1993-1994 Academic Catalog
Students anticipating careers in some type of vocational ministry often choose a major in communication arts to develop their public speaking skills. The Communication Arts Department offers the following programs of study: Broadcasting, with specializations in: Management/Sales Production Video media production Communication arts, with specializations in: General communications Organizational communications Platform arts communications Multimedia Technologies ...:......°'"""'""" education Broadcasting Communication arts Organizational communications Platform arts s Graduate and professional schools welcome Cedarville College graduates. Careers pursued by graduates include: actor attorney broadcast programmer college professor investment consultant journalist manager minister multimedia technology personnel manager politician producer public relations salesman station manager teacher is intercollegiate speech competition. Areas of competition include public speaking, oral interpretation, limited preparation events, and Lincoln– Douglas debate. (Please refer to the Honors speech course definition: COM-112.) Cedarville competes regularly with The Ohio State University, Miami Univer~ity '. B~ll State University, and other nationally ranked mst1tut10ns. For the past four years, Cedarville has won the Ohio State Forensics Championship. Qualified students from all majors may contact Dr. David Robey, Director of Forensics, for audition information. Limited scholarships are available. The Cedarville College Team successfully competes with colleges and universities the eastern United States. Cedarville's debaters are defending state champions, and are competitively ranked within the East Central region. Students with the competitive edge who plan to pursue leadership careers such as the ministry, law, education, business, or politics are encouraged to contact the debate coach, Deborah Haffey. Communication arts majors interested in organiza– tional communication and human resources are encour– aged to join the Cedarville College Chapter of the Society for Human Management (SHRM). SHRM members investigate the field of human re– sources by developing their own human resource management programming and activities and by attend– ing other professional human resource meetings and conferences. Activities include, but are not limited to dinner meetings, plant tours, shadow days, and profes– sional seminars and conferences.
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