Communication
This is content from the Catalog 2020–2021 back issue. Please visit the current catalog for current information.
Department Chair:
Email: jingyin@hawaii.edu
Office: Kanakaʻole Hall, Room 214
Tel: (808) 932–7216
Website: hilo.hawaii.edu/academics/communication/
Professors:
Ronald Gordon , Ph.D.Randy Hirokawa , Ph.D.Yoshitaka Miike , Ph.D.Jing Yin , Ph.D.
Associate Professors:
Catherine Becker , Ph.D.
Assistant Professors:
Rayna Morel , Ed.D.
Instructors:
Colby Miyose , M.A.
The UH Hilo Department of Communication offers a communication major and minor and courses in the areas of interpersonal, intercultural, organizational, public, and media communication.
The Department of Communication provides a strong foundation in human communication theories and practices. Our program emphasizes multicultural team and community building in a personalized learning environment. The program emphasizes multicultural perspectives, authentic communication, valuing diversity, professional and personal empowerment, and enhanced self-awareness. Students develop oral, written, group, interpersonal, intercultural, and organizational communication skills that prepare them for leadership and citizenship in a diverse civil democratic society.
Mission
The mission of the Communication Department is guided by the assumption that culture permeates every level of communication. Consequently, our mission is to:
- explore and promote diverse theories and perspectives related to communication;
- facilitate practical skills for effective communication in multicultural contexts;
- develop leaders that can relate to global and local cultures;
- cultivate healthy individuals, relationships, organizations, and communities;
- promote dialogue among diverse individuals, communities, and organizations.
We seek to empower our students by facilitating the development of skills that encourage replacing monologue with dialogue, fragmentation with connection. Students are encouraged to develop projects relevant to their personal and professional goals. They develop the talents and skills necessary to succeed as leaders and change agents in a wide variety of settings.
Goals for Student Learning in the Major
Upon graduation students should posses the following knowledge and abilities:
- Knowledge. Students will be able to:
- Describe the major paradigms, theories, concepts, and subfields within the discipline.
- Discuss non-Western and alternative communication perspectives.
- Performance Skills. Students will be able to:
- Make effective public or professional presentations.
- Demonstrate interpersonal communication competence.
- Participate in group discussions and facilitate dialogue.
- Display sensitivity to the perspectives of others.
- Capstone Paper or Project. Students will be able to:
- Design, implement, and/or evaluate a research project, a communication intervention, or a campaign.
Special Aspects of the Communication Program
Communication and Culture Emphasis
Located in one of the most diverse areas of the world, our program places the relationship between culture and communication at the center of our curriculum. Our program has a special emphasis on communication and culture as they influence and are influenced by wisdom, context, process, and community.
- Wisdom: All cultures have accumulated indigenous wisdom and information that provide valuable insights on the relationship between humanity and communication. Consequently, our department is committed to the advancement of diverse theoretical standpoints. We explore both traditional and non-traditional theories of communication. We seek to provide students with a wide range of communication models and concepts that they can meaningfully relate to their diverse cultural backgrounds and experiences.
- Context: Given UH Hilo’s unique location, our department especially aims to broaden and deepen our students’ understanding of communication in Pacific-Asian contexts. We strive to encourage students to continually consider the role that context plays in organizational, professional, interpersonal, and media communication. Additionally, we foster the ability to respect, adapt to, bridge, change, translate, and transcend this context, as is appropriate.
- Process: As the metaphor of “island laboratory” indicates, our department encourages students to experience the multicultural aspects of Hawaiʻi. We believe that seeing local events in the global context and globalization in the local context is an important asset of a world citizen in the 21st century. Culture can be a contested zone that generates conflicting views and clashes of opinions. Conflict, however, also opens up the possibility of dialogue.
- Community: Communication and culture work together in the formation of communities. In an “ideal” multicultural community, human dialogue overshadows monologue, and connection replaces fragmentation. Our program encourages multicultural team-building, community-building, and dialogue. Further, our program seeks to empower our students as facilitators of intercultural dialogue.
Prospects for Graduates
The ability to communicate effectively in diverse contexts is highly desirable. In a report on the fastest growing careers, the U.S. Department of Labor stated that communication skills will be in demand well into the 21st century. When 1,000 faculty members from a cross-section of disciplines were asked to identify basic competencies for every college graduate, communication skills topped the list. Executives with Fortune 500 companies indicate the college students need better communication skills that include the ability to work in teams and with people from diverse backgrounds.
With its multicultural emphasis, our program provides a foundation for students to pursue graduate study of careers in education, business, counseling, social or human services, the media, journalism, law, public relations, health care, organizational management, community development, performance, or in any other field where intercultural communication competence is crucial.