What is ISUComm?

ISUComm is Iowa State University’s communication-across-the-curriculum initiative. The goal of ISUComm is to strengthen student communication and enhance students’ critical thinking skills by creating opportunities for them to practice communication skills throughout their academic careers. While many institutions have similar outreach efforts to train and encourage faculty from all disciplines to include writing assignments in their courses, ISUComm speaks to a broader set of communication competencies. Rather than focusing solely on written communication, ISUComm is contemporary and comprehensive in its emphasis on oral, visual, and electronic skills development as well.

Vision

ISUComm offers a vision of communication education appropriate to a changing world of communication practice. In particular, ISUComm promotes a curriculum that is contemporary in its attention to new forms of information technology, comprehensive in addressing the many manifestations of communication expertise, and consistent in its emphasis of ongoing communication experiences throughout the entire undergraduate career. The goal of this curriculum is to prepare our graduates to communicate with confidence and integrity in the varied contexts of their academic, professional, and civic lives.

Mission

The mission of ISUComm is to enact this vision in three ways. First, to address the changing nature of communication practice, ISUComm will integrate instruction in written, oral, visual, and electronic communication (or WOVE) and apply this integration to the variety of academic, professional and civic discourse. Second, to prepare all students for the diversity of contemporary communication, ISUComm will cultivate a full range of communication competencies: from critical reading practices to comprehensive research methods; from clear prose to effective oral presentation; from the systematic analysis of textual, verbal, and visual media to the development, design, and delivery of well-reasoned arguments. Third, to accommodate this broad and complex agenda, ISUComm will provide two, three-credit courses, taught in the first and second years, then build on this foundation by promoting regular communication instruction in advanced courses, including courses in the major.

Means

To realize its vision and fulfill its mission, ISUComm will place special emphasis on well-prepared teachers. That is, teachers contributing to ISUComm at both the foundation course and upper-division levels must receive effective education in WOVE pedagogy and suitable support for their efforts if ISUComm is to have a significant impact on student communication. In brief, effective teachers are the cornerstone of ISUComm.

Basic principles

The faculty of Iowa State University believes that all educated people should be able to communicate effectively in a variety of settings and media. Consequently, Iowa State University graduates are expected to develop competence in four interrelated areas of communication: written, oral, visual, and electronic.

This communication competence can best be achieved through the following five principles:

  1. Communication instruction and practice are distributed over the student’s entire undergraduate experience, both in and out of the classroom, from the first through the senior year.
  2. Communication instruction and practice are distributed across the curriculum, both in communication courses and in courses in the student’s major.
  3. Active learning and higher-order thinking are fostered through communication.
  4. Faculty across the university share responsibility for the student’s progress in communication practices.
  5. Both faculty and students engage in ongoing assessment for continuous improvement of the student’s communication practices.

Iowa State University’s communication curriculum, based on these five principles, seeks to enrich the student’s understanding of the various subjects studied as well as prepare the student to communicate successfully in professional, civic, and private life.

Iowa State University’s communication curriculum, based on five basic principles, (see pre) enriches each student’s understanding of various subjects while preparing each student to communicate successfully in professional, civic, and private life.

Foundation courses

To ensure that broad communication competence is addressed and developed at the beginning of a university career, all students will earn six credits in the two-course introductory sequence, normally taken in the first and second years. Students will focus on writing and critical reading, with complementary instruction in visual, oral, and electronic communication; they will concentrate on civic and cultural themes; and they will enter work in a communication portfolio to document their current level of proficiency.

Upper-level curricula

Continuing development of communication skills will be directed by the student’s major department. Using the university’s basic principles as a guide, each department will specify a set of intended learning outcomes and design communication experiences by which students in the major can achieve the desired level of communication proficiency.

Departments may select from or combine a variety of communication options that best match their faculty, students, and curriculum:

  • designated communication-intensive courses that integrate written, oral, and visual communication into a course in the major;
  • a sequence of courses within the major that incorporates communication tasks of increasing complexity;
  • linked courses—one in communication, one in the major—that integrate readings and assignments;
  • advanced communication course(s) appropriate to the student’s major and offering instruction in written, oral, and visual communication;
  • communication-intensive activities within or beyond course work, such as communication portfolios, discipline- or course-specific student tutoring, community service projects, internships, electronic presentations, informational fairs, juried competitions, entrepreneurial projects, newsletters, websites.

Departments are responsible for regularly assessing the degree to which their students achieve the specified learning outcomes and for making curricular improvements based on departmental assessment data.

Programs

  • Foundation Communication

    Foundation Communication classes form the very basics of English proficiency while you are at Iowa State. Test-out opportunities are provided throughout the academic year and an honors-level course is also available.

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  • Advanced Communication

    Advanced Communication courses satisfy the upper-level communication proficiency requirement for many majors. There are four courses: 3020 Business Communication, 3090 Proposal and Report Writing, 3120 Communicating Science and Public Engagement, and 3140 Technical Communication. Test-out opportunities are available for 3020 and 3140.

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  • Speech Communication

    Speech Communication 2120 provides a supportive environment to practice and improve oral communication skills. The class focuses on research, organization, and argument development as well as delivery skills. Test-out options are available before fall and spring semesters.

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What is WOVE?

WOVE is an acronym that stands for “written, oral, visual, and electronic” communication. More commonly referred to as “multimodal communication,” this pedagogy serves as the basis for ISUComm’s efforts toward student-centered, contemporary curriculum reform. In the foundation courses that ISUComm has developed, ISUComm is building upon an integrated approach to writing instruction that has been underway at ISU for some time. All composition classes use electronic classrooms, all teach students how to engage in small group discussions and oral critiques with peers, many sections of these courses incorporate brief oral presentations, and many of these classes now address some design aspects of written texts, such as headings and page layout. By bringing WOVE pedagogy into their classrooms, teachers provide all students with the kind of communication instruction that prepares them to communicate with expertise in multiple settings and with multiple media.

Why WOVE?

Because of changes in technology, written communication is now virtually inseparable from oral, visual, and electronic modes of communication, not just in the academy but also in the professions, in business, and in the public sector. For example, writers of all sorts discuss their drafts with friends and colleagues, they often present their ideas orally and visually at conferences and in meetings, and they routinely add illustrations, layout devices, and visual representations of data to clarify their ideas. Most writers now do all these tasks with the help of computers, and they increasingly do it on the web.

And yet, despite the integrated nature of contemporary communication, many students neither grasp the fact that communication itself has changed nor know how to communicate in this multimodal environment. If we are to adequately prepare our students for the challenges they will face in the academy and beyond, then it is our responsibility as teachers to acquaint them with communication practices as they actually exist. In other words, we must present writing as it is integrated with other media.