Please note:
To view the Summer 2025 Academic Calendar, go to www.sfu.ca/students/calendar/2025/summer.html.
Communication Courses
CMNS 110 - Introduction to Communication Studies (3)
An introduction to selected theories about human communication. This course is required for a major, honours or minor in communication. Breadth-Social Sciences.
CMNS 120W - Creativity and Communication Across Media (3)
Introduces students to the creative practice of multimodal writing and content creation for communication and media studies. Topics may include: creativity and idea generation; media literacy in digital environments; writing conventions for various platforms and genres; analytical writing and scholarly argumentation; audio-visual production for popular audiences. Writing.
CMNS 130 - Communication and Social Change (3)
An introduction to the forms, theories and institutions of communication as they relate to broader social change, with a focus on the political, economic and regulatory shifts characterizing Canadian and transnational media systems. This course is required for a major, honours or minor in communication.
CMNS 200 - STT-Professional and Strategic Communication (4)
Students will learn effective and strategic communication principles, including crafting persuasive messages, analyzing audiences, and applying ethical communication strategies. The course covers practical skills like creating (social) media strategies, press kits, and internal communication strategies, while teaching students to ethically integrate AI tools into communication workflows, preparing them for various professional and organizational settings.
CMNS 201W - Empirical Communication Research Methods (4)
An introduction to empirical research methods in diverse traditions of communication enquiry. Some methods recognize communication as everyday interactions; others analyze communication as a process; still others blend traditional scientific empiricism with analytical and critical methods derived from the arts and humanities. Topics include: ethics, paradigms, conceptualizing and operationalizing research, sampling, interviews, surveys, unobtrusive observation, content analysis, and the role of statistics in communication research. Students with credit for CMNS 201 or CMNS 260 may not take this course for further credit. Writing/Quantitative.
CMNS 202 - Design and Method in Qualitative Communication Research (4)
An introduction to interpretive approaches in communication inquiry. Topics include ethics, paradigms, conceptualizing the research process, documentary research, historical methods, discourse or textual analysis, ethnographic research, and performative research. Prerequisite: CMNS 110 with a minimum grade of C-. Students with credit for CMNS 262 may not take CMNS 202 for further credit.
CMNS 210 - Media History (3)
Explores the social and cultural histories of media technologies and techniques for doing historical analyses of media. Topics include: communication over a distance; technologies of inscription; electric media; broadcasting; wireless; cinema; and early computing. Prerequisite: CMNS 110 or 130, with a minimum grade of C-.
CMNS 215 - Media and Identity (3)
Media and identity centers the idea of "social position" and that media are created and interpreted from and through specific perspectives and experiences of the world. Media and public discourse are shaped through various axes of social position that include gender, race, sexuality, ability, nationality, and other markers of identity.
CMNS 221 - Media and Popular Cultures (3)
Focuses on communication for social change; historical and contemporary perspectives in consumer culture; technology, media and popular culture; media and identity; and communication as public education. Prerequisite: CMNS 110 or 130, with a minimum grade of C-.
CMNS 226 - Digital Storytelling for Public Engagement (4)
Storytelling is foundational for media communication today. We connect and engage with media stories almost constantly and through them we understand our world and ourselves. Students learn the importance of storytelling to engage audiences through the practice of media production in conjunction with the history and theories of storytelling. Media literacy is cultivated through the reading and writing of stories, which is done by developing audio and video production and analysis skills in assignments that demonstrate public communication and engagement.
CMNS 230 - The Cultural Industries in Canada: Global Context (3)
What do we mean when we talk about the 'cultural industries' today? This course explores the business structure and economics of the cultural sectors, the regulatory and policy frameworks, and their social and cultural contexts. Students are encouraged to develop, compare and contrast at least two sectors from the audio, print or visual industries. While the primary focus is on the Canadian case, students will be encouraged to look at other countries. Overriding themes explore the following: relationships between public and private sectors; independent and commercial creators; rights of creators versus distributors; specialty and general media; Indigenous and global contents. Prerequisite: CMNS 130 with a minimum grade of C-.
