UT AUSTIN

UNDERGRADUATE CATALOG
1998 - 2000
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1
The University
CHAPTER 2
School of Architecture
CHAPTER 3
College of Business Administration
CHAPTER 4
College of Communication
CHAPTER 5
College of Education
CHAPTER 6
College of Engineering
CHAPTER 7
College of Fine Arts
CHAPTER 8
College of Liberal Arts
CHAPTER 9
College of Natural Sciences
CHAPTER 10
School of Nursing
CHAPTER 11
College of Pharmacy
CHAPTER 12
School of Social Work
CHAPTER 13
The Faculty
Texas Common Course Numbering System
(Appendix A)
APPENDIX B
Degree and Course Abbreviations
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CHAPTER FOUR CONTENTS
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Graduation
Special Requirements of the College of Communication
All students must fulfill the
general requirements for graduation
given in chapter 1. Students in the
College of Communication must also fulfill the
following requirements.
- All University students must have a grade
point average of at least 2.00 to graduate. In the
College of Communication, a student who fails to achieve this grade point average in the
normal 120 hours may register for up to forty
additional hours in order to do so.
- The University requires that the student
complete in residence at least thirty semester
hours of the coursework counted toward the degree. In the College of Communication, these
thirty hours must include at least eighteen hours
of upper-division coursework and at least six
hours of upper-division coursework in the major.
- A candidate for a degree must be registered
in the College of Communication either in residence or in absentia the semester or
summer session the degree is to be awarded and
must apply to the dean for the degree no later
than the date specified in the official
academic calendar.
- An Air Force, Army, or Naval Reserve
Officer Training Corps student who elects the
basic and/or advanced program in air force
science, military science, or naval science will not be
approved for graduation until the student's government contract is completed or the
student is released from the ROTC.
- Each degree program is arranged to provide
for the orderly progress of the student's
coursework. A beginning student (including a transfer
student with fewer than forty-eight semester hours of transferable credit) who registers for
twelve semester hours or more must take at least
nine semester hours, in at least three courses, of
the coursework listed as prescribed work for one
of the degrees in the College of Communication. The student must continue to take at least
nine semester hours of the prescribed work each long-session semester until he or she has
completed forty-eight semester hours of credit.
The dean may adjust this rule in exceptional
circumstances, or when the student has earned
credit by examination, or when the student
registers for fewer than twelve hours in a
long-session semester.
- No student in the College of
Communication may repeat for credit a course in which he
or she has earned a grade of C or better.
The Degree Audit
Students should verify the coursework they have completed and the coursework still needed for
the degree by reviewing a degree audit at least once
each semester. The degree audit is a
computer-generated report of the student's progress in completing
degree requirements. The student may request a
printed audit in the Office of Student Affairs. He or she
may also create and review an audit on-line through
IDA, the Interactive Degree Audit system;
information about IDA is available at
http://www.utexas.edu/student/registrar/ida/.
Although the degree audit normally provides an accurate statement of requirements, the student
is responsible for knowing the requirements for
the degree as stated in a catalog under which he or
she is entitled to graduate and for registering so as
to fulfill those requirements. Because the student
is responsible for registering for the classes needed
to fulfill degree requirements, he or she should seek
an official ruling in the student affairs office before
registering if in doubt about any requirement. It
is highly recommended that the student meet once a semester with an adviser in the Office of
Student Affairs to discuss the student's degree requirements.
Applying for Graduation
To graduate, a student must be registered in
the College of Communication and must file a
graduation application in the Office of Student Affairs.
This should be done at the beginning of the student's
last semester but in no case later than the deadline
given in the official
academic calendar.
No degree will
be conferred unless the graduation application form
has been filed on time.
Degrees
Degrees Offered
In the College of Communication six
undergraduate degrees are offered: Bachelor of Science in
Advertising, Bachelor of Science in Communication
Sciences and Disorders, Bachelor of Journalism, Bachelor
of Science in Public Relations, Bachelor of Science
in Radio-Television-Film, and Bachelor of Science
in Speech. The requirements of each degree are
divided into special requirements, prescribed work, and
major requirements; these are given later in this
chapter under the heading for the degree. In addition,
the student must fulfill the
University-wide graduation requirements
given in chapter 1 and the
special requirements of the College of Communication
given above.
