Program’s Aims and Learning Outcomes
Program’s Aims and Learning Outcomes
Knowledge and Skills: Two Sides of a Coin
The Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree offered by the Faculty of Mass Communication and Fine Arts is a dynamic program delivered by well-qualified and supportive academic and teaching team. You will acquire and develop critical and analytical skills to enable you to evaluate your communication and media practices and their forms of influence as well as to have a better understanding of the communication and media industry, its dynamics, products, and audiences.
You will be able to create your own media products on our range of media pre-production, production and post-production courses offered in the major and technical electives, using our quality Integrated Multimedia Production Center (including studios).
All students will have an opportunity to take a minimum of two major courses related to one or a combination of media production phases, depending on the major selected, as well as on a range of other core and technical electives to support and develop their media skills.
When you graduate with a degree in one of the MCFA’s programs of study, you will be able to understand and evaluate the media industries in their social, economic, cultural and professional environments; you will be able to engage with key concepts and theoretical frameworks and will have a more sophisticated understanding of the mediated world; and you will also become competent ethically and responsibly in the mass communication and media-related practices in a particular working environment.
Any of the degrees on offer by the Faculty enables you to develop good teamwork and interpersonal skills. Moreover, it enables you to have a capacity of reflective practice that induces productive engagement with the real world events.
The combination of knowledge and organizational skills will inevitably equip students with indispensable contemporaneous tools and methods for a range of jobs in the culture industries or for continued graduate studies.