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Speech
Communication
Amy Slagell, Professor-in-Charge
The Program in Speech Communication promotes student development in directions
that are central to the College mission. Students are provided opportunities
to develop their understanding and appreciation of the human communication
process, to enhance their communication and related critical thinking skills,
and to heighten their awareness of communication as a linguistic, social,
and cultural phenomenon. In this way the program contributes to the humanistic,
aesthetic, and critical development of liberally educated students in order
to prepare them for full and effective participation in society.
Five faculty members currently teach courses in the program and from eight
to ten teaching assistants handle the lab sections of Sp Cm 212, Fundamentals
of Public Speaking, a course that enrolls over 1,400 students this academic
year and an additional 200 over the summer. Students who major in speech
communication are preparing themselves for a wide range of employment opportunities
in business, industry, education, and law, as well as for work at the graduate
level. The speech communication curriculum consists of fifteen courses,
including five that are cross-listed with other departments and programs.
Faculty in speech communication also bring their distinctive focus on oral
communication to bear as active contributors to the university-wide initiative
known as ISUComm, which attempts to blend written, oral, visual, and electronic
communication into a unified whole. |
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