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PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS

 

THEATER 

Jan Silverman, Undergraduate Adviser 
(215) 204-6840 
silverj@temple.edu

The objective of the undergraduate curriculum in Theater is to introduce students to the broad view of the theater as an important cultural institution and at the same time provide the opportunity to develop creative, cognitive, and communication skills. 
Specifically, we aim to: 

1. offer essential training in theater and the related arts so that the student is prepared for further training and/or experience at the graduate and/or professional levels; 

2. provide the opportunity for the student to develop as high a level of cognitive and communications (reading, writing, speaking, movement) skills as the individual's own capacities permit; 

3. provide through the production program an arena for optimum development of social and living skills; and 

4. cultivate the enlargement of interests to the end that the student's potential for achievement, life enjoyment, and responsibility to a democratic and diverse society is vastly extended. 

These objectives are facilitated by the University requirement that all undergraduate students complete a common Core of approximately 36 credits in addition to their major area. Further, the department requires study in one subject outside of Theater to further encourage the enlargement of the student's interests. 

In addition to the intensive classes in all disciplines, the department encourages workshop productions done by students, faculty, or staff. These opportunities augment participation in major productions and are a natural extension of classroom work. 

The student's curriculum is intended to balance work within the Department of Theater and work in broad areas of education outside the department with practical experience in the many phases of theater production. The successful student can leave the program with a background of basic skills and information as well as practical experience in the theatrical discipline. The Theater major provides an excellent educational opportunity for students, regardless of career objectives. 

Faculty Advising 
Advising is an important part of the education of students in Theater. Majors are first assigned to the Academic Advising Center and later to a faculty adviser. Students are encouraged to consult their adviser on academic matters, production experiences, and career objectives. 

Requirements for the Degree 
The Bachelor of Arts degree in Theater is organized to provide Theater core courses that each entering class takes together throughout their four-year program and emphasis areas that can be selected. The degree will be awarded to students who have met the following requirements: 

1. Graduation requirements of Temple University, including successful completion of the University Core Curriculum. 

2. Completion of the following required Theater core courses with a grade of C or better in each course: 

Theater Core Courses

  • 0119 Creativity: Basic
  • 3 s.h
  • 0011 Introduction to Theater Process
  • 3 s.h
  • 0027 Introduction to Acting
  • 3 s.h
  • 0041 Technical Theater Production
  • 3 s.h
    • 0243 Principles of Design
    •  
    3 s.h
  • W303 The Classical Tradition
  • 3 s.h
  • W304 The Romantic Tradition
  • 3 s.h
  • 0305 Modern Directions
  • 3 s.h
  • 0307 Seminar in Drama
  • 3 s.h
    OR  3 s.h
  • 0372 History of Modern Scenic Design
  • 3 s.h
    OR  3 s.h
  • 0312 American Musical Theater
  • ;
    3 s.h
  • 0335 Introduction to the Director's Art
  • 3 s.h.
    3 s.h
  • 0100 Production Practicum (1 s.h. each semester the student is enrolled as a major) up to 8 s.h. 
  • up to 8 s.h

      3. One course in art history (may also satisfy the University Core Curriculum Arts requirement)                                                                  3 s.h. 

    4. One course in non-dramatic literature                       3 s.h. 

    5. Exploratory concentration 12 s.h. in any one department or 12 s.h. that constitute an interdisciplinary study planned with the student's adviser and approved by the Chair of the Department of Theater. The concentration may include the required course in art history or the required course in non-dramatic literature. It may not include English C050. 

    6. Completion of a minimum of 63 s.h. outside of Theater. 

    7. No more than 20 credits of work in the major field may be transferred from another institution. 

    8. All Theater majors must pass the placement tests in English and mathematics. A student who fails any one of these tests must successfully complete English 0040 and the required mathematics course(s).