Writing Requirement
As part of the prescribed work for all degrees in
the college, students must complete English 306
and 316K and a three-semester-hour course taught in
the Department of English. In addition, in taking
courses to fulfill other degree requirements, students
must complete two courses certified as having a
substantial writing component. If the writing
requirement is not fulfilled by courses specified for the degree,
the two courses certified as having a substantial
writing component must either be included within the
electives or taken in addition to the minimum
number of semester hours for the degree. Courses with a
substantial writing component are identified in
the Course Schedule.
Communication and Culture Requirement
As part of the prescribed work for all degrees, students must complete three semester hours of
coursework in the College of Communication dealing with the study of communication issues concerning at least
one minority or nondominant group within the United States. Courses used to fulfill this requirement
may also be used to fulfill other degree requirements. Multicultural courses include, but are not limited to,
the following; all courses that fulfill this requirement are identified in the
Course Schedule.
Advertising 378, Topic: African Americans and the Media
Advertising 378, Topic: Advanced Issues in Multicultural Markets
Communication 316M, Communication and Ethnic Groups
Communication Sciences and Disorders 308K, Perspectives on Deafness
Communication Sciences and Disorders 360M, Communication and Deaf People
Journalism 327, Feature Writing (sections in Latino journalism)
Journalism 352, Topic 2: Community Journalism
Journalism 359, Mass Media and Minorities
Radio-Television-Film 331K, Topic 1: Cult Movies and Gender Issues
Radio-Television-Film 331K, Topic 2: Television and Theories of Gender
Radio-Television-Film 359, Topic 1: Hispanic Images and Counterimages
Radio-Television-Film 365, Topic 4: History of United States Latino Media
Radio-Television-Film 365, Topic 6: Latinos and Media
Radio-Television-Film 370, Topic: Women and Film
Speech 355K, Intercultural Communication
Speech 361K, Performance of Dramatic Literature (sections in African American literature)
Speech 364, Performance of Prose Fiction (sections in African American literature)
Speech 365K, Male-Female Communication
Speech 367, Topic 1: Language and Culture
Speech 367, Topic: Performance and Culture
Applicability of Certain Courses
Physical Activity Courses
Physical activity (PED) courses are offered by the
Department of Kinesiology and Health Education. They are counted among courses for which a
student is enrolled, and the grades are included in
the grade point average. However, these courses
may not be counted toward a degree in the College
of Communication.
ROTC Courses
No more than nine semester hours of credit for
air force science, military science, or naval science
courses may be counted toward any degree in the College
of Communication. Such coursework may be counted only as lower-division electives in degree
programs that have room for such electives, and only by
students who have completed the third and fourth
years of the ROTC program. ROTC courses may not be
substituted for any specific required course.
Concurrent Enrollment and Correspondence and Extension Courses
Credit that a University student in residence
earns simultaneously by correspondence or
extension from the University or elsewhere or in residence
at another school will not be counted toward a
degree in the College of Communication unless
specifically approved in advance by the dean. A
student in his or her final semester may not enroll
concurrently at another institution in any course that
is to be counted toward the degree. No more than
30 percent of the semester hours required for any
degree offered in the College of Communication may be taken by correspondence.
Courses Taken on the Pass/Fail Basis
A student in the College of Communication may count toward the degree up to fifteen semester
hours of coursework in elective subjects outside the
College of Communication taken on the pass/fail
basis. No course required for the degree and taken in
residence may be taken pass/fail, unless the course
is offered only on that basis. The student may also
take examinations for credit in elective subjects on
the pass/fail basis; credit earned by examination is
not counted toward the total of five courses that the
student may take on this basis. A letter grade is
mandatory for credit by examination in any course in
the student's major. If a student chooses to major in a
subject in which he or she has taken a course pass/fail, the major department decides whether
the course may be counted toward the student's
major requirements. Complete rules on registration on
the pass/fail basis are given in
General Information.
Other Courses
No more than twelve semester hours of Bible
courses may be counted toward a degree.
Music 101G may not be counted toward any degree offered in the College of Communication.
Courses for Teacher Preparation
Many students seek to prepare themselves for
teaching within the framework of the degrees in the
College of Communication. Information about
teacher certification is available from the teacher
certification officer in the College of Education or from
the Texas Education Agency.
