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200 | 300
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Communication Disorders (CmDis)
(Administered by the Department of Psychology)
The following courses are part of the Speech Communication program.
For more information refer to that section. CmDis 170, 275, 286,
371, 471.
Courses Primarily for Undergraduate Students
CmDis 170. Speech Improvement for Nonnative
Speakers. (2-0) Cr. 2. For nonnative speakers of English
only. Development of effective English vowel and consonant productions,
accommodation processes that occur in context, intelligibility in
conversational English, and appropriate stress patterns. Offered
on a satisfactory-fail grading basis only.
CmDis 275. Introduction
to Communication Disorders. (Same as Ling 275.) (3-0) Cr.
3. Survey of nature, causes, and types of major communication disorders
including phonological, adult and child language, voice, cleft palate,
fluency, and hearing disorders.
CmDis 286. Basic Sign Language. (Same
as Ling 286.) (3-0) Cr. 3. Development of basic skills in the use
and understanding of signed English, a modification of American
Sign Language. Overview of the types, causes and consequences of
hearing impairment, deaf culture and the education of hearing-impaired
children.
CmDis 371. Phonetics and
Phonology. (Same as Ling 371. (3-0) Cr. 3. Prereq: 275
or Engl 219. Analysis of speech through study of individual
sounds, their variations, and relationships in context; English
phonology; practice in auditory discrimination and transcription
of sounds of American English; description of speech sounds in terms
of their production, transmission, and perception.
CmDis 471. Language Development.
(Same as Ling 471.) (3-0) Cr. 3. Prereq: 275 or Psych 230 or
Engl 219. Definition of components of language. Overview of
theories and developmental processes related to each component of
linguistic skill (semantics, lexicon, syntax, morphology, phonology,
pragmatics). Overview of normative information available for infants,
children, adolescents, and adults. Attention to metalinguistic skills
and the complementary nonlinguistic and paralinguistic skills. Nonmajor
graduate credit.
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