    9. Students must fulfill the library workbook requirement. 


    NOTE: The following courses can be repeated for credit in Theater 

    • 0117 Performance Art 
    • 0121 Voice for the Actor 
    • 0123/0223 Basic Movement/Movement for the Actor 
    • 0125 Acting Workshop 
    • 0126 Basic Acting Technique
    • 0127 Speech for the Actor 
    • 0225 Intermediate Acting I 
    • 0246 Stage Management I 
    • 0277 Scene Painting II 
    • 0307 Seminar in Drama 
    • 0319 Acting for Film and TV 
    • 0325 Advanced Acting 
    • 0328 Stage Combat (u.g.) 
    The following are suggested four-year course plans for the student entering with no high school deficiencies and passing the placement tests in English and mathematics: 

    General Theater Studies   

    First Year 

    • 0011 Introduction to the Theater Process
    • 0027 Introduction to Acting
    • 0119 Creativity:  Basic
    • 0100 Production Practicum (both semesters) 
    • English C050 or R050 (Core) (first semester)
    • Intellectual Heritage X051 (Core) (second semester)
    • American Culture (Core)
    • Quantitative Reasoning A (Core) (first semester)
    • Quantitative Reasoning B (Core) (second semester)
    • Elective
    • Elective
    Second Year 
    • 0041 Technical Theater Production
    • 0243 Principles of Design
    • 0100 Production Practicum (both semesters) 
    • Theater or other elective
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Intellectual Heritage X052 (Core) 
    • Science A (Core) (first semester)
    • Science B (Core) (second semester)
    • Core Elective
    • Art History (Theater Core)
    • Elective
    Third Year 
    • W303 The Classical Tradition
    • W304 The Romantic Tradition
    • 0100 Production Practicum (both semesters)
    • Theater or other elective 
    • Non-Dramatic Literature (Theater Core)
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Language or International Studies (Core)
    • Language or International Studies (Core)
    • Individual and Society (Core) 
    • Elective
    • Elective
    Fourth Year 
    • 0305 Modern Directions
    • 0307 Seminar in Drama 
    • OR
    • 0372 History of Modern Scenic Design
    • OR
    • 0312 American Musical Theater
    • 0335 Introduction to the Director's Art 
    • 0100 Production Practicum (both semesters)
    • Theater or other elective
    • Theater or other elective
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Elective
    • Elective
    • Elective 

    Acting Emphasis 

    Note:  Asterisk (*) indicates required course for the Acting Emphasis.  Each course in this Emphasis must be passed with a B or better in order to move on to the next level.

    First Year

    • 0011 Introduction to the Theater Process
    • *0027 Introduction to Acting
    • 0100 Production Practicum  (two semesters)
    • *0119 Creativity:  Basic 
    • English C050 or R050 (Core) (first semester)
    • Intellectual Heritage X051 (Core) (second semester)
    • American Culture (Core)
    • Quantitative Reasoning A (Core) (first semester)
    • Quantitative Reasoning B (Core) (second semester)
    • Elective 
    Second Year 
    • 0041 Technical Theater Production 
    • 0100 Production Practicum (two semesters)
    • *0121 Voice and the Actor
    • *0123 Basic Movement
    • *0126 Basic Acting Technique
    • 0243 Principles of Design
    • Intellectual Heritage X052 (Core) (first semester) 
    • Science A (Core) (first semester)
    • Science B (Core) (second semester)
    • Elective or Exploratory Concentration
    • Art History (Theater Core)
    Third Year 
    • *0127 Speech for the Actor
    • *0225 Intermediate Acting
    • W303 The Classical Tradition
    • W304 The Romantic Tradition
    • 0328 Stage Combat 
    • 0100 Production Practicum (two semesters) 
    • Individual and Society (Core)
    • Non-Dramatic Literature (Theater Core)
    • Language or International Studies (Core) (first semester)
    • Language or International Studies (Core) (second semester)
    • Exploratory Concentration
    Fourth Year 
    • 0305 Modern Directions
    • 0307 Seminar in Drama
    • OR
    • 0372 History of Modern Scenic Design
    • OR
    • 0312 American Musical Theater
    • *0325 Advanced Acting
    • *0326 Acting Emphasis Thesis Project
    • *0329 Acting as a Profession
    • 0335 Introduction to the Director's Art 
    • 0100 Production Practicum (two semesters)
    • Exploratory Concentration 
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Elective
    • Elective

