Sep 13, 2024  
2024-2025 Academic Catalog 
    
2024-2025 Academic Catalog

Communication: Human Communication, AS (COMM-AS-HUM)

Location(s): Asnuntuck, Capital, Manchester, Naugatuck Valley, Norwalk


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Communication studies prepare students to participate in the professional, social, and civic life in an ethical, intellectually curious, and engaged manner. The discipline of communication focuses on how people use messages to generate meanings within and across various contexts, cultures, channels, and media.

Students who complete the major will have knowledge of foundational theories of communication; prevailing communication research paradigms; media industry structure and practices; prevailing criticism of media practice and performance; media influence on individuals and groups; the interplay of media systems in a global context; roles and functions of communication in interpersonal, group, organizational, and public contexts; conventions of public address and advocacy; and the impact and ethics of persuasion.

Students will be able to think critically; develop and present arguments; communicate effectively in interpersonal, group, organizational, and public contexts; and invent, arrange, and deliver effective and ethical messages via oral, print, and electronic modes.

Human Communication Option:
The Human Communication concentration prepares students to effectively collaborate in teams, clearly express ideas, as well as analyze and respond to challenging issues that arise in interpersonal, intercultural, small-group, and organizational contexts. Human Communication majors will develop strategies for communicating effectively and ethically through mediated channels. The degree provides open electives allowing students to pursue areas of interest in a range of career fields such as public relations, social media brand strategy, project management, human resources, mediation, counseling, customer service, negotiation, recruitment, administration, and freelance entrepreneurial pursuits.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Describe the Communication discipline and its central questions
  • Employ Communication theories, perspectives, principles, and concepts
  • Create messages appropriate to the audience, purpose, and context
  • Critically analyze messages
  • Apply ethical communication principles and practices
  • Influence public discourse

Communication General Education Core (21-22 credits)


Communication Program Core (24 Credits)


Human Communication Courses (15 credits)


Total Credits: 60-61


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