American University School of Communication

School of Communication
Established 1893 as Department of Communication. 1984 becomes School of Communication. Independent of the College of Arts and Sciences in 1993
Type Private
Dean Jeff Rutenbeck
Academic staff
50 full-time[1]
Students 791 (undergraduate)/337 (graduate)
Location Washington, District of Columbia, USA
Campus Urban
Nickname SOC
Website http://american.edu/soc

The School of Communication at American University is accredited by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. The school offers five undergraduate majors: communication studies, print/broadcast journalism, public communication, visual media, and foreign language and communication media (jointly administered with the College of Arts and Sciences). Interdisciplinary degrees in communication, legal institutions, economics, and government (CLEG, which is housed in the School of Public Affairs), and multimedia design and development (which is housed in the College of Arts and Sciences). The school offers several advanced degrees: Master of Arts (M.A.) in Media Entrepreneurship, Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Film and Electronic Media, M.A. in Film & Video, M.A. in Game Design (offered jointly with the College of Arts and Sciences), M.A. in Producing for Film & Video, M.A. in Journalism & Public Affairs (Print/Broadcast/Interactive), M.A. in Strategic Communication, M.A. in Political Communication (offered jointly with the American University School of Public Affairs), M.A. in International Media (offered jointly with the American University School of International Service), and a 3-year Ph.D program in Communication Studies.

Departments

Journalism

SOC's journalism and public communication programs are accredited by the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (ACEJMC). SOC's faculty teach courses ranging from web design to Race, Ethnic and Community reporting. SOC's Investigative Reporting Workshop offers additional expertise.

Undergraduates get the basics in web, writing and reporting and work up to courses that could include ethics, law, health reporting and advanced reporting.

Graduate programs specialize in investigative, international or broadcast journalism. A Master's degree can be earned through the weekday 11-month program or the weekend Interactive Journalism program that takes 20 months of Saturday-only classes.

Film and media arts

SOC's film and media arts program is a member of CILECT, the international association of film and television schools. Faculty include Emmy, Oscar and Sundance award-winners, such as Russell Williams (sound engineer). Students' thesis projects have gone on to win Student Academy Awards and CINE Eagle Awards.

Public communication

The American University's Public Communication degree program teaches how to target an audience, how to create a compelling message, how to write persuasively, in a world of new media and new technology. SOC's Public Communication alumni include speechwriters, press secretaries, media strategists, crisis communicators, Hollywood agents, sports marketers, public diplomacy experts, nonprofit leaders, advertising executives, and public relations professionals.

Communication Studies

The Communication Studies division offers interdisciplinary degree programs at the bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral levels, and are intended for students seeking a broad-based, intellectually challenging course of study.

The undergraduate program in Communication Studies is a liberal arts-oriented major that draws on the strengths and attributes of the School’s journalism, public communication, and film and media arts curricula. The International Media master’s program is a partnership between the School of Communication and the School of International Service, providing a combination of communication theory, media production skills, and academic research techniques to equip students for professional leadership positions in international and global communication. The Ph.D. program in Communication is an accelerated, interdisciplinary curriculum designed around the intersections of media, technology, and democracy.

Notable alumni

Academic Centers

American University Center for Social Media

CSM studies ways to use media as tools for public knowledge and action. It focuses on social documentary films and on the public media environment. In addition to hosting film festivals, conferences and working groups, it maintains a website that serves as a clearing house of resources for filmmakers, activists and scholars.

Investigative Reporting Workshop

The Investigative Reporting Workshop undertakes investigative reporting projects for multimedia publication or broadcast in collaboration with others, and will serve as a laboratory “incubator” to develop new models and techniques for conducting and delivering investigative journalism.

Center for Environmental Filmmaking

The Center, led by Professor Chris Palmer, trains film makers to create films and new media that are effective at producing conservation and that are entertaining and ethically sound.

Foreign Correspondence Network

Photojournalist, documentary filmmaker, artist-in-residence and Emmy winner Bill Gentile - who has covered conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan and Nicaragua connects SOC alumni working in more than 30 countries.

Current

The university School of Communication is the steward of Takoma Park, Maryland-based newspaper "Current" and its web site Current.org. "Current" has published continuously since 1982 under the stewardship of WNET.

Facilities

Media Production Center

The Media Production Center is a digital HD production facility, containing thirteen digital video editing suites, three digital radio production suites, two multi-format AV-enabled classrooms, a computer based newsroom featuring Associated Press' ENPS, a 40'x40' three-camera television studio and a media production equipment checkout room.[2]

Ed Bliss Broadcast Newsroom

The Ed Bliss Broadcast Newsroom is configured with the Electronic News Production Service, a newswire application, and 19 networked Windows computers.

Digital Video Editing Suites

The Mac based Digital Video Editing Suites are equipped with Final Cut Pro Studio, Avid Media Composer, Sony HDV VTR and digital media production applications.

Radio Editing Suites

The Radio Editing Suites are equipped with a Mac based audit workstation running Adobe Audition, professional quality microphones, digital and analog playback machines and a professional radio mixing board.

Media Production Equipment Checkout Room

The Equipment Checkout Room offers professional level film and video, sound and lighting equipment packages.

Photography Lab

The Photography Lab gives students access to cameras, from 35mm SLR film to large format cameras. The photography facilities also include a darkroom with 15 enlargers to produce film based prints as well as a Mac based digital advanced imaging lab.[3]

McKinley Hall renovation

McKinley is the new home of the American University School of Communication. The renovated McKinley Building includes a Media Innovation Lab, the 145-seat Malsi Doyle and Michael Forman Theater, 10 specialized classrooms, multi-purpose learning spaces, office and work space for approximately 100 faculty and staff, and six computer labs supporting digital imaging, online content creation, motion graphics, multichannel audio, and full HD video editing. and a rooftop terrace.[4]

Other programs

Discover the World of Communication

SOC's summer program for high school students interested in learning more about communication and journalism.

Classroom in the Wild

The Center for Environmental Filmmaking's runs outdoor workshops around the world, including Florida, the Chesapeake Bay, Alaska, and Costa Rica. Students camp out and learn how to meet the sometimes extreme challenges of natural history field production, including how to prepare and organize a shoot, use filmmaking equipment, record sound, and shoot footage to make a compelling and engaging story—all with minimal environmental impact.

External links

Notes