    Design Emphasis 

    First Year 

    • 0011 Introduction to the Theater Process
    • 0027 Introduction to Acting
    • 0041 Technical Theater Production
    • 0119 Creativity:  Basic
    • 0100 Production Practicum (two semesters) 
    • English C050 or R050 (Core) (first semester)
    • Intellectual Heritage X051 (Core) (second semester)
    • American Culture (Core)
    • Quantitative Reasoning A (Core) (first semester)
    • Quantitative Reasoning B (Core) (second semester)
    • Elective 
    Second Year 
    • 0243 Introduction to Design 
    • 0351 Introduction to Lighting
    • 0373 Drawing and Rendering
    • 0352 Lighting Design I
    • OR
    • 0378 Scene Design I
    • OR
    • 0360 Costume Design I
    • Production Practicum (two semesters)
    • Theater or other elective
    • Intellectual Heritage X052 (Core) (first semester)
    • Science A (Core) (first semester)
    • Science B (Core) (second semester)
    • Individual and Society (Core) 
    • Art History (Theater Core)
    Third Year 
    • W303 The Classical Tradition
    • W304 The Romantic Tradition
    • 0341 Technical Direction for the Theater
    • OR
    • 0351 Introduction to Lighting Design
    • OR
    • 0367 Costume Production AND 0363 History of Costume
    • 0378 Scene Design I
    • OR
    • 0352 Lighting Design I
    • OR 
    • 0368 Draping and Flat Pattern Drafting
    • 0100 Production Practicum (two semesters)
    • Theater or other elective
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Non-Dramatic Literature (Theater Core)
    • Language or International Studies (Core) (first semester)
    • Language or International Studies (Core) (second semester)
    • Elective
    Fourth Year 
    • 0305 Modern Directions
    • 0307 Seminar in Drama
    • OR
    • 0372 History of Modern Scenic Design
    • OR 
    • 0312 American Musical Theater
    • 0335 Introduction to the Director's Art
    • 0353 Lighting Design II
    • OR 
    • 0379 Scene Design II
    • OR
    • 0361 Costume Design II
    • 0100 Production Practicum (two semesters) 
    • Exploratory Concentration 
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Exploratory Concentration
    • Elective
    • Elective 

    Requirements for the Minor in Theater 
    Required courses 

    • C110 Theater: The Collaborative Art 
    • 0011 Introduction to the Theater Process 
    • 0100 Production Practicum (two semesters) 
    • W303 Classical Tradition or W304 Romantic Tradition or 0305 Modern Directions 
    • Plus three courses from the selection below for a total of 20 s.h. 
    The minor course studies should be developed with an adviser in the Department of Theater. 

    Additional courses for students interested in theater history and literature 

    • W303 Classical Tradition 
    • 0305 Modern Directions 
    • 0372 History of Modern Scenic Design 
    • W304 Romantic Tradition 
    • 0307 Seminar in Drama 
    • 0363 History of Costume and Architectural Decor 
    Additional courses for students interested in theater performance 
    • C025 Acting for Non-Majors 
    • 0120 Basic Acting II 
    • 0126 Basic Acting Technique 
    • 0225 Intermediate Acting 
    • 0325 Advanced Acting 
    • 0121 Voice for the Actor 
    • 0123 Basic Movement 
    • 0127 Speech for the Actor 
    • 0223 Movement for the Actor 
    Additional courses for students interested in theater design and technology 
    • 0041 Technical Theater Production 
    • 0276 Scene Painting 
    • 0351 Lighting for the Theater 
    • 0360/0361 Costume Design I and II 
    • 0341 Technical Direction for the Theater 
    • 0243 Principles of Design 
    • 0373 Drawing and Rendering Technique 
    • 0352/0353 Lighting Design I and II 
    • 0378/0379 Scene Design I and II 
    Additional courses for students interested in theater producing/directing 
    • 0041 Technical Theater Production 
    • 0246 Stage Management 
    • Directing Practicum 
    • C025 Acting for Non-Majors 
    • 0335 Introduction to the Director's Art 
    • 0243 Principles of Design 
    Transfer credits are not accepted for credit for the minor in theater. Students must receive the permission of their adviser before starting in this program. Once the minor has been approved, students must follow the academic rules of the Department of Theater for all theater courses. Minor credit is not given for theater grades below C. Students must maintain at least a 2.0 GPA in the minor. Students with Theater averages under 2.0 for more than two semesters will be dropped from the program. Students with averages under 2.0 may not begin the program. 

