Section Title
advanced search

Career

Area of study


Hide this form

Recommended Study Sequence

Click unit name to reveal description:

Admission

Applications for the course must be made through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC). Further information on postgraduate courses is available on the Local Admissions section of the UWS website.

Candidates are required to hold academic qualifications deemed by UWS to be at least equivalent to a Bachelor degree in some related discipline (such as Communication and Media). Special equivalence may be granted to candidates on the basis of evidence they submit at the time of application, for academic, professional and/or any other qualifications they hold.

Qualification for this award requires the successful completion of 80 credit points including the units listed in the recommended sequence below.

The course comprises two core units of 10 credit points each, plus 60 credit points from the pool units listed.

Year 1

Autumn session

Core Unit

Communication in the Information Age

This unit explores the changing shape of communication in the information age, focusing on the shift from the interpersonal and individualistic to the renaissance of the collective and communal in post-industrial society. The unit aims to contextualise these changes through the study of globalisation and its impacts and to identify, define and investigate the communication challenges for civil society and political action.

Pool Units

Crisis Communication

The principles and practice of crisis communication will be examined. This examination will be informed by the concepts surrounding crisis within capitalist and command economies. A critical understanding of the elements of crisis and the balance between crisis and emergency planning will be pursued. Developing, executing and evaluating a crisis management plan will occur. Managing issues before they become a crisis and incorporating crisis communication into a communication management strategy for an organisation will be reviewed.

Practice-Based Elective

Students work with selected community organisations and external agencies to research, develop, and define specific strategic communication objectives, and then to produce communication tools and outcomes, which reflect contemporary professional communication practices. Students engage with a range of real-world scenarios, and have the opportunity to fully engage with the complexities of practice-based professional communication within an organisational and community-based context.

Professional Writing and Editing

This unit focuses on developing competence in producing written communication which is purposeful, clearly structured, reader-centred, appropriate for its social context and creatively realised. In the editing component, students will apply these skills to enhancing the work of others. In addition, this unit introduces students to collaborative approaches in developing writing skills.

Self-Directed Elective

Candidates engage in a self-directed elective outside of the formal electives on offer. With the broad range of interests and specialisations possible in new media, it is important to enable candidates to identify a particular topic, possibly introduced in another unit, and to pursue this in more detail. This unit allows research and theoretical investigation of a particular topic of interest, as agreed by the course coordinator.

The Electronic Text

This unit explores the practical and social aspects of the phenomena of electronic writing and hypermedia, from the standpoint of rhetoric and communication.

Understanding Online Design and Production

The unit introduces the Internet as a publications medium. Students will be introduced to the specific design characteristics of this emerging medium, and work towards the design and development of a web site. This unit is designed to enable students to explore and examine the evolving current and future opportunities for visual communication using online digital technologies. The unit will introduce students to current digital technologies for communication, commerce and publication. These technologies currently include the world wide web, the Internet more generally, and the broadband technologies of interactive television. Students will design and produce material in, and for, the world wide web; examine and critique current styles and trends in online communication; consider the impact of these emerging technologies on the practice of design; and investigate the potential social and cultural context of such developments.

Visual Design and Production Literacies

In this unit students will be introduced to fundamental visual (screen) design skills and concepts, alongside design production literacies. Students will engage in critical analysis of content to be communicated and in practical exploration of content structure, information architecture and layout. Emphasis will be placed on understanding the role of process in the design and production contexts, (including screen design) and a broader understanding of the roles and responsibilities inherent in production processes. Design situations are examined in light of the background of shifting production languages, convergent technologies and professional contexts.

Spring session

Core Unit

Transnational Communication

Communication across national boundaries is becoming more common and complex. To be effective such communication involves an understanding of the challenges associated with transcultural communication, cross-linguistic communication and cross-cultural communication. This unit provides an overview of these issues, with particular attention to relations between Australia and its Asian neighbours. Related topics including communicating development, communication flow, national and international communication policies and regulation will be critically analysed.

Pool Units

Advertising, Promotion and Publicity

This unit considers the areas of advertising, publicity and promotion from the perspective of the professional communicator's role and organisational goals, including the relationship with corporate, sales, marketing and media agendas. The integration of public communication areas will be critically analysed.

Media and Audience

This unit fosters an appreciation of the range of traditions of enquiry which have been brought to bear, historically, on the problem of audience/text relations. A multidisciplinary approach to these relations is used, drawing on ethnography, literary theory and theories of discourse, with particular emphasis on texts and audiences produced or affected by audio-visual media and computers. This unit seeks to develop varied research skills appropriate to the audience - text interface, and to explore implications for communication produced by textual attempts to limit the variability of interpretation and audience participation in the social and leisure worlds.

Practice-Based Elective

Students work with selected community organisations and external agencies to research, develop, and define specific strategic communication objectives, and then to produce communication tools and outcomes, which reflect contemporary professional communication practices. Students engage with a range of real-world scenarios, and have the opportunity to fully engage with the complexities of practice-based professional communication within an organisational and community-based context.

Professional Communication Theory

This unit extends students' knowledge of the communication ideas that inform and support effective professional communication. Current work in the fields of organisational, public, mass, speech, computer mediated and visual communication will be investigated in order to improve workplace practice and outcomes. New research that supports professional communication will also be explored.

