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College of Arts and Science | Department of Communication Studies | Faculty

The University of North Texas

The University of North Texas is the flagship of the University of North Texas System, which includes the University of North Texas Dallas Campus and the University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth. UNT is the leading university of the Dallas–Fort Worth region and, with more than 31,000 students from every state in the nation and more than 100 other countries, UNT is the fourth largest university in Texas.

A comprehensive, state-assisted, co-educational institution, UNT offers a wide variety of undergraduate, master's and doctoral degree programs. About 22 percent of UNT's student body is made up of graduate students, a greater percentage than the top five public universities in Texas.

Designated as a doctoral/research university-extensive by the Carnegie Foundation, UNT ranks in the top 4 percent of U.S. colleges and universities. UNT offers far more graduate degree choices than any other university in the Dallas–Fort Worth region and has been named one of America's 100 Best College Buys® for nine consecutive years.

UNT is classified as one of seven emerging research universities in Texas by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. The classification is based on UNT's range of academic programs and its measures in teaching, service, and research, particularly its commitment to graduate education through the doctoral level.

The university is committed to academic excellence, to student success and to serving as an intellectual resource for the community, state and nation.


The College of Arts and Sciences

The College of Arts and Sciences is the academic heart of the University of North Texas. It is a learning and discovery community of increasingly recognized and highly capable scholars and artists who interact in a variety of formats with talented students and colleagues across disciplines for the purpose of communicating, pursuing, and advancing knowledge. Accordingly, our mission is:

" to promote and provide, through diverse courses of study, the finest in quality graduate and undergraduate education and scholarship in traditional liberal arts, performing arts, sciences, professional, and technical academic programs."

Our mission is served by programs and activities designed to enrich the human mind, stimulate and sustain a spirit of free inquiry, and sharpen and enlarge the intellectual capacities and aesthetic awareness of the members of the College community. We carry out our mission while preserving depth, breadth, and cohesiveness within the vast scope of our College. This balance is epitomized in our College’s motto - "Excellence, Unity, Diversity."

The mission statement for the College of Arts and Sciences clearly expresses fundamental and important goals - goals shared by many similar colleges in numerous comprehensive, urban, and metropolitan institutions. Yet, our College has a more explicit vision of itself as a premier institution that accomplishes those fundamental educational and scholarly goals in a manner that differentiates and distinguishes our College from others in the North Texas region. Pursuit of our vision elevates CAS, and UNT, to a position of national recognition among research universities. Increasing the quality and excellence in our endeavors, against a backdrop of maintaining "excellence, unity and diversity," will require the setting and meeting of loftier goals for faculty and students alike, placing a premium on "quality" over "quantity," and emphasizing an academic culture that understands learning and scholarship to be mutually supportive and sustaining endeavors.


The college is composed of the following academic departments:

 Biological Sciences
 Chemistry
 Communication Studies
 Computer Science
 Dance and Theatre Arts
 Economics
 Engineering Technology
 English
 Foreign Languages and Literatures
 Geography
 History
 Journalism
 Materials Science
 Mathematics
 Philosophy and Religion Studies
 Physics
 Psychology
 Political Science
 Radio, Television, Film
 Speech and Hearing Sciences

Department of Communication Studies

Mission Statement (in brief)

The Department of Communication Studies at the University of North Texas is dedicated to encouraging the study of communication through concomitant commitments to education, research and scholarship, outreach activities, and service. We actively foster academic freedom and open communication in each of our activities.

An integral part of our mission, therefore, is to insure that activities conducted with undergraduate and graduate students serve to instill an appreciation for the confluence of education and scholarship. A second part of our mission is to encourage research and scholarship that contribute knowledge and understanding to the lives of our students, our university, our profession, and our communities. A third part of our mission is to facilitate an interactive partnership with the community-at-large by seeking to establish ties with agencies that and individuals who can assist us in furthering the goals of education. A fourth part of our mission is to translate our expertise into serving university, professional, and non-academic communities.

Further, we regard the goals of supporting a culturally, racially, and ethnically diverse environment and advocating mutual respect for all members of our society as especially befitting our mission.

Constituted of a strong coalition of perspectives, methodologies, professional activities, interests, and values, the Department of Communication Studies is exceptionally well suited to communicate, perpetuate, and develop a variety of means of understanding human communication differences and commonalities.


Faculty

The Department of Communication Studies faculty exemplifies the diverse approaches to the study of communication and includes some of the outstanding scholars in the field.  The faculty members are not only scholars and academicians, they are also professors who have won many awards for outstanding teaching. In addition to teaching, they are active in various activities including professional leadership, coaching debate, directing performances, authoring books, and consulting for businesses in the community, the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, and in various parts of the United States.

John M. (Jay) Allison, Jr. 
Ph.D., Louisiana State University. Director of graduate studies. Performance theory and criticism, narrative theory, Southern culture and fiction.

Karen Anderson
Ph.D., University of Kansas.  Basic Course Director.  Intergenerational communication, family communication, political debates and campaigns, and quantitative research methods.
Lori A. Byers
Ph.D., Ohio University. Interpersonal communication, quantitative and qualitative research methods, research design, organizational communication.

Ted Colson, Professor Emeritus
Ph.D., University of Oklahoma. Performance studies and storytelling.

John S. Gossett
Ph.D., University of Southern California. Department chair. First Amendment studies, legal communication, American public address.

Brian Lain
Ph.D., University of Iowa. DIrector of Debate.  Argumentation and Debate, Rhetorical Theory and Criticism, Visual/Material Rhetoric and Culture, Asian American Rhetorics.

Brian Richardson
Ph.D., University of Texas. Undergraduate Internship Coordinator. Organizational Communication.

Kelly S. Taylor
Ph.D., Louisiana State University. Faculty sponsor of the Performance Interest Group. History of performance studies, group performance, storytelling.

Justin Trudeau
Ph.D., Louisiana State University. History of performance studies, performance art.

Lawrence R. Wheeless, Professor Emeritus
Ph.D., Wayne State University. Interpersonal Communication, communication theory, nonverbal communication, quantitative research methods.

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Last updated: September 04, 2006.