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Communication report (17 pp.) The discipline of communication studies all forms, modes, media, and consequences of communication through humanistic, social scientific, and aesthetic inquiry. Departments in the discipline were surveyed for the first time with 2012–13 Humanities Departmental Survey (HDS-2), and received a 62% response rate (148 of 237 departments).

Overview

  • Number of Departments and Faculty by Carnegie Classification and Highest Degree Offered, Fall 2012
  • Faculty (overview, all disciplines)

  • Faculty Members by Tenure Status, Fall 2012
  • Faculty Members by Employment Status and Gender, Fall 2012
  • Number of Faculty by Carnegie Classification and Highest Degree Offered, Fall 2012
  • Considerations in Tenure Decisions, Fall 2012
  • Faculty Tenure Decisions and New Hires
  • Instructor of Record for Undergraduate Introductory Courses, Fall 2012 Term
  • Instructor of Record for All Other Undergraduate (Non-Introductory) Courses, Fall 2012 Term
  • Instructor of Record for All Graduate Courses, Fall 2012 Term
  • Students (overview, all disciplines)

    Undergraduates

  • Bachelor’s Degrees Completed in the 2011-12 Academic Year
  • Number of Juniors and Seniors with Declared Major in Communication as of the Beginning of the Fall 2012 Term
  • Number of Students Completing a Minor during the 2011-12 Academic Year
  • Assessment of Overall Undergraduate Student Learning as of the Fall 2012 Term
  • Graduate Students

  • Number of Graduate Students during Fall 2012 Term
  • Departmental Issues (overview, all disciplines)

  • Availability of Institutional or Departmental Support for Research
  • Departments Offering Online Courses by Carnegie Classification and Form of Control, 2011-12 Academic Year
  • Engagement with Digital Humanities by Carnegie Classification and Form of Control as of Fall 2012
  • Departments and Faculty Members in Communication, by Carnegie Classification and Highest Degree Offered

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    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Number of Departments by Carnegie Classification and Highest Degree Offered, Fall 2012

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    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Bachelor’s Degrees Completed in Communication in the 2011–12 Academic Year

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    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Number of Juniors and Seniors with Declared Major in Communication as of the Beginning of the Fall 2012 Term

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    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Number of Students Completing a Minor in Communication during the 2011–12 Academic Year

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    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Number of Graduate Students in Communication during Fall 2012 Term

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    * Student figures in this row are as reported by the responding departments, none of which currently offers a graduate degree.
    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Instructor of Record for Introductory Undergraduate Courses in Communication, Fall 2012 Term

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    * Proportion is significantly different from Primarily Research (for Carnegie Classification) or from Doctorate (for Highest Degree Offered) or from Public (for Form of Control) at the 5% level.
    ** Proportion is significantly different from all other disciplines combined at the 5% level. We used regression analysis for these tests with a binary (0-1) variable for the level of interest. If the coefficient for the binary variable differed significantly from 0, then the interpretation from regression is that the discipline differs from all other levels combined.
    Statistical significance depends on a number of factors, not solely the absolute difference between two values. While differences that are not marked as significant may seem to be the same size as, or even larger than, those marked as significant, they are not statistically significant. The most likely factors contributing to the lack of significance when the absolute difference seems “large enough” are a smaller sample size or a larger variation within that discipline.
    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Instructor of Record for All Other (Non-Introductory) Undergraduate Courses in Communication, Fall 2012 Term

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    * Proportion is significantly different from Primarily Research (for Carnegie Classification) or from Doctorate (for Highest Degree Offered) or from Public (for Form of Control) at the 5% level.
    ** Proportion is significantly different from all other disciplines combined at the 5% level. We used regression analysis for these tests with a binary (0-1) variable for the level of interest. If the coefficient for the binary variable differed significantly from 0, then the interpretation from regression is that the discipline differs from all other levels combined.
    Statistical significance depends on a number of factors, not solely the absolute difference between two values. While differences that are not marked as significant may seem to be the same size as, or even larger than, those marked as significant, they are not statistically significant. The most likely factors contributing to the lack of significance when the absolute difference seems “large enough” are a smaller sample size or a larger variation within that discipline.
    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Instructor of Record for All Graduate Courses in Communication, Fall 2012 Term

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    * Proportion is significantly different from Primarily Research (for Carnegie Classification) or from Doctorate (for Highest Degree Offered) or from Public (for Form of Control) at the 5% level.
    ** Proportion is significantly different from all other disciplines combined at the 5% level.
    We used regression analysis for these tests with a binary (0-1) variable for the level of interest. If the coefficient for the binary variable differed significantly from 0, then the interpretation from regression is that the discipline differs from all other levels combined.
    Statistical significance depends on a number of factors, not solely the absolute difference between two values. While differences that are not marked as significant may seem to be the same size as, or even larger than, those marked as significant, they are not statistically significant. The most likely factors contributing to the lack of significance when the absolute difference seems “large enough” are a smaller sample size or a larger variation within that discipline.
    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Assessment* of Overall Undergraduate Student Learning in Communication as of the Fall 2012 Term

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    Note: The sum of the four rows in any column may exceed 100% because respondents could select multiple choices.
    * The “assessment” is an aggregate assessment based on examining the results from a given cohort of students in an attempt to examine the effectiveness of a program.
    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Considerations in Tenure Decisions in Communication, Fall 2012

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    * CC—Carnegie Classification: PUG—Primarily Undergraduate, Comp—Comprehensive, PRes—Primarily Research
    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.

    Communication Departments Offering Online Courses by Carnegie Classification and Form of Control, 2011–12 Academic Year

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    *Includes only departments that offer these courses.
    Source: Susan White, Raymond Chu, and Roman Czujko, The 2012–13 Survey of Humanities Departments at Four-Year Institutions (College Park, MD: Statistical Research Center, American Institute of Physics, 2014). Study conducted for the American Ƶ of Arts Sciences’ Humanities Indicators Project.
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