The University operates the Education Placement Service as a liaison between students and
prospective employers. All candidates for teacher
certification must register with the Education
Placement Service in the College of Education at the
beginning of their student-teaching semester.
Bachelor of Science in Advertising
To be awarded the degree of Bachelor of Science
in Advertising, the candidate must complete 120 semester hours of coursework and must fulfill the
University-wide graduation requirements
in chapter 1, the
college graduation requirements
above, and the special requirements, prescribed work,
and major requirements below.
Special Requirements
To enroll in upper-division advertising courses,
a student must have passed the College of Communication Grammar, Spelling and Punctuation
Test and must have a University grade point average
of at least 2.25 and a grade point average in courses
in the College of Communication of at least 2.00.
Students who do not fulfill this requirement will
be dropped from upper-division advertising
courses, normally before the twelfth class day. The
grade point average requirement is waived for the
transfer student during the first semester of
coursework, while he or she is establishing a University
grade point average.
In addition, a student with a major in
advertising must have a grade of at least C in each course
taken in the College of Communication that is
counted toward the degree; if the course is offered on the
pass/fail basis only, the student must have a grade of
CR.
Prescribed Work
English 306, 316K, and a
three-semester-hour course taught in the Department of English.
Two courses certified as having a
substantial writing component, both of which may
be taken within the College of Communication. Courses with a substantial writing
component are identified in the
Course Schedule.
Three semester hours of coursework in the
College of Communication dealing with the study of communication issues concerning at
least one minority or nondominant group within the United States. Courses that fulfill this
requirement are identified in the Course Schedule. They may also be used to fulfill other degree
requirements. A
partial list of these courses
is given above.
Three semester hours of fine arts, chosen
from courses in art (including art history, studio
art, visual art studies), fine arts, music
(including music, instruments, ensemble), and theatre
and dance.
Students must complete four semesters in
a single foreign language. These courses may not be taken on the pass/fail basis. The usual
course sequence is 406 or 506, 407 or 507 or 508K, 312K, and 312L. Some language
departments use different course numbers to designate
the first four semesters of coursework; such
courses may be used to fulfill this requirement if
they are designed to provide first-semester-level through fourth-semester-level proficiency.
Any part of this requirement may be fulfilled by credit by examination.
Students who enter the University with a foreign language deficiency must take the first
two semesters in a foreign language without degree credit to remove the deficiency. Students
must then complete two semesters beyond those courses in the same language to fulfill the
foreign language requirement.
An extensive foreign language testing program is available at the University. Students
with knowledge of a language are encouraged to
take appropriate tests both to earn as much credit
as possible and to be placed at the proper level
for further study. Students should consult the Measurement and Evaluation Center or the
department concerned for information on testing.
Fifteen semester hours of social science,
consisting of six hours of American history; six
hours of American government, including Texas government; and three hours of anthropology,
economics, geography, linguistics, psychology, or sociology.
Three semester hours of mathematics.
Nine semester hours of natural sciences,
of which six hours (and no more than six) must be taken in one field of study. Courses must
be chosen from the following fields: astronomy, biology, botany, chemistry, computer
sciences, geological sciences, marine science,
microbiology, physical science, physics, and zoology.
Students may fulfill this requirement by completing nine hours of coursework in the fields
that are part of the Division of Biological
Sciences--biology, botany, microbiology, and zoology;
no more than six hours may be in a single field.
For this requirement a student may take three
hours of mathematics beyond those used to fulfill
requirement 7.
Six semester hours of upper-division
coursework in the College of Business Administration,
preferably three hours in marketing and three
hours in management. Marketing 338 may not be used to fulfill this requirement.
At least thirty-six semester hours of
upper-division coursework.
No more than twelve semester hours of
transfer credit in advertising may be counted
toward the degree.
Enough additional coursework to make a
total of 120 semester hours. No more than
thirty-six semester hours in one subject may be
counted toward the degree.
Major Requirements
- At least thirty but no more than thirty-six
semester hours of advertising, of which at least twenty-four hours must be upper-division.
The following courses are required: Advertising
318J, 325, 344K, 345J, 369J, 370J, and 371J.
- At least six semester hours of coursework
must be taken in the College of Communication but outside the department. However, no
student may count toward the degree more than
forty-two hours (including transfer credit) in
College of Communication coursework.
