Communication Workshops

Communication workshop details for Frontiers session I are listed below. When applying, rank your top three choices for your communication workshop. Learn more about the Frontiers session I academic programs.

American History Through Film and the Internet

This course combines film sources, class discussion, and internet research. Material covered will focus on four central themes: work, leisure/recreation, the urban environment, and American politics. For each of the four modules, you'll view films on the central theme, research the theme using Internet sources, and discuss your findings and conclusions with the class.

Creative Writing

Conduct a series of experiments with words, imagination, and ideas: fiction or nonfiction prose, poetry, or playscript. What you create will depend on your group members, the Frontiers experience, and what you've been writing along the way.

Elements of Writing

Investigate what happens when an author chooses certain vocabulary, sentence structure, and overall organization. This approach will help you improve the expository writing you will have to do in college. You will also be given an opportunity to write college application essays in which you may reveal your individuality. You are encouraged to bring with you topics that appear on admission forms for colleges where you intend to apply.

Law on Film

We live in a world where legal matters have become part of the popular culture. Judge Judy is a ratings-winner, "Law and Order" is in its second decade of popularity, and celebrity legal battles, such as the trials of Michael Jackson and Robert Blake, are fodder for the late-night television hosts. However, the entertainment value of law and justice has a long pedigree in film. Stories of law elicit drama, emotion, suspense, and sometimes humor. Central to these stories are image of lawyers, who might personify goof, evil, or a gray area in between. In this course, we will explore selected films that present interesting concepts of law and lawyering. We will discuss what themes the films address, how the lawyers are portrayed, and what the films tell us about the views of society (and perhaps what effect, if any, the films have on society).

Music

Participate in music activities and rehearse daily in an instrumental ensemble appropriate for your instrument. Perform in a concert at the conclusion of the program, presented in conjunction with the drama activities. Music selected will vary in style from jazz to pop to classical. Any student interested will also have the opportunity to improvise in a jazz setting.

Speech

Discover how to present your ideas in an organized format for optimal impact and understanding. Learn specific approaches and implement them through planned presentations that will be videotaped and analyzed. Explore the techniques that minimize the threat of nervous reactions and learn to utilize nervous energy for peak performance. The primary focus of the workshop will be on individual presentations, but some attention will be given to interactive communications (e.g., the campus interview for prospective college students).

The Art of Science

What are the boundries between art and science? Does it matter? This couse will explore the impact of science and technology throughoutart history. Topics to be considered include the painter's interest in light and optics; the influence of invention, exploration, and scientific discovery on techniques and materials; the science of conservation; controversial material; art and astronomy; nature and the environment, and more. We will look at artists who have advanced scientific technique, and attempt simple experiments used by artists, such as the function of pinhole cameras and camera obscura. Time will be left to discuss subjects of particular interest to the students

Theatre

Produce a show from soup to nuts in under two weeks. Create a character, make a costume, hang the lights, record the sound, and build a set. Explore a wide variety of theatrical exercises and techniques, including warm-ups, expressive movement exercises, collective improvisation, and interpretive reading. Become familiar with essential elements of traditional comedy and tragedy, as well as contemporary experimental theatre. Put theory into practice by making an audience laugh, cry, and maybe even think.

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Last modified: March 25, 2009 12:07:59