Topic Pathways

Need help planning out your degree or finding courses in the area of Communication Studies that you're most interested in? Welcome to the School of Communication's topic pathways!

These are not formal streams or concentrations, but organized clusters of courses that are meant to support you in a specific area of study. To fully understand degree requirements, please book an appointment with one of our advisors. Book an advising appointment here. 

Public Communication, News and Audiences

What is a civic society? What are the cornerstones of journalism and an informed public? What is community media? This set of courses will help you understand contemporary trends such as disinformation, online hate, social media metrics, and how media shape public opinion and consent in society. 

Skills and Expertise You'll Gain:

  • Principles of journalistic writing
  • News briefs
  • Media strategy
  • Audience opinion research
  • Content analysis of news 
  • Globalization and development

Media, Production and Literacy

This set of courses will help you understand the history of media conventions, documentary styles, basics of storytelling, and help you become a "better" creator. You'll learn the history as well as conventions for critical media design by actually making, producing, editing and designing media, including film, video, podcasts, audio, etc.

Skills and expertise you'll gain: 

  • Field recording and audio editing
  • Video recording and editing
  • Interviewing skills
  • Scripting and storyboarding
  • Documentary production
  • Podcast creation

Media, Intersectionality and Popular Culture

You will build a vocabulary for critical analysis of media representation; study how different social groups empower themselves through media, with a focus on intersectional, feminist, and critical race perspectives. You need these concepts to understand DEI organizational structures, and to produce media for social change.

Skills and Expertise You'll Gain: 

  • Media literacy for critical social issues
  • Qualitative methods, analysis and argumentation
  • Digital publishing
  • Critical literacy in decolonization, anti-racism, and community mobilization

Technology and Society

You will learn how technologies structure society and culture; what is the future of AI; what are the ethical considerations of algorithms; what are the political economies of data infrastructure. How do power relations affect digital policy-making and influence contemporary media landscapes?

Skills and Expertise You'll Gain: 

  • Policy research and writing
  • Policy briefs
  • Argumentative and analytical writing 
  • Strategic communication and campaign design
  • Knowledge translation
  • Portfolio development