- No College of Communication course to be counted toward the degree may be taken on
the pass/fail basis, unless the course is offered
only on that basis.
Order and Choice of Work
First Year
- The student must take three courses from
the following group each semester:
- English 306.
- Courses to be counted toward
requirements 6, 7, and 8 of the prescribed work.
- Courses in a foreign language.
- Enough additional coursework (if only three
of the courses under item 1 above are taken) to raise the student's course load to fifteen or
sixteen hours each semester. Courses should be chosen with the guidance of a college adviser.
First-year students may not take two beginning
language courses in the same semester. First-year
students may not take more than eight semester
hours in one department.
Second Year
- The student must take three courses from
the following group each semester; four are recommended:
- English 316K and any three-semester-hour course taught in the Department of English.
- Courses to be counted toward
requirements 6, 7, and 8 of the prescribed work,
including courses in American government or American history.
- Courses in the foreign language, unless
the language requirement has been fulfilled.
- Advertising 318J.
- Enough additional coursework, if needed,
to raise the student's course load to fifteen or
sixteen hours each semester. Basic courses in accounting and computer sciences are
especially recommended.
Third and Fourth Years
- Two courses certified as having a
substantial writing component.
- Any outstanding requirements included in
the prescribed work.
- The remaining courses listed as major
requirements.
- Upper-division electives chosen to support
the major. Advertising majors normally emphasize economics, government, history, English,
sociology, psychology, studio art, marketing, or management.
Bachelor of Science in Communication Sciences and Disorders
To be awarded the degree of Bachelor of Science
in Communication Sciences and Disorders, the candidate must complete 120 semester hours of
coursework and must fulfill the
University-wide graduation requirements
in chapter 1, the
college graduation requirements
above, and the
special requirements, prescribed work, and major
requirements below.
Special Requirements
To enroll in upper-division communication
sciences and disorders courses, a student must have a
University grade point average of at least 2.25 and
a grade point average in courses in the College of
Communication of at least 2.00. Students who do
not fulfill this requirement will be dropped from
upper-division communication sciences and
disorders courses, normally before the twelfth class day.
This requirement is waived for the transfer student
during the first semester of coursework, while he or
she is establishing a University grade point average.
In addition, a student with a major in
communication sciences and disorders must have a grade of
at least C in each course taken in the College of
Communication that is counted toward the degree; if
the course is offered on the pass/fail basis only, the
student must have a grade of CR.
Prescribed Work
English 306, 316K, and a
three-semester-hour course taught in the Department of English.
Two courses certified as having a
substantial writing component, both of which may
be taken within the College of Communication. Courses with a substantial writing
component are identified in the
Course Schedule.
Three semester hours of coursework in the
College of Communication dealing with the study of communication issues concerning at
least one minority or nondominant group within the United States. Courses that fulfill this
requirement are identified in the Course
Schedule. They may also be used to fulfill other degree
requirements. A
partial list of these courses
is given above.
Three semester hours of fine arts, chosen
from courses in art (including art history, studio
art, visual art studies), fine arts, music
(including music, instruments, ensemble), and theatre
and dance.
Students must complete four semesters in
a single foreign language. These courses may not be taken on the pass/fail basis. The usual
course sequence is 406 or 506, 407 or 507 or 508K, 312K, and 312L. Some language
departments use different course numbers to designate
the first four semesters of coursework; such
courses may be used to fulfill this requirement if
they are designed to provide first-semester-level through fourth-semester-level
proficiency. Coursework in American Sign Language
may be used to fulfill this requirement. Any part
of this requirement may be fulfilled by credit by examination.
Students who enter the University with a foreign language deficiency must take the first
two semesters in a foreign language without degree credit to remove the deficiency. Students
must then complete two semesters beyond those courses in the same language to fulfill the
foreign language requirement.
An extensive foreign language testing program is available at the University. Students
with knowledge of a language are encouraged to
take appropriate tests both to earn as much credit
as possible and to be placed at the proper level
for further study. Students should consult the Measurement and Evaluation Center or the
department concerned for information on testing.
Fifteen semester hours of social science,
consisting of six hours of American history; six
hours of American government, including Texas government; and three hours of anthropology,
economics, geography, linguistics, psychology, or sociology.
Three semester hours of mathematics.
