B.S. in Communication - Advertising/Public Relations Emphasis

USA

1

What will I learn?

The communication program’s liberal arts orientation equips students for a variety of professional opportunities in communication as well as graduate study in communication, law, business administration and other areas. This program focus on advertising/public relations.

With the appropriate electives, students can prepare themselves for careers in media studies, organizational studies, public relations and advertising, journalism, visual communication and other related fields.

Students who complete the undergraduate program will:

  • Evaluate and critique abstract categories, and to use these categories in the analysis of empirical data.
  • Apply concepts of social science methodology to rigorously critique and compare empirical studies, or to construct one’s own empirical study.
  • Effectively use writing to accurately convey one’s own ideas, and to demonstrate the basic ability to think logically and critically, through one’s writing.
  • Demonstrate a basic competence in communicating ideas through oral presentations before a group of people.
  • Critique visual images with certain fundamental theoretical concepts.
  • Think of oneself within a wider social and environmental context, to thoughtfully consider one’s responsibilities to other people and to the world in which one lives, and to take appropriate and ethical actions based upon those considerations.

Which department am I in?

Henry Kendall College of Arts and Sciences

Study options

Full Time (36 hours for the major)

Tuition fees
$46,932.00 (39,59,838) per year
Start date

September 2025

Venue

Henry Kendall College of Arts and Sciences

Chapman Hall, Room 111,

800 South Tucker Drive,

TULSA,

Oklahoma,

74104, United States

Entry requirements

For international students

Graduating high school seniors or adults who have a high school diploma or GED and have never attended an accredited two or four year college should apply for admission as freshmen. High school graduates who have only attended a non-accredited post-secondary institution should follow freshman procedures. A 2.75 (C+) cumulative grade point average is recommended for consideration for admission. English requirement proficiency: Students may be exempt from this requirement if: English is the native language spoken in their country; English was the median of instruction in high school and can be verified by the school; the applicant attended a high school in the USA for at least two academic semesters; The applicant attended a college or university in the USA and enrolled in a minimum of 30 semester hours of academic credit. Students who are not exempt should have a score of 173 (computer based test), 500 (paper-based test) or 61 (internal based). Proof of English proficiency can also be met by an IELTS band score of 5.0 (with no sub score below 5.0). IELTS testing is offered by the British Council. Freshman applicants who show academic promise but whose records are inconsistent with average performance of entering students may be offered conditional admission. A student admitted conditionally is monitored by the collegiate advising office, limited in the number of credit hours for the first year of enrollment, and required to maintain a 2.0 cumulative grade point average during that time. Students admitted conditionally will be referred to the Center for Student Academic Support for academic support services.

*There may be different IELTS requirements depending on your chosen course.

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