Communication

In this major, you will explore the fundamental principles of how media shape the ways human beings relate to one another. With a strong digital focus, this major exposes you to the inner workings of the media, and teaches you to look beneath the surface to understand how media change is connected to broader cultural, political, and socio-economic changes.

In the first year, you will take gateway units providing introductory approaches to media and communication studies, and learn about the social impacts of past and present media technologies. During second year, you will gain a grasp of the concepts and theories needed to research and analyse media change. In final year, you will study the key debates shaping media policies across the world, and undertake a research project to understand the intricate workings of social media platforms. As a communication graduate, you can expect to have gained the skills to think critically about media and society, to have mastered the management and execution of research projects in groups and individually, and to have a firm grasp of how to use a range of media forms, including films, photographs, websites, essays and reports, and oral presentations, for successful public communication.

Unit highlight:

Digital Media Policy and Governance

In this unit, you will be introduced to recent debates on digital media policies and governance. Through discussion and examination of a succession of case studies of specific digital technologies’ (e.g., social media platforms, AI) effects within specific geographical contexts (e.g., SEA, EU) you will learn about the academic debates on the role and effects of digital media in society, as well as concrete regulatory debates and policy proposals. Each case study will introduce academic concepts and theories from communications, political science, and science & technology studies to provide a broad, interdisciplinary view on digital media in today’s societies, and on the institutions, standards, and practices that regulate, govern, and intervene.

Victor Thong Weng Hong

Bachelor of Communication (2016)

"Studying communication definitely guided me in addressing practical, real-world problems. Instinctively, things made a lot more sense and the classroom theories reinforced my understanding of what I saw.”

Communication prepares you for a potential career in:

Corporate communications, marketing and PR industries, advertising, consulting, media management, policy and programming, writing and journalism, and many other dynamic fields.