CMNS 235 - Digital Democracies (3)
Introduces students to the study of the relationship between public communication, information media practices and structures, and democracy. Examines the role of media and communication in existing and emerging democratic contexts, including print and electronic journalism, alternative media, public spheres, and the challenges of constructing and maintaining a democratic media and communication environment in Canadian and global contexts. Prerequisite: Six CMNS units with a minimum grade of C-, including CMNS 130.
CMNS 240 - The Political Economy of Communication (3)
Examination of the political and economic processes that have generated the policies and structures of mass media, telecommunications and related industries; the relationship between the dichotomies of state and market, citizen and consumer, capitalism and democracy, global and local, and sovereignty and globalization in media industries and policies; overview of influences on State and international policies towards the media.
CMNS 253W - Introduction to Technology and Society (3)
An introduction to new communication/information technologies, seen as new media of communication: the technologies, their uses, and the social issues arising from them. Students with credit for CMNS 253 may not take this course for further credit. Writing.
CMNS 258 - Sound Across Media (4)
An introduction to audio representation technology and a survey of the history of major sound-based media, including a discussion of the way sound design conventions have developed over time. Students both analyze sound in media and create audio-based applied projects. Specific techniques of field recording, interviewing, editing, sound processing, multi-tracking, and basic digital audio techniques will be explored using the school's studio facilities. Breadth-Humanities/Social Sciences.
CMNS 286 - Selected Topics (3)
Analysis of a particular topic in the general area of communication. This course can be repeated for credit up to a maximum of three times, if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Nine CMNS units with a minimum grade of C-.
CMNS 287 - Selected Topics (3)
Analysis of a particular topic in the general area of communication. This course can be repeated for credit up to a maximum of three times, if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Nine CMNS units with a minimum grade of C-.
CMNS 304W - Communication in Everyday Life (4)
An examination of a range of theories of everyday language focused on specific forms of discursive practice, including gossip, humour, religion, and sarcasm. Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Writing.
CMNS 311 - Topics in Communication and Social Justice (4)
Topics pertain to issues of inequality, resistance and activism with a focus on entanglements with media and communication. Explores how relations of power are shaped and contested through media and communication. Topics include: racial justice, environmental policies, globalization, social activism, and labour. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 312 - Topics in Communication Policy and Governance (4)
Topics cover a range of policy and governance concerns and processes pertaining to communication, media, and/or culture in national and international contexts. Topics vary and include: content regulation, copyright, media institutions, media advocacy, and different perspectives to study these issues. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 313 - Topics in Data and Society (4)
Topics in the social, political, and cultural aspects of data and datafication. Explores social and philosophical implications of gathering, interpreting, and managing data. Topics include: data protection, visualization or sonification, data activism, big data, algorithmic bias and decision making, AI harms, big data, and the political economy of data. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 314 - Topics in Media Production and Aesthetics (4)
Topics on the cultural production of acoustic, visual, and/or multimodal communication. Explores cultural contexts of media production, media artifacts, media perceptions, and alternative media practices. Topics include: advertising, film, gaming, radio, television, and questions of representation in media professions. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 315 - Topics in Media, Difference, and Intersectional Identities (4)
Focus on how media play a role in the representation, construction, and circulation of difference and identities by drawing from feminist theories, cultural studies and/or political economy to critique dominant conceptions. Topics may include how difference and identities intersect with: gaming, film, and technology. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Breadth-Humanities.
