MAJOR PROGRAM IN MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION STUDIES - Media Studies Stream (ARTS) - SCMAJMSS2

Undergraduate Advisor: Email: acm-pm@utsc.utoronto.ca

In the context of the complexity of the contemporary media environment and journalism’s central role in how information is disseminated, the Major in Media and Communication Studies has two streams: Media Studies and Journalism Studies. Through common core courses and courses unique to each stream, students consider the ubiquity of media in contemporary society and examine media’s cultural, political, economic, and social implications in the contexts of class, race, gender, sexuality, and other forms of diversity with a focus on national and transnational intersectional perspectives. The program also highlights three critical cluster areas that inform the critical study of media: (i) media and the arts; (ii) media and society; (iii) media and institutions. Because media is centrally placed as a means through which democratic discussion occurs in the public sphere, the development of media literacy skills is crucial in maintaining an informed citizenry and paramount to students’ individual empowerment. Students can navigate through the program flexibly across the three cluster areas, while also developing the capacity to recognize how these clusters relate to one another and the contexts in which they intersect to shape identities and communities and to influence power relations.

The Media Studies Stream offers students theoretical and analytical tools, alongside digital methods, to examine what it means to live in a highly-mediated, media-focused visual and auditory culture. Students study how media works in today’s world at local, regional and global scales; the history of media and technology and its development and use across different cultures; how media industries manufacture, manage, and circulate information; and how media form and content shape knowledge and meaning from historical, philosophical, and artistic perspectives, among many others. In studying media, students hone their media literacy skills and learn to critically evaluate the content of media and analyze its underlying ideologies and their implications within the distinct yet intersecting realms of art, society, and institutions.

While all forms of journalism are examples of media, not all media are journalistic in nature. The Journalism Studies Stream is ideal for students who are interested in studying media with a specific focus on journalism, the news media industry, as well as journalism’s form, function and meaning in a global and democratic society. It offers a comprehensive program of study and research with an emphasis on scholarly, conceptual understandings of journalism, including how journalism functions as an agent of change. It provides students a critical understanding of the role of journalism, its relationship to new technologies, and how cultures of information sharing are in the process of social change and what this means from cultural, political, economic, and social points of view. In critically studying journalism, students hone their media literacy skills to comprehend, navigate, and adapt to today’s complicated and ever-changing media environment, whether as journalists, policy advocates, or simply as informed citizens.

Guide to Course Selection
The Media Studies and Journalism Studies streams require 4.0 credits as a common core. During their first year, students in both streams should take MDSA10H3 Media Foundations, and MDSA13H3 Media Ethics. In addition to these shared courses, students in the Media Studies stream should take MDSA13H3 Media Histories. Students in the Journalism Studies stream should also take JOUA01H3 Introduction to Journalism and News Literacy I and JOUA02H3 Introduction to Journalism II.

Program Requirements
Students must complete 8.0 credits including 2.0 credits at the C- or D-level:

Core (3.5 credits)

1. Introductory Courses (1.0 credit):
MDSA10H3 Media Foundations
MDSA11H3 Media Ethics

2. 0.5 credit from the following (please note that you can enroll in a maximum of 0.5 credit from the following list):
MDSB11H3 Media and the Arts
MDSB21H3 Media and Society
MDSB31H3 Media and Institutions

3. 1.5 additional credits at MDSB-level

4. 0.5 additional credits at MDSC-level

Media Studies Stream (4.5 credits)

5. MDSA13H3 Media Histories

6. 1.5 additional credits at MDSB-level

7. 2.0 additional credits at MDSC-level including 0.5 credits from the following (please note that you can enroll in a maximum of 0.5 credit from the following list):
MDSC10H3 Advanced Studies in Media and the Arts
MDSC20H3 Advanced Studies in Media and Society
MDSC30H3 Advanced Studies in Media and Institutions

8. 0.5 credit from the following (please note that you can enroll in a maximum of 0.5 credit from the following list):
MDSD10H3 Senior Seminar: Topics in Media and Arts
MDSD20H3 Senior Seminar: Topics in Media and Society
MDSD30H3 Senior Seminar: Topics in Media and Institutions