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Program Overview
Program Description
The MFA Program in Integrated Media Arts (IMA) offers advanced studies in multimedia documentary arts. The IMA Program educates multi-disciplinary, socially engaged media makers in a diverse range of skills across the media landscape. Working with faculty from film, emerging media, and journalism backgrounds, students learn to conceptualize, create and distribute innovative, politically and socially engaged expression using contemporary media technologies.
The IMA Program offers a 48 credit course of study, combining analytical seminars, interdisciplinary research, and creative workshops in writing, visual communication, film and emerging media production, culminating in an advanced thesis project and paper. IMA students can also engage in collaborative production labs, intensive tech workshops, a teaching mentorship program, and outside creative residencies. Student work in the program has included films, animation, audio, interactive installations and websites, public exhibitions, transmedia narratives, live performances, and rich media for the expanding spectrum of screen-based platforms. Building on a foundation of research and analysis, IMA students explore and create new ways to advance information and ideas, balancing critical thinking with aesthetics, contemporary issues with a historical perspective, theory with practice, and traditional methods with new technologies.
Program Objectives
- Cultivate an understanding of historical and contemporary practices in Documentary and Emerging Media
- Display an ability to closely analyze media using critical concepts and theoretical frameworks
- Demonstrate a proficiency with the tools and techniques of contemporary media production and apply them to a diverse range of projects
- Produce original work that carefully calibrates form and content across a variety of media platforms and communicates effectively with an intended audience
- Thoughtfully critique creative work and constructively evaluate feedback
- Develop an artistic practice and professional media skill set
Program Requirements and Curriculum
Required Courses
- Students are encouraged to take the following courses:
- IMA 700: Visual Culture Seminar, or IMA 701: Social and Historical Roots of Arts and Culture
- IMA 750: Emerging Media 1
- IMA 751: Documentary 1
- Minimum of 48 credits. 42 credits of coursework and 6 credits for Thesis. The program allows students to take a maximum of 60 credits, so 9 – 12 additional credits beyond what is required, if they choose.
Non-Credit Requirements
- Critique Sessions: Students must pass two critique sessions in order to begin work on the Thesis Project. Students who do not pass either the First or Second Critique after three attempts must withdraw from the IMA Program.
- Thesis Requirements: To graduate, students have a maximum of two years to complete the creative component of the Thesis Project, present this project to a panel of three advisors in a Thesis Defense, submit a Thesis Paper that is approved by the Primary Thesis Advisor and conforms to the College's guidelines for Master's Theses in Arts & Sciences, and exhibit the Thesis Project in the IMA Program's Thesis Show.
Program Completion
- Students must fulfill all degree requirements within five years of matriculating.
FAQs
Placing Out of Requirements
In some cases, students can place out of requirements based on prior graduate study or the equivalent in professional experience. To do so, we require a substantive correlation between the student's experience and the course content and projects of the class in question. To place out of a course, you must make a written appeal to the program director and course instructor that includes a detailed rationale along with relevant supporting materials.
Part-Time Students
Our new program requirements have been designed to apply to part-time and full-time students.
Course Offerings
Unfortunately, we do not have the requisite resources to run courses in both the fall and spring semesters. We normally offer all required classes every fall semester, though we are working with a new model and offering technical 1-credit film courses in fall and Documentary 1 in the spring semester.
Summer Courses
We are expanding our summer course offerings including running our required foundation classes during summer session.
Focusing on One Discipline
Students can primarily work with the medium of their choice throughout the program but we do recommend that students try at least one course that would be outside their comfort zone to explore new storytelling tools.
Electives
Yes. We have created prerequisites that support a tiered curriculum while preserving student flexibility.
Exemptions and Credits
No. You must still complete the 48 credits required for a degree.
Course Order
It's ideal to take required classes in your first and second semester but there are many reasons why you might wait to take a class later in your time at IMA.
1-Credit Classes
These are classes from which you cannot withdraw. Nonattendance will result in potentially receiving an F grade and placing the student on probation. Please be aware that attendance to all one-credit sessions is mandatory, so mark your calendar as the 1-credit classes often start later in the semester.
External Courses
You can take up to 6 graduate credits outside of the program towards your degree.
