Our Eligibility Criteria

Explore DUNC’s Eligibility Criteria for Students Worldwide

Eligibility Criteria

Bachelor's Degree or equiv. international education

Credit Hours

60 Hours

Course Duration

1 Year (Self-Paced)

Courses Offered

10

Courses Offered In MASTERS DEGREE

  • Courses Name

  • Courses Description

  • Credit Hours

  • Sociology

  • Sociology is a comprehensive course that offers you a global perspective to help you better understand your own lives, provides strong focus on social diversity that allows you to see the impact of race, class, and gender, and focuses

  • 6 Credits

  • Economics

  • This Economics course engages you with familiar real-world examples and applications that bring economics to life. The course explains you with easy-to-understand concepts that how economics is a part of your everyday life, and how it can be a useful tool in making personal decisions and evaluating policy decisions. 

  • 6 Credits

  • English Literature

  • English Literature course is an introduction to reading and writing, it’s founded on the principles of writing about literature. This course emphasizes literature, critical thinking, and the writing process. You learn how thinking, reading, and writing relate to one another by studying poetry, fiction, drama, art, music, and film.

  • 6 Credits

  • Mass Communication

  • This course retains the emphasis on the challenges of today's media while building on its extensive coverage of media history, effects, technology, and culture. The five part-organization-the media, media channels, media messages, media effects and media issues-provides a framework for you to understand the big picture behind today's media issues.

  • 6 Credits

  • World History

  • World History course present the big picture, to facilitate comparison and assessment of change, and to highlight major developments in world's history. This course emphasizes the global interactions of major civilizations so that you can compare and assess changes in the patterns of interaction and the impact of global forces.

  • 6 Credits

  • Mass Communication Law

  • This course includes the most current legal developments affecting the daily work of writers, broadcasters, advertisers, cable operators, Internet service providers, public relations practitioners, photographers, and other public communicators. Course ensures that you will acquire a firm grasp of the legal issues affecting the media.

  • 6 Credits

  • Contemporary Mass Communication Research

  • This course offers you a comprehensive, straightforward introduction to field of research methods. Emphasizing the importance of the research process, the course highlights how social scientists design research studies, introduce the variety of observation modes used by sociologists, and covers the "how-to's" and "whys" of social research.

  • 6 Credits

  • Media Management

  • This course gives you a close look at the burgeoning, influential, and exciting media and entertainment industries. Offering extensive analyses of the business and economic issues of the mass media, the course demonstrates the dramatic, revolutionary impact these formats, from books to the Internet, have had throughout the world.

  • 6 Credits

  • Multimedia

  • This course integrates coverage of essential new technologies, applications, and impact on managerial decisions. You will be introduced to industry-standard tools, skills, and materials that they can manipulate as primary means of creative expression. You will explore basic applications of various multimedia tools to create visual, aural, and written projects.

  • 6 Credits

  • Advanced Mass Communication

  • The course offers you considering careers in television, radio, or the Web a firm grounding in the field. You will gain a basic understanding of the history and technical foundations of electronic media as well as the daily business realities and likely future challenges facing today's media professionals.

  • 6 Credits