    NEW MEDIA INTERDISCIPLINARY CONCENTRATION
    Jan Fernback, Co-Director
    (215)204-9597
    fernback@temple.edu

    Heather Raikes, Co-Director
    (215)204-3395
    hraikes@temple.edu

    What is the New Media Interdisciplinary Concentration (NMIC)?  What is new media?  How is the digital revolution changing the way we think, communicate, interact?  What is the future of the Internet?  How are the boundaries between communications disciplines blurring and merging as we define and redefine interaction through the lens of digital media?  Where is the edge and what is its message?  What new forms emerge from the chaos of digital synthesis and experimentation?  These questions converge to for the exploration called NMIC.

    The New Media Interdisciplinary Concentration  in the School of Communications and Theater explores the expressive and communicative possibilities presented by digital media across the contxts of the established disciplines of advertising, broadcast, film, journalism, mass communication, public relations and theater.  NMIC seeks to facilitate students in both the development of a comprehensive understanding of the established communication arts, and an experiential exploration of the evolution of media traditions through new technologies.

    Integrating the medium with its messages, NMIC considers not only to work with new technologies, but how to think about them in a cultural context.  In addition to offering an in-depth introduction to new media production, the concentration examines the impact of emerging technologies on commerce, education, communication, politics, the arts, entertainment, and our overall cultural framework.

    The 21st  century  communications landscape is destined to be a rapidly shifting influx of new technologies and evolving possibilities.  NMIC is designed to enable students to develop practical and conceptual relationships to the new media present and future that will define the cutting-edge of the art and science of communication.  Current explorations focus on interactive multimedia, convergence technologies, broadband content and delivery systems, experimental art forms, and it issues associated with digital culture.

    Any medium carries within it the seeds for new conceptual models and new means of interaction.  digital media are blurring the boundaries between disciplines that have previously been considered to be separate.  The vitality of new media is inventing itself on the margins between art and science; film and journalism; theory and theater; television and graphic design.  It is in this interdisciplinary spirit that the New Media Interdisciplinary Concentration invites and facilitates collaborations across disciplines that aspire to invent ideas and expressions in which the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

    The New Media Interdisciplinary  Concentration is open to all SCAT students.
    The goal of the curriculum is to provide an interdisciplinary approach to new media, exploring the interpenetrating ideas and collaborative opportunities that are emerging as new technologies evolve.

    Requirements:

    NMIC requires 20 credits for completion.  These credits are taken in conjunction with the requirements of the student's declared major.  Course taken in the major may be used for both the NMIC concentration and the major. 

    All courses must be passed with a "C"

    Required Courses:

    NMIC 0001     Introduction to Interdisciplinary New Media  (3)
    NMIC 0002     Interdisciplinary New Media Production (3)
    NMIC 0301     New Media Colloquium (1)
    NMIC 0302     New Media Synthesis (4)

    Additional Courses:
    Students must complete a minimum of 9 credits from the following course selections; at least one elective must be taken outside of the major; at least two electives must be take at the 200/300 level:

    Broadcasting , Telecommunications and Mass Media:

    BTMM 0175    Introduction to Digital Audio (4)
    BTMM 0322    Regulation and Public Policy: Legal and Ethical Issues in
                           New Media (4)
    BTMM 0335    Economics of Informantion (4)
    BTMM 0349    Advanced Topics in Social Processes:  New Media Theories
                            and Issues (2-8)
    BTMM 0373    Making Corporate and Multi-Media Production (4)
    BTMM 0374    Advanced Digital Audio (4)
    BTMM 0375    Cybermedia Workshop (4)

    Film and Media Arts:

    FMA 0241       Experimental Video and Multi-Media (4)
    FMA 0245       Multi-Media Production (3)
    FMA 0258       Computerized Editing (4)
    FMA 0312       Digital Animation (4)
    FMA 0354       New Technologies Lab (4)
    FMA 0393       Special Topics:  Advanced Multi-Media

    Journalism, Public Relations and Advertising:

    JPRA 0317      Special Topics:  Intermedia Design, Writing and Analysis (3)
    JPRA 0381      Magazine Editing and Design (Online) (4)
    JPRA 0357      Publishing to the Web

    Students may also take approved new media courses offered through Tyler School of Art, Esther Boyer College of Music, and the College of Science and Technology and students may petition the co-directors of NMIC to count other relevant courses towards the NMIC concentration.
     
     

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