Graduate Index |
Elaine M. Frank, Chair
Associate Professors
Elaine M. Frank, Ph.D., University of South Carolina, 1988
Hiram L. McDade, Ph.D., University of Tennessee, 1976
Assistant Professors
Eric W. Healy, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, 1998
Julius Fridriksson, Ph.D., University of Arizona, 2001
Janice E. Jackson, Ph.D., University of Massachusetts, 1998
Distinguished Professors Emeriti
William A. Cooper Jr., Ph.D., University of Oklahoma, 1964
Gale N. Coston, Ed.D., University of Georgia, 1969
Overview
The Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders offers programs leading to the degrees of Master of Speech Pathology, Master of Communication Disorders, and Doctor of Philosophy. Programs are accredited by the Council on Academic Accreditation and its graduates are eligible for national certification, state licensure, and certification by the public schools of South Carolina.
Masters Degrees. The curricula consists of five principal areas of study: the normal development and use of speech, language, and hearing; information and training in speech-language pathology; information and training in audiology; clinical practice; and research. All requirements are dependent upon the students prior academic experience. During each semester of study, students have concurrent practicum placements in selected school or clinical locations to develop skills in the practice of speech-language pathology and audiology.
Doctor of Philosophy. The Doctor of Philosophy program prepares professionals for academic careers, and therefore its emphasis is on research and the scholarly study of the science of human communication and its disorders. While students are permitted to pursue the Ph.D. degree on a part-time basis, a minimum of one full semester must be spent in residence. During this time the student is expected to conduct experiments in the departments various laboratories and gain experience in curriculum development and classroom teaching.
USC Speech and Hearing Center. The USC Speech and Hearing Center is one of more than 300 practicum sites where students majoring in communication sciences and disorders receive supervised clinical training. Through the center, speech, language, and hearing diagnostic and therapy services are offered to persons of all ages, including University students and faculty members. The center is located at 1601 St. Julian Place, Middleburg Office Park, Columbia, S.C.
Course Descriptions
Communication Sciences and Disorders (COMD)
- 500Introduction to Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology. (3) Human communication disorders with an overview of prevention and treatment programs.
- 501Anatomy and Physiology of Speech and Hearing Mechanisms. (3) An intensive study of the anatomy and physiology of the speech and hearing mechanisms.
- 502Neurocognitive Bases of Language Behavior. (3) (Prereq: consent of instructor) Neurocognitive bases for speech and language in the central nervous system including anatomy and physiology and theoretical constructs of language.
- 503Anatomy and Physiology of the Auditory and Vestibular System. (3) (Prereq: COMD 501 or permission of instructor) Detailed examination of the anatomy and physiology of the auditory and vestibular system.
- 504Introduction to Speech Science and Acoustic Measurement. (3) The physical and related psychological attributes of speech. Use of electronic instruments and laboratory practices in measurement of acoustic variables. Introduction to information theory.
- 505Instrumentation in Speech and Hearing Science. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Theory and use of electrical-acoustic and mechanical laboratory devices used in diagnosis and treatment of communicative disorders including teaching machines and programmed instruction. Laboratory practices and observation.
- 506Introduction to Psychoacoustics. (3) Classical and modern psychophysical procedures in audition including absolute and differential sensitivity, loudness pitch, masking, and binaural listening.
- 507Language Theory and Phonetics. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Study of language theory and international phonetics alphabet transcription.
- 520Principles of Speech Pathology. (3) Types of communicative abnormalities exhibited by children and adults; emphasis given to speech and hearing defects encountered by the classroom teacher and professional personnel in the field of health, rehabilitation, and welfare.
- 521Introduction to Clinical Procedures in Speech Pathology. (1) (Prereq: introduction to phonetics or equivalent or permission of instructor) Diagnostic and therapeutic programs for the communicatively handicapped will be observed in the public school and various rehabilitative settings. Discussion and study of basic therapeutic theories and procedures utilized in speech therapy.
- 523Speech and Language Problems of the Developmentally Disabled. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Neurological and psycholinguistic factors in the diagnosis of language impairment and therapy procedures for language disorders of the developmentally handicapped.
- 524Speech Therapy in the Public Schools: Modern Developments and Experimental Programs. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Review of various approaches to public school speech therapy programs; the clinical approach; the individual versus group therapy programs; utilization of the block system; special administrative problems and current experimental programs in diagnosis and treatment of the speech defective school child.
- 525Selected Topics. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Presentation of current experimental or innovative programs in diagnosis and treatment of the communicatively impaired. Course is designed to update the practicing clinician in specific areas of expertise. May be repeated for credit. Individual topics to be announced with suffix and title.
- 526Disorders of Articulation: Evaluation and Therapy. (3) The diagnosis and treatment of articulation problems in children and adults, including analysis of current research in testing and therapy for articulation disorders.