CMNS 316 - Topics in Popular Cultures and Public Communication (4)
Topics on public and popular cultures with a focus on social, political, and cultural dynamics. Explores audiences, publics, and institutions at a global, national, and/or local level. Topics vary and may address themes like: news, music, public media, advertising, sports, childhood, youth cultures, art, and everyday life. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 353 - Topics in Science, Technology and Society (4)
Examination of the emergence and shaping of information and communication technologies and science in the digital age. Explores new media and social change between everyday life, social institutions, and various enterprises. Emphasis is placed on social context and relations of power. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 362 - Strategic Communication Research Design and Planning (4)
Explores advanced research design and applied methodologies for analyzing communication practices and strategies within socio-economic, political, and cultural contexts. Emphasizing research management, students will develop skills in team collaboration, data collection and analysis, report writing, and presentation. Prerequisite: 17 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 386 - Special Topics in Communication (4)
Intensive analysis of a particular topic in the general area of communication. This course can be repeated for credit up to a maximum of three times, if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Depends on topic, published before enrollment.
CMNS 395 - Communication Practicum I (3)
First term of work experience for students in the co-operative education program. Units from this course do not count towards the units required for an SFU degree. Graded as pass/fail (P/F). Prerequisite: Acceptance in the co-operative education program.
CMNS 396 - Communication Practicum II (3)
The second term of work experience in the School of Communication's Co-operative Education Program. Units from this course do not count towards the units required for an SFU degree. Graded as pass/fail (P/F). Prerequisite: CMNS 395.
CMNS 410 - Media, Ideology, and Power (4)
An advanced seminar which explores intersections between communications, media studies and social theory through an in-depth history of the concept of ideology. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 424 - Colonialism, Culture and Identity (4)
Examines why identity is such an important issue for contemporary diasporic communities and former colonies. Introduces students to critiques of representations that construct "racialized" groups as inferior, primitive threats to civilization and their constitution of passive, disciplined subjects. Primarily focuses on innovative cultural strategies developed in Indigenous people, the Black diaspora, Asian/Canadian communities and survivors of the Jewish Holocaust to create ethical communities and critique the impact of colonial violence on contemporary societies. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 425 - Applied Communication for Social Issues (4)
An advanced seminar in applied communication that focuses on the research and strategic design of media messages, campaigns and programs for public awareness, education, and social change. This course involves the application of theories and approaches in critical media analysis to the tasks of media design and media use for public understanding, engagement and participation around social issues. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 426 - Video Design for Social Communication (4)
This capstone-style workshop examines the growing role that video is playing in a variety of public relations, industrial, advocacy and educational contexts. Students will work to develop a documentary video project for a real issue of social change using advanced video design and production techniques. The emphasis of this course is on issues of communication design in relation to the goals and values in specific communication forums. Prerequisite: CMNS 226 and 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 427 - Children and Youth Media Cultures (4)
Examines the nature, meaning and pedagogical implications of children’s screen use, youth media making cultures, including their relationship to the development of a digitally literate citizenry. These developments are examined with a view to how they shape young people's lives. Through self-directed projects students will explore select issues concerning children’s media, advertising to children, screen time practices, youth media production, ESRB ratings globally, as well as global digital policy on children’s digital literacy and media use. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 428 - Media Analysis Project Group (4)
An advanced workshop in media analysis focused on applied research. This course can be repeated for credit up to a maximum of three times, if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Two upper division CMNS courses with a minimum grade of C- and permission of the instructor.
CMNS 431 - News Research and Analysis (4)
Applied research seminar using traditional or digital techniques of textual and contextual analysis of news media and explore patterns of coverage and omission. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 432 - Media, Political Messaging, and Persuasion (4)
Examines how media shapes political discourse, public opinion, and persuasion strategies. Topics include media influence, political messaging tactics, and public speaking for advocacy. Students will learn to craft persuasive opinion pieces, analyze media rhetoric and political propaganda, and develop effective communication skills for political and social impact. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Students with credit for CMNS 486 under this topic may not take this course for further credit.
