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7.2.4 Detección de PYVV por RT-PCR y qPCR

relations campaigns, designing brochures, newsletters, and press releases. Pass/ Fail. May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits.

105. TELEVISION EXPERIENTIAL COMPONENT 1 cr. Prerequisite:

permission of instructor. Effective participation in preparation and production of campus cable news program. Attendance at productions required. Pass/Fail. May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits. Highly recommended for students in the Digital Media concentration but does not fulfill requirements for the major or minor.

106. THEATRE EXPERIENTIAL COMPONENT 1 cr . Prerequisite:

permission of instructor. Credit for effective participation in theatre productions; set construction, technical theatre, acting, backstage crew support. Participation in weekend and evening rehearsals required; attendance mandatory at all required rehearsals. Pass/Fail. May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits.

110. RADIO BOOT CAMP 1 cr. Prerequisite: permission of instructor.

Operations, programming, and on-air performance in an FCC-licensed broadcast radio station. Emphasis on learning the fundamental aspects of radio station organization and operation as well as developing a framework for engaging in on-microphone performance. WJCU-FM, the university’s Class A NCE FM radio station, will provide the facilities and context for this course.

111. IMPROVISATION 1 cr. Prepares students to concentrate and to speak

112. BASIC PHOTOGRAPHY FOR THE DIGITAL AGE 1 cr. A condensed

photographic course for learning elemental skills of visual communication, using digital cameras, smart phones, and/or electronic tablets, and applying computer processing for Web postings. Ethics involved in photo choice, processing, and placement; issues of photo manipulation, fairness, diversity, privacy, and copyright for Web/print stories.

113. PHOTOSHOP 1 cr. Basic photo editing principles and journalism practices.

Introduction to the Photoshop interface, and essentials for editing photos. Cropping, color correction, photo design, and photo editing ethics.

*Note: The one and two-credit courses complete elective hours toward graduation

but do not fulfill major requirements.

125. SPEECH COMMUNICATION 3 cr. The Oral Foundation competency

course for the University. Features the principles of oral communication, applying communication theory to the preparation and delivery of speeches in informative, argumentative, and persuasive settings with appropriate technology. Uses audience analysis and adaptation to foster development of communication competence, critical analysis, and aesthetic appreciation, all within an ethical framework.

130. AUDIENCE MATTERS 3 cr. In communication, the audience matters because

all effective communication is tailored to an audience. The audience also encompasses different dimensions, conceptions, and uses of any individual or group who receives a message. Introduction to a wide range of audience matters, including how communicators analyze, target, develop, empower, commodify, ignore, and survey audiences; also, how audiences receive, interpret, create, and co-create messages.

140. COMMUNICATION, TECHNOLOGY, & SOCIETY 3 cr. New and

emerging communication technologies and their influence on our culture and relationships. Primary focus on digital and mobile technologies and practices. Examination of ways that new media influence existing media and institutions, interpersonal relationships, and individuals. Examination of digital platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, Wikipedia, Twitter, eBay, Flickr, and Second Life and the ways they are reshaping everyday lives and relationships.

150. WRITING DOCUMENTARIES 1 cr. Skills include how to research a story,

outline an idea, develop a treatment, structure a documentary, create a shot sheet, and write a shooting script. Does not fulfill requirements for the major.

151. PLAYWRITING 2 cr. Concepts of dramatic structure in playwriting

and major elements that go into a dramatic work for the theater. Analysis and application of theatre production methodologies in writing plays. Does not fulfill requirements for the major.

152. WRITING TV DRAMAS AND COMEDIES 2 cr. Explanation of the

process of writing drama and comedy for television. Close analysis of appropriate text and series episodes; development of full-length drama or comedy. Does not fulfill requirements for the major.

160. INTERVIEWING SKILLS 1 cr. Development of ability to manage

interviews in employment and persuasive/sales settings using application/practice in interview settings .

161. CONFLICT NEGOTIATION 1 cr. Tools individuals and groups can use to

manage conflict in constructive ways .

170. SOCIAL MEDIA ANALYTICS 3 cr. Understanding the trends, dynamics,

and networking patterns among social media users . Addresses data gathering, analytics, visualization, and interpretation techniques to track the diffusion of information, identify trends in messages, reveal influential users, and understand user sentiment surrounding topics on social media networks .

198. INTERNSHIP NONCREDIT/TRANSCRIPT NOTATION 0 cr.

Prerequisite: instructor permission . Open to COMM majors who want their internship recognized but do not need/want credit . Creates a supervised learning experience . Noted on transcript .

205. PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION 3 cr. Prerequisites: COMM 125,

COMM 130, and COMM 140 . Development of communication skills required for professional communicators across a broad set of communication media, including individual and team presentations, written texts, and digital interactions . Primary focus is on strategic thinking combined with writing that produces effective messages aimed at different audiences .

206. COMMUNICATION RESEARCH METHODS 3 cr. Prerequisite: COMM

130 . Increases knowledge and understanding of communication as an academic discipline . Focus on developing hypotheses, applying qualitative and quantitative research methods, developing competency in identifying and critically analyzing useful resources, and creating clear and concise written and oral arguments .

208. INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION 3 cr. How people establish,

maintain, and alter relationships with friends, strangers, work associates, and family members in professional, personal, and cross-cultural contexts . Discussion and application to professional and personal settings of theories of interpersonal communication, the role of self-awareness and culture, perception, diversity, verbal and nonverbal messages, listening, conflict, power, and ethics in relationships .

210. ARGUMENTATION AND ADVOCACY 3 cr. Prerequisite: COMM 125

or CO 100 . How to be responsible and effective advocates for ideas, causes, and policies . Cultivates respect for the vital role of evidence in a world too often factually challenged .

220. INTRODUCTION TO THEATRE 3 cr. Why has theatre as an artistic live

performance survived in the face of censorship, disapproval, and competition from technology? An examination of theatre’s place in human history, its elements, and milestones in artistic movements .