The Film program prepares students for creative roles in the motion picture and television industry. The 81-credit program provides intensive experience in production and writing as well as media theory and criticism. Graduates are required to write a classically structured, feature length screenplay and complete a major production or theory/criticism project. A faculty-student panel reviews both the script and the project. The Department of Electronic Media, Theatre and Film provides students a variety of electronic media facilities, including radio and television studios, electronic field production units, and audio and video editing suites. Students are encouraged to apply their academic training on department-operated cable television channels in Spokane and Cheney and KEWU, a 10,000-watt FM broadcast station.
Financial information
Total tuition
$0.00
Total required fees
$0.00
Books and supplies
$0.00
Locations
Cheney
Instructional methods
In-person Primary Location
Is this program offered on evenings and weekends?
No
Additional details
Award name
BA
Education Prerequisites
No Selection
Prerequisite courses and other requirements
N/A
Is this program approved to train veterans?
Yes
Program languages
English
Certification/license obtained as part of training program
N/A
Certification/license test preparation provided
N/A
Employment performance results
Data is unavailable for one of several reasons: In some cases, the institution has not provided the Workforce Board with data to independently evaluate program performance. We encourage all schools to provide this data on an annual basis. In other cases, the program joined Career Bridge recently and student data has not been reported yet. In other cases, the program is too small or too new to provide reliable results.
Top industries for graduates
Data is unavailable for one of several reasons: In some cases, the institution has not provided the Workforce Board with data to independently evaluate program performance. We encourage all schools to provide this data on an annual basis. In other cases, the program joined Career Bridge recently and student data has not been reported yet. In other cases, the program is too small or too new to provide reliable results.
Data is unavailable for one of several reasons: In some cases, the institution has not provided the Workforce Board with data to independently evaluate program performance. We encourage all schools to provide this data on an annual basis. In other cases, the program joined Career Bridge recently and student data has not been reported yet. In other cases, the program is too small or too new to provide reliable results.