CMNS 433 - Issues in Communication and Cultural Policy (4)
Advanced seminar on current issues in communication policy. Topics will be selected from among current policy issues in local, national and international aspects of broadcasting, the cultural industries, the arts and heritage. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 437 - Media Democratization: From Critique to Transformation (4)
An advanced seminar on the normative debates, social bases, and strategic potential for media democratization in the context of economically developed liberal democracies like Canada and the United States. This course complements other courses which critically examine state communication policies and the political economy and allegedly ideological character of corporate media. Here, we focus on campaigns and movements in civil society to define and build alternative communicative forms based on equality, democratic participation and/or human rights. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Students with credit for CMNS 428 or 487 under the same title may not take this course for further credit.
CMNS 440 - Labour, Communication and the Media (4)
Explores the relationship between labour, communication, and the media, including: working conditions in the media and communication industries; media representations of workers and workplaces; and uses of media and communication technologies by workers and their organizations. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Students with credit for CMNS 488 with the topic "Labour and CMNS" may not take this course for further credit.
CMNS 443 - Asian Media and Popular Culture (4)
Offers a basis for understanding different Asian media systems in concrete historical, political and socio-economic contexts. Introduces students to a range of media and popular culture examples in a vast and extremely diverse region that is undergoing a period of rapid political, economic, social and cultural transformation. Engages students in self-directed work using case studies of media, political economy and popular culture in specific countries in the region. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 446 - Communication, Science and Technology (4)
Explores the relationship between power, politics, and science; investigates stakeholders such as scientists, entrepreneurs, technologists, activists, policy-makers and their world-wide institutional contexts; compares global flows of science and technology through governmental, non-government, and transnational organizations; examines representations of science and technology in media systems and international development programs. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 452 - Race and the Media (4)
Examines the contemporary construction and maintenance of race and ethnicity, through movies, music, and the Internet. Provides grounding in scholarship on media, race, ethnicity, and identity. Explores the historical role of entertainment in racialization. Investigates contemporary issues and forms of media and race. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Students who have taken CMNS 486 with subtitle "Race and the Media" cannot take this course for further credit.
CMNS 453 - Advanced Topics in Technology and Society (4)
Advanced seminar to discuss issues in the interplay between contemporary society and new computer/communication technologies, including generative AI, big data, digital surveillance, the quantified self, and more. The seminar will offer students the chance to engage with theories of technology and society, as well as public policy that concerns digital technology and AI. This course can be repeated twice for credit if the topics are different (up to a maximum of three times). Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 455W - Feminist Approaches to Science and Technology (4)
Topics include the processes through which gendering of technologies takes place; information and communication technologies (ICTs), gender and public and private spheres; issues related to labour of women and gender minorities in tech sectors; and gender and the use of ICTs in relation to health; as well as the contributions which the study of gender and ICTs have made to theoretical debates within science, technology and society studies. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Students with credit for CMNS 455 may not take this course for further credit. Writing.
CMNS 457 - Migration and Media (4)
Students will explore how migration, the mass movement of human populations, is deeply intertwined with capitalist uneven development and globalization, with a special focus on the relationship between migration and media, including mainstream media, social media, and digital technologies. Prerequisite: 26 CMNS units with a minimum grade of C- or 60 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00. Students with credit for CMNS 487 under the title "Migration and Media" may not take this course for further credit.
CMNS 458 - Advanced Topics in Sound, Media and Culture (4)
An advanced workshop in applied sound design, context-based composition, and theoretical exploration of cultural sound studies. Students will engage with self-directed literature review and research creation using advanced sound design techniques. This course can be repeated for credit once, if the topic studied is different. Prerequisite: CMNS 258 and two upper division CMNS courses with a minimum grade of C- or 45 units with a minimum CGPA of 2.00.
CMNS 479 - Directed Study (1)
Independent research and reading on topics selected in consultation with the supervising instructor. No more than ten units of Directed Study may be taken. May repeat for credit if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Two upper division CMNS courses with a minimum grade of C- and permission of the instructor.
CMNS 480 - Directed Study (2)
Independent research and reading on topics selected in consultation with the supervising instructor. No more than ten units of Directed Study may be taken. May repeat for credit if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Two upper division CMNS courses with a minimum grade of C- and consent of instructor.
