 384Interpreting Popular Culture
COMM 395Gender, Media and Communication
COMM 425Communicating Religion

Minor in Communication

COMM 200, 201 and any three of: 102, 202, 301L and 322 are required. Grades of C or better in COMM 200 and 201 are required in order to proceed to those upper division courses listing COMM 200 and 201 as prerequisites and to complete the degree. Students must also complete three additional upper division COMM courses (12 units).

Debate Squad

USC's Debate Squad provides an opportunity for outstanding students (3.0 GPA), both majors and non-majors, to compete in an intensive intercollegiate laboratory setting. Whatever the student's intended career, the skills he or she develops in research, critical thinking and oral advocacy will be invaluable. The team has an excellent record in both team policy debate and individual speaking events and has traveled widely both nationally and abroad.

Honors Program

The school offers an honors program for exceptional students, including honors sections of regular classes, special seminars reserved only for honors students (495), an internship (COMM 496x) and an honors thesis (COMM 497x). To qualify, students must maintain a 3.5 GPA both overall and in the COMM major after completing the core courses (COMM 200, 201 and any three of: COMM 102, 202, 301L and 322). Contact the undergraduate advisor for further information and application forms.

Interdisciplinary Law and Society Minor

See the Department of Political Science.
 

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