Nine semester hours of natural sciences, of
which six hours (and no more than six) must be
taken in one field of study. Courses must be
chosen from the following fields: astronomy,
biology, botany, chemistry, computer sciences,
geological sciences, marine science, microbiology,
physical science, physics, and zoology. Students
may fulfill this requirement by completing nine
hours of coursework in the fields that are part of
the Division of Biological Sciences--biology,
botany, microbiology, and zoology; no more than
six hours may be in a single field. For this
requirement a student may take three hours of mathematics beyond those used to fulfill requirement 7.
At least thirty-six semester hours of
upper-division coursework.
No more than twelve semester hours of
transfer credit in communication sciences and disorders may be counted toward the degree.
Enough additional coursework to make a
total of 120 semester hours. No more than
thirty-six semester hours in one subject may be
counted toward the degree.
Special Emphases in Communication Sciences and Disorders
Students majoring in communication sciences and disorders may specialize in speech/language
pathology, audiology, or education of the
deaf/hearing-impaired. After completing the necessary
undergraduate coursework, they may seek the
graduate degrees that are required for professional
accreditation by the American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association (for those in speech/language
pathology and audiology) or the Council on Education of
the Deaf (for those in education of the
deaf/hearing-impaired). Students in speech/language
pathology and audiology who wish to practice in Texas
must be licensed by the Texas Department of Health;
those in education of the deaf/hearing-impaired must
be certified by the Texas Education Agency.
Major Requirements
- Students specializing in speech/language
pathology or audiology must complete at least thirty semester hours of coursework in
communication sciences and disorders; those
specializing in education of the
deaf/hearing-impaired must complete at least twenty-five hours.
For students in all three specializations, fifteen hours of this coursework must be
upper-division. No more than thirty-six semester hours
of coursework in communication sciences and disorders may be counted toward the
degree. Coursework in American Sign Language may not be used to satisfy requirement 1 and is
not included in the thirty-six hours allowed for
the degree. The following courses are required:
- Speech/language pathology: Communication Sciences and Disorders 306K,
311K, 313L, 315S, 341, 350, 367K, 368K, 371, and 373 or 378.
- Audiology: Communication Sciences and Disorders 306K, 311K, 313L, 315S,
341, 367K, 368K, 371, 373, and 378.
- Education of the deaf/hearing-impaired: Communication Sciences and
Disorders 308K, 313L, 314L, 341, 360M, 368K, and
seven additional semester hours of coursework in communication sciences and disorders.
- At least six semester hours of coursework
must be taken in the College of Communication but outside the major. However, no student
may count toward the degree more than forty-two semester hours (including transfer credit)
in College of Communication coursework. American Sign Language courses are not counted
toward the forty-two hour total.
- No College of Communication course to be counted toward the degree may be taken on
the pass/fail basis, unless the course is offered
only on that basis.
Order and Choice of Work
First Year
- The student must take three courses from
the following group each semester:
- English 306.
- Courses to be counted toward
requirements 6, 7, and 8 of the prescribed work.
- Courses in a foreign language. Students
in education of the deaf/hearing-impaired are encouraged to take American Sign Language.
- Enough additional coursework (if only three
of the courses under item 1 above are taken) to raise the student's course load to fifteen or
sixteen hours each semester. Courses should be chosen with the guidance of a college adviser.
First-year students may not take two beginning
language courses in the same semester. First-year
students may not take more than eight semester
hours in one department.
Second Year
- The student must take three courses from
the following group each semester; four are recommended:
- English 316K and any three-semester-hour course taught in the Department of English.
- Courses to be counted toward
requirements 6, 7, and 8 of the prescribed work,
including courses in American government or American history.
- Courses in the foreign language, unless
the language requirement has been fulfilled.
- Communication Sciences and Disorders
306K (for students in speech/language pathology or audiology) or 308K (for students in education
of the deaf/hearing-impaired) and other lower-division courses in communication sciences
and disorders recommended by the student's adviser.
- Enough additional coursework, if needed,
to raise the student's course load to fifteen or
sixteen hours each semester.
Third and Fourth Years
- Two courses certified as having a
substantial writing component.
- Any outstanding requirements included in
the prescribed work.
- The remaining courses listed as major
requirements.
- Enough additional coursework to raise
the student's course load to fifteen or sixteen
hours each semester.
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