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Bachelor of Arts in Politics, Philosophy, and Economics with a Concentration in Media

The Media Concentration
The headquarters of The New York Times, Condè Naste Publishing, Time Warner, the Hearst Corporation, HarperCollins, Random House, Simon & Schuster, ABC, CBS, NBC, MTV, Fox News, HBO, and Comedy Central are within a fifteen minute walk from The King’s College’s classrooms in The Empire State Building. Saturday Night Live is broadcast from Rockefeller Center, 14 blocks away. The Daily Show, and Comedy Central are a little further: about a twenty minute walk. A third of independent movies in the United States are made in New York City. By any estimation, New York City is the media capital of the world.

PPE students have the option to concentrate in Media. A concentration at The King’s College consists of five courses that a student can take in addition to the PPE major. The Media Concentration focuses on the history, economics, and cultural and political influence of mass communication. The PPE Concentration in Media is not technical training in media production. Rather it offers students the opportunity to examine in some depth what the media are and how they shape our society.

The media play a complicated role in our society, ostensibly informing and entertaining the public, but also helping to set the agenda for national discussion, persuading us as to what is important, and, more subtly by shaping our tastes. The media also reinforce one another. Oprah’s book choices on television sell far more copies of a book than does a favorable review in The New York Times Book Review. Movie soundtracks popularize singers and singers popularize movies. The Internet has become a place where many people respond to the other media with their personal comments on the news, music, movies and books.

To study the mass media, in other words, is to examine our society’s conversation with itself. The Media Concentration develops a student’s skill at listening in on that conversation and understanding how it relates to our public choices. It also trains students to analyze how our public policies in turn shape and re-shape the media. How should the government award access to the limited airwaves? Should telephone and cable companies have free access to each others’ primary markets?

The Media Concentration begins in the fall of the sophomore year with The Enterprise of Media, which examines the history of mass media from Gutenberg’s invention of movable type up to today’s media conglomerates. In the spring semester, Media students take Theories of Mass Communication, which explores how mass media create audiences. In the fall of the junior year, Media students take Media and Popular Culture, a course that illuminates how ideas spread and tastes develop in mass society. In the spring of the junior year, students take Media and Politics, which explores topics such as campaign ads, political blogging, and media bias. The final course in the Media Concentration is Emerging Media taken in the senior year, which focuses on the latest technologies and their applications.

Throughout the five courses, students in the Media Concentration meet journalists, writers, editors, TV and film producers, and other figures who work in the media in New York.

 
Course Year Term Title Credits
 YEAR 1         CREDITS
POL 110  Fall  Introduction to Politics  
ENG 110  Fall  College Writing I  
HIS 111  Fall  Western Civilization I  
REL 111  Fall  Introduction to New Testament Literature  
URB 110  Fall  Introduction to the City  
        Fall Total  15
ECO 110  Spring  Introduction to Economics   ( )
ENG 120  Spring  College Writing II   (ENG 110)
HIS 112  Spring  Western Civilization II   (HIS 111)
REL 112  Spring  Introduction to Old Testament   (REL 111)
PHL 110  Spring  Logic  
        Spring Total  15
        YEAR 1 CREDITS 30
 
 YEAR 2         CREDITS
POL 215  Fall  American Political Thought and Practice I   (POL 110)
ECO 210  Fall  Macroeconomics   (ECO 110)
REL 212  Fall  Foundations of Judeo-Christian Thought   (REL 112)
ENG 252  Fall  Persuasive Writing   (ENG 120)
MED 251  Fall  The Enterprise of Mass Communication   (ENG 120)
        Fall Total  15
POL 216  Spring  American Political Thought and Practice II   (POL 215)
HIS 214  Spring  American History   (HIS 112)
ECO 211  Spring  Microeconomic   (ECO 110)
MAT 274  Spring  Statistics or BUS 274: Statistics for Business and Economics  
MED 252  Spring  Theories of Mass Communication   (ENG 120)
        Spring Total  15
        YEAR 2 CREDITS 30
 
 YEAR 3         CREDITS
POL 351  Fall  Constitutional Law   (POL 216, HIS 214)
ECO 311  Fall  History of Economic Thought  
PHL 313  Fall  History of Western Philosophy: Ancient and Medieval  
ELEC   Fall  Elective  
MED 351  Fall  Media and Popular Culture   (ENG 120)
        Fall Total  15
PHL 314  Spring  History of Western Philosophy: Modern   (PHL 313)
SCI 312  Spring  Scientific Reasoning   (PHL 110)
POL 312  Spring  Enlightenment and Liberal Democracy   (PHL 313, HIS 112)
ECO 452  Spring  Political Economy   (ECO 210)
MED 352  Spring  Media and Politics   (ENG 120)
        Spring Total  15
        YEAR 3 CREDITS 30
 
 YEAR 4         CREDITS
PHL 361  Fall  Ethics  
PHL   Fall  PHL 351: Theories of Human Nature or PHL 412: Culture and Aesthetics  
POL   Fall  POL 352: Public Policy, POL 451: Civil Rights, POL 452: Statesmanship, or POL 454: American Foreign Policy  
MED 451  Fall  The Emerging Media   (ENG 120, Senior Status)
ELEC   Fall  Elective  
        Fall Total  15
PHL 312  Spring  Philosophical Apologetics  
ECO   Spring  ECO 453: The Global Economy or ECO 451: Public Choice  
PPE 451  Spring  Senior Thesis  
ELEC   Spring  Elective  
ELEC   Spring  Elective  
        Spring Total  15
        YEAR 4 CREDITS  30
        TOTAL FOR DEGREE  120

* These courses are offered in both the Fall and the Spring, students may take them in either semester.
** Courses in bold (POL 110 and ENG 120) must be taken at King's.  No transfer credit accepted.

While completing this course of study, the following requirements must be met:

  1. No fewer than 60 of the semester hours of course work must be earned at The King’s College, and these 60 hours of credit must include at least 48 semester hours which apply to this degree.

  2. The successful candidate for this degree must have a cumulative GPA of 2.00 in all work completed at The King’s College. In addition, all students must maintain at least a 2.0 cumulative GPA in the courses that are a part of the Common Core.

  3. To progress beyond the freshman year, the student must obtain a grade of C or higher in both ENG-101 College Writing I and ENG-201 College Writing II.

  4. The successful candidate must satisfactorily complete all the requirements for the Fall and Spring Interregnum.

  5. The successful candidate for the BA degree must obtain approval for graduation from the Office of the Registrar and upon vote of the faculty.

While the Bachelor of Arts in Politics, Philosophy, and Economics program may be started at the beginning of any semester, students should be aware that not all courses will be offered each semester.


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