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Master of Science in Information and Communication Sciences
An ICT company may have plenty of employees with technical background—what the company really needs is someone who can blend that technological understanding with management skills and analytical, problem-solving insight. An information and communication sciences degree can help you step up a few rungs on an exciting but crowded career ladder.
The Center for Information and Communication Sciences (CICS) offers a 38-credit program designed to be completed in about a year. It includes core course work that all students must take, along with courses in research methodology, management, development, and a series of electivesthat meet each student’s particular area of emphasis.
It’s a flexible program that takes into account both your goals and your experiences—faculty members will help you design the degree that best fits your needs.
When you complete your degree, you should be able to:
- apply your broad, new knowledge of human information and communication to solve organizational problems
- work effectively with voice, data, video, and imaging technologies in business, government, health care, or education
- develop integrated information systems and design networks
- solve a wide range of information-related problems, such as disaster recovery planning, delivering entertainment to the home, and managing information/communication problems in large organizations
What Can I Do with this Degree?
Here’s the good news: CICS alumni indicate that they’ve achieved starting salaries that typically are more than $50,000 and sometimes as high as $80,000.
Whatever course they have pursued, they’ve entered the field not only with relevant course work under their belts but also valuable experience, thanks in part to the resources available within the communications complex that houses CICS. Our program has been designed specifically for the kinds of teaching and applied research and development pertinent to the Information Age—with electronic classrooms, well-equipped labs, and links to the campus and the world through high-tech voice, data, and video networks.
Our program is not just a classroom building, but a living laboratory for studying the communications world into which you will be heading.
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