Self-Directed Elective

Candidates engage in a self-directed elective outside of the formal electives on offer. With the broad range of interests and specialisations possible in new media, it is important to enable candidates to identify a particular topic, possibly introduced in another unit, and to pursue this in more detail. This unit allows research and theoretical investigation of a particular topic of interest, as agreed by the course coordinator.

Theory and Practice of New Media

In this unit students will be introduced to theoretical and critical understandings of new media design issues. Students will engage in critical analysis of new media products and in case study exploration of design process and application. Emphasis will be placed on understanding the context of new media practice, including precedents and historical understandings. New media design projects are examined in light of the background of shifting production languages, convergent technologies and technical contexts.

Note: Not all pool units are offered every year. Please check the timetable to see which units are on offer.

Master of Professional Communication

The Master of Professional Communication is designed for communication specialists who wish to build on their professional experience through studies in contemporary communications practice. The program specifically builds on professional expertise by providing a critical engagement with current theory and practices in this rapidly changing field. It is structured to provide a balance between critical thinking, and practice-based projects, which also engage with real-world scenarios and clients, through a mix of face-to-face and on-line learning situations.

The program is taught by a range of staff from the areas of public relations, media and audience theory, design and professional communication. Inter-disciplinary input is one of the unique contemporary features of this program, reflecting the current trends of convergent media taking place across the professional communications industries. Working with professionally oriented staff, students are guided through practical project work with community-based organisations, and/or corporate communication clients. These projects develop a depth of understanding of a range of strategic organisational communications outcomes and processes, including event management, and media planning.

The units of study offered in each semester are designed to work as a cohesive program of study. This provides an excellent framework for students to gain both theoretical and applied skills, with an emphasis on providing a groundwork for a range of employment opportunities within the professional communications industries.

Careers

Students who complete the MPC may apply for a place in either coursework masters, research masters, or Ph.D. programs. Upon successful completion of the degree, the School of Communication Arts writes to graduates inviting them to make application.

This course is for graduates from any discipline seeking a career in the rapidly expanding arena of professional communication. Students from diverse backgrounds – including business, arts, languages, sciences, computing, law, and health – are able to develop new skills and knowledge complementary to their current careers.

Location

Penrith Campus 

Duration

One year full-time or two years part-time. The program is offered through face-to-face study supported online.

Courser Structure

The course consists of a set program of eight subjects (four per semester), covering transnational communication, electronic and information communications, media and audience studies, marketing communications, ethics and corporate social responsibility, and risk and crisis communication. In both the Autumn Semester Self-Directed Elective (SDE) and the Spring Semester Practice Based Elective (PBE), there is an opportunity to complete a major communications project for a real world client.

Alternatively, in the PBE, students may work in small, commercially oriented groups where they focus on a given client scenario. This is usually the case where students have had less exposure to strategic design (the development of an integrated strategic communications plan). Under both scenarios, students regularly consult with the professor on a one-to-one or small group basis.

Subjects are mainly delivered through a mix of tutorials and lectures, with students developing projects to given briefs and developing applied communication research skills, relevant to a range of commercial fields. Other delivery modes include seminars, workshops, presentations and individual consultations.

Full-time study normally involves attending 2-3 sessions per week (part-time 1-2 sessions per week). Each unit involves approximately 10 hours of learning per week, for a standard semester of 17 weeks, including assessment and study weeks. Classes are usually held in the afternoon and evenings (for example on Mondays and Tuesdays), at the Werrington South campus. Many units are also supported through web-based discussion boards and other curriculum resources.

Projects may include corporate communications strategy development, event planning and management, writing for specific media (such as television), web or print-based communications, and organisational planning and networking. The emphasis is on developing a project to suit your own interests, as well as the broad needs of the client. So, while both SDE and PBE projects reflect the direct needs of a given or real world client, you are encouraged to develop innovative strategies, based on the specific communications context being addressed.

What facilities are available?

Werrington South is home to the Creative Arts and Media Precinct of UWS Penrith campus. This is a growing hub for communications, media, design, and the arts, with hundreds of students drawn from a wide geographical spread across Sydney, as well as internationally.

The campus is an hour’s travel from the city centre, and is set in a rural parkland environment. Train access is close by, and during semester a UWS bus service runs regularly to and from the railway station.

The precinct includes AIR FM, a local radio station where broadcast journalism students have a role, and Television Sydney (TVS), Sydney’s sixth free to air  channel. TVS is a catalyst for studies in television production, management, and acting for screen performance.

Students in the Master of Professional Communication who are specifically interested in television marketing and corporate communications may take the opportunity to develop a professional project with TVS.

Admission Requirements

Candidates are required to hold academic qualifications deemed by UWS to be at least equivalent to a Bachelor degree in some related discipline (such as Communication and Media). Special equivalence may be granted to candidates on the basis of evidence they submit at the time of application, for academic, professional and/or any other qualifications they hold.

All domestic applications for entry to UWS postgraduate courses must be made through the Universities Admissions Centre (UAC). Step by step instructions are available on on How to Apply pages.

Do you need more information?

Request a course and application information pack:

Course Enquiry Form

International Course Enquiry Form

Alternatively, you are welcome to contact us.