Leigh Hochberg, M.D., Ph.D., gives the keynote address at the 11th Annual Neuroscience Symposium at Kent State University.

Imagine a tiny microsensor implanted in someone’s brain, allowing that person to transfer their thoughts through the sensor and into a computer where they would appear as text on screen – opening a world of communication that previously had been cut off for patients with paralysis or other diseases.  Those types of innovations and medical breakthroughs were the topic of “Brain-Machine Interfaces in Health and Disease,” Kent State University’s 11th Annual Neuroscience Symposium, sponsored by the Brain Health Research Institute (BHRI). The symposium took place on Oct. 26-27, at the ...

Professor Jennifer Ray Tomasek

Jennifer Ray-Tomasek, an assistant professor in the School of Foundations, Leadership and Administration, answered 10 questions for the EHHS Featured Faculty series. Q: What subject(s) do you teach? I’m the Undergraduate Program Coordinator for the Professional Studies (PROS) program, a degree-completion program serving students in our own college of EHHS, or students who have returned to college after a long while and simply need a good path forward to obtaining a college degree.  I teach several courses for the program, including a Seminar course, a course on Leadership skills, an...

Communication and Advocacy - Graduate Certificate

The Communication and Advocacy graduate certificate meets the growing opportunity to tackle emerging advocacy needs. Students learn to communicate with diverse allies across digital and physical platforms; engage and motivate audiences by clearly, consistently and creatively telling stories worth sharing; and approach advocacy challenges from health, organizational, intercultural, intergroup, global, mediated and persuasion contexts. Read more...

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Program Information for Communication and Advocacy - Graduate Certificate

Program Description

Full Description

The Communication and Advocacy graduate certificate provides communication professionals and recent graduates the skills and understanding to tackle emerging advocacy needs. Students learn to communicate with diverse allies across digital and physical platforms; engage and motivate audiences by clearly, consistently and creatively telling stories worth sharing; and approach advocacy challenges from health, organizational, intercultural, intergroup, global, mediated and persuasion contexts.

Certificate graduates will have the practical skills to respond to the dynamism that defines contemporary society. Based on current employment statistics and forecasts, the Communication the Advocacy certificate will position graduates for career advancement in multiple employment sectors.

Admissions

For more information about graduate admissions, visit the graduate admission website. For more information on international admissions, visit the international admission website.

Admission Requirements

  • Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university
  • Minimum 2.750 undergraduate GPA on a 4.000-point scale
  • Official transcript(s)
  • Goal statement
  • Sample of scholarly writing
  • Three letters of recommendation
  • English language proficiency - all international students must provide proof of English language proficiency (unless they meet specific exceptions to waive) by earning one of the following:1
    • Minimum 94 TOEFL iBT score
    • Minimum 7.0 IELTS score
    • Minimum 65 PTE score
    • Minimum 110 DET score
1

International applicants who do not meet the above test scores may be considered for conditional admission.

Application Deadline

  • Fall Semester
    • Application deadline: April 15
  • Spring Semester
    • Application deadline: November 15

Applications submitted after these deadlines will be considered on a space-available basis.

Learning Outcomes

Program Learning Outcomes

Graduates of this program will be able to:

  1. Incorporate theories from the field of communication to address advocacy challenges.
  2. Identify advocacy intervention strategies for a variety of target audiences.
  3. Assess communication needs and evaluate advocacy intervention efficacy.
Coursework

Program Requirements

Certificate Requirements

Certificate Requirements
COMM 65000FOUNDATIONS OF COMMUNICATION AND ADVOCACY 3
Certificate Electives, choose from the following:9
COMM 65070
SOCIAL INFLUENCE
COMM 65662
MEDIA EFFECTS
COMM 65686
GLOBAL CULTURES, INTERGROUP COMMUNICATION AND IDENTITIES
COMM 65851
ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION
COMM 66501
HEALTH COMMUNICATION
Minimum Total Credit Hours:12

Graduation Requirements

Minimum Certificate GPA Minimum Overall GPA
3.000 3.000
Program Delivery
  • Delivery:
    • In person
  • Location:
    • Kent Campus

Examples of Possible Careers and Salaries for Communication and Advocacy - Graduate Certificate

Social and community service managers

17.0%

much faster than the average

175,500

number of jobs

$69,600

potential earnings

Public relations and fundraising managers

9.2%

much faster than the average

88,000

number of jobs

$118,430

potential earnings

Advertising and promotions managers

-1.1%

decline

28,600

number of jobs

$133,460

potential earnings

Notice: Career Information Source
* Source of occupation titles and labor data comes from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' Occupational Outlook Handbook. Data comprises projected percent change in employment over the next 10 years; nation-wide employment numbers; and the yearly median wage at which half of the workers in the occupation earned more than that amount and half earned less.

Grant awarded to Kent State Geauga to provide occupational safety & health training

As part of a $75,000 grant from OSHA’s Susan Harwood Training Grants Program, Kent State at Geauga is building upon a federally funded, no-cost training program designed to help ensure safe and healthy workplaces in our community. Consistent with its ongoing commitment to lead regional workforce development, Kent State Geauga first offered training sessions in chemical/health hazards safety and workplace violence prevention this past summer.

I AM FIRST week of celebration

Join us for the I AM FIRST week of celebration, Nov. 6-10. Several programs will be held across the Kent State system to honor and celebrate students who will be the first in their family to earn a bachelor's degree. In addition to recognizing first-generation students, we will celebrate staff, faculty and advocates for their accomplishments and support of the first-generation student journey. Mandy Munro-Stasiuk, Ph.D., dean for the College of Arts and Sciences, will be this year's keynote speaker.

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