CMNS 481 - Directed Study (3)
Independent research and reading on topics selected in consultation with the supervising instructor. No more than ten units of Directed Study may be taken. May repeat for credit if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Two upper division CMNS courses with a minimum grade of C- and consent of instructor.
CMNS 486 - Special Topics in Communication (4)
Intensive analysis of a particular topic in the general area of communication and/or attention to the work of a particular writer or school of thought. This course can be repeated for credit up to a maximum of three times, if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Depends on topic; published before enrollment.
CMNS 487 - Special Topics in Communication (4)
Intensive analysis of a particular topic in communication and/or attention to the work of a particular writer or school of thought. This course can be repeated for credit up to a maximum of three times, if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Depends on topic; published before enrollment.
CMNS 488 - Selected Topics in Communication (4)
Intensive analysis of a particular topic in the general area of communication. This course can be repeated for credit up to a maximum of three times, if topic studied is different. Prerequisite: Depends on topic; published before enrollment.
CMNS 494 - Communication Practicum III (3)
The third term of work experience for students in the School of Communication's Co-operative Education Program. Units from this course do not count towards the units required for an SFU degree. Graded as pass/fail (P/F). Prerequisite: CMNS 396.
CMNS 495 - Communication Practicum IV (3)
The fourth term of work experience for students in the School of Communication's Co-operative Education Program. Units from this course do not count towards the Units required for an SFU degree. Graded as pass/fail (P/F). Prerequisite: CMNS 494.
CMNS 496 - Communication Practicum V (3)
An optional term of work experience for students in the School of Communication Co-operative Education Program. Units from this course do not count towards the units required for an SFU degree. Graded as pass/fail (P/F). This course may be repeated for additive credit. Prerequisite: CMNS 495.
CMNS 497 - Honours Research Proposal (4)
Preparation for honours research project, including literature review, ethics approval (if necessary), and presentation of work in progress at end of term. Minimum grade of B is required in order to continue in CMNS honours program, and take CMNS 498 in a future term. Prerequisite: Students accepted into honours program only.
CMNS 498 - Honours Research Project (6)
Intensive work in a particular topic in the general field of communication. Involves an extensive individual research project under the direct supervision of at least one CMNS faculty member, who will provide guidance and critical feedback as necessary. Presentation of completed project at end of term. Prerequisite: Successful completion of CMNS 497 with grade of B or higher.
CMNS 800 - Contemporary Approaches in Communication Studies (5)
This course surveys current interdisciplinary perspectives in communication studies and theory. It is normally offered in the fall term, and expected in the first year of graduate study.
CMNS 801 - Design and Methodology in Communication Research (5)
A survey course which examines the problems, methods and theoretical assumptions in communication research using case studies of research design and methods. Students may design a research project and conduct a small pilot study in a selected area. Normally offered in the spring term and expected in the first year of graduate study.
CMNS 802 - History of Communication Theory (5)
A survey of classic works, issues and debates in communication theory.
CMNS 804 - Seminar in Advanced Communication Theory (5)
CMNS 815 - Social Construction of Communication Technologies (5)
A study of the social theory of information technologies, examining issues affecting computer-mediated communication.
CMNS 820 - Media, Democratic Communication and the Concept of the Public (5)
This course examines and evaluates the media (such as journalism, film, community media, or digital media) as fields of political and cultural practices, in relation to debates, concepts and models of the public sphere, democratic communication, and alternative media practices.
CMNS 824 - Colonialism, Culture and Identity (5)
A study of colonialism, culture, and identity with a focus on the strategies used by diasporic communities and (neo)colonial subjects to address the impact of colonial violence as well as create ethical communities. Historical and contemporary case studies will be examined. Students who took CMNS 855 in Term 1071 may not take this course for further credit.
CMNS 830 - Media & Cultural Studies (5)
Examines current debates in media and cultural studies, including hegemony, biopower, affect, subjectivity, cultures of capitalism and cultures of resistance.