- 540Principles of Audiology. (3) Basic anatomy and psycho-physics of hearing, the pathologies of hearing loss, introduction to identification procedures including organization of hearing conservation programs and practice in pure-tone audiometry, and impact of hearing loss on preschool and school-age children and educational, psychological, and medical aspects of habilitation.
- 541Industrial Audiology. (1) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Hearing loss due to noise exposures, present noise standards, management considerations, noise surveys, personal protection, engineering controls, and audiological hearing conservation programs.
- 570Introduction to Language Development. {=LING 570} (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) The language acquisition process in normal children, including the development of semantics, morphology, syntax, phonology, and pragmatics; American dialects and bilingualism.
- 700Evaluation and Treatment of Speech Sound Disorders in Children. (3) Advanced, alternative procedures for the evaluation and management of children with severe speech sound disorders. Historical and current trends in motor-linguistic theory and treatment.
- 701Stuttering Evaluation and Therapy. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) An introduction to the problem of stuttering; its possible causes; the management and training of clients.
- 702Cleft PalateCraniofacial Disorders: Evaluation and Management. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Nature, diagnosis and treatment of cleft palate and craniofacial anomalies.
- 704Disorders of Voice: Evaluation and Therapy. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) The diagnosis and treatment of voice disorders in children and adults. The neurological, physiological, and psychological bases of voice disorders will be considered.
- 705Language Disorders in Adults. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Neuropathological bases for language disorders in adults; includes differential diagnosis and remediation techniques.
- 706Language Disorders in Children. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) The neurophysiological and psychological bases of language disorders in children. Differential diagnostic and educational-rehabilitative procedures for treatment of language-impaired children.
- 707Clinical Evaluation in Communicative Disorders. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Assigned readings and reports combined with clinical practice in the evaluation of cases in areas such as aphasia, cerebral palsy, voice disorders, articulation problems, stuttering, or cleft palate.
- 708Directed Study in Speech Pathology. (3) Directed readings and/or research in speech pathology. May be repeated for credit.
- 709Laryngectomy Clinical Management. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Pre- and postoperative clinical management of the laryngeal patient with emphasis on communication and related problems.
- 710Selected Topics in Speech Pathology. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Individually assigned directed readings in speech pathology. May be repeated for credit when the topics covered or subject matter is different.
- 711Seminar in Speech Pathology. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) An in-depth study of selected issues. May be repeated for credit when the topics covered or subject matter is different.
- 712Management and Coordination of Programs in Speech Pathology and Audiology. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) A study of management systems in funding, scheduling, and case load.
- 713Neurogenic Disorders of Speech. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Clinical management of the neurogenic speech disorders. Major emphasis on neuroanatomy and pathophysiology; sign and symptoms, etiology, and the diagnosis and treatment of the major disorders.
- 714Gerontology and Communicative Disorders. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Aging, communicative processes and problems associated with aging, and specific communicative disorders associated with aging. Methods of assessment and rehabilitation will be considered.
- 715Augmentative Communication: Assessment and Intervention. (13) A study of historical perspectives, current issues, assessment, intervention techniques, and training strategies in augmentative communication.
- 717Professional Issues in Speech-Language Pathology. (1) (Prereq: COMD 521 and COMD 712) Issues affecting speech-language pathologists including professional education, certification, licensure, legislation, standards, and ethics.
- 721Cognitive Retraining. (13) (Prereq: COMD 705 and consent of instructor) Traumatic brain injury and implications for speech and language function including diagnostic evaluation and remediation.
- 722Dysphagia. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Normal function and pathologic changes of the swallowing mechanism, including evaluation and therapeutic techniques.
- 723Language Disorders in Adolescents. (1) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Diagnosis and treatment of communication problems in adolescent children, including educational psychosocial sequelae.
- 724Introduction to Medical Speech-Language Pathology. (1) Practical application skills for speech-language pathology in the medical setting.
- 752Auditory Assessment of Children. (3) Special audiometric techniques to be used with children from birth to 12 years of age.
- 754Aural Habilitation of Children. (3) Effects of severe-to-profound hearing loss on a childs total development (linguistic, intellectual, social, and educational). Communication assessment and case management, including parent training, education, and counseling.
- 755Aural Rehabilitation of Adults. (3) Comprehensive rehabilitation of hearing-impaired adults with emphasis upon amplification, auditory training, and speech reading in developing communication skills.
- 756Directed Study in Audiology. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Directed reading or research in the students area of interest. Maybe repeated for credit.
- 758Auditory Assessment of Adults. (3) (Prereq: COMD 540) Auditory assessment procedures of adults, including case history, pure-tone testing, masking, speech audiometry, immitance, functional hearing loss, and site-of-lesion test battery.
- 760Cochlear Physiology and Cochlear Implant. (3) Anatomy and physiology of the normal cochlea and the eighth cranial nerve. Evoked otoacoustic emissions as a diagnostic medium. Cochlear