CMNS 835 - Communication and Cultural Policies, Power and Governance (5)
The governance of communication and culture in Canada and globally. Issues in and approaches to communication and cultural policies as a field of international scholarly inquiry in cultural and communication studies.
CMNS 840 - Political Economy of Communications (5)
A study of the political, economic and social process that produces the structure and policies of mass media, and of telecommunication agencies in their historical setting.
CMNS 844 - Communication and Global Power Shifts (5)
This course examines the mutually constitutive relationship between rapidly transforming global communication systems and shifting structures of global political economic and cultural power. Competing claims of global power shifts - between the West and the Rest, between labour and capital, and between established institutions and networked "multitudes" – are analyzed in relation to enduring patterns and emerging dynamics in global communications.
CMNS 848 - Communication and Global Social Justice (5)
Examines communicative responses to transforming global communications systems and shifting structures of global economic and cultural power. Considers how communicators and producers of knowledge and culture interact with and produce these systems and structures and the implications of these processes for social justice. Note: Priority will be given to students enrolled in Global Communication Double MA Degree program. Students with credit for CMNS 858 (Special Topics: CMNS & Global Social Justice) in Spring 2014 & Spring 2015 may not take this course for further credit.
CMNS 849 - Communication Research for Social Change (5)
Introduction to communication research methodologies utilizing an intersectional framework of analysis, with a focus on the knowledges developed with, by, and for movements for social justice.
CMNS 850 - Directed Readings and Research (5)
Pursuance of particular areas of interest related to a student's program.
CMNS 851 - Directed Studies (5)
Pursuance of interest in specific areas, including field studies related to the student's program. May include work and study in supervised professional settings.
CMNS 855 - Selected Topics in Communication Studies (5)
Specialized one-time graduate course offerings on topics related to the current research of school faculty of visiting professors.
CMNS 857 - Selected Topics in Communication Studies (5)
Specialized graduate course offering on a topic related to the current research of school faculty or visiting professor.
CMNS 858 - Selected Topics in Communication Studies (5)
Specialized graduate course offering on a topic related to the current research of school faculty or visiting professor.
CMNS 859 - Acoustic Dimensions of Communications (5)
Special topics in sound and communication studies with emphasis on specific problems in psycho-acoustics, theories of sound cognition and information processing, soundscape studies, acoustic design, community noise surveys, media analysis and related technology. Students will gain experience in designing and conducting research projects in one of these areas. Prerequisite: CMNS 359 or equivalent.
CMNS 860 - Graduate Colloquium in Global Communication (5)
Development of capstone topic and question choice, theory, method, audience, research ethics, writing and presenting. Students share emerging drafts of extended essay for critical review by course supervisor and fellow students. Enrollment restricted to Global Communication Graduate Double Degree Program MA students. Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
CMNS 880 - Directed Readings and Research (5)
Supervised enquiry in concentrated areas of specialization.
CMNS 881 - Research Practicum (5)
Work and study in an approved professional setting.
CMNS 891 - Co-op I
Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
CMNS 892 - Co-op II
Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
CMNS 893 - MA Project (6)
MA project examined by two readers. Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis. Prerequisite: CMNS 801 and one of CMNS 800, CMNS 802 or CMNS 804.
CMNS 894 - MA Extended Essay (5)
MA Extended Essay (ÓÈÎïÊÓÆµ-CUC double degree students). Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
CMNS 895 - Comprehensive Examination (6)
Examination of three areas of which one must be on the theoretical or methodological framework/procedures indicated by the proposed dissertation. S/U standing only. The exam may be retaken once in the event of unsatisfactory performance.
CMNS 896 - MA Extended Essays (6)
MA Extended Essays. Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis. Prerequisite: CMNS 801 and one of CMNS 800, 802, or 804.
CMNS 897 - MA Project (10)
MA Project. Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
CMNS 898 - MA Thesis (18)
Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
CMNS 899 - PhD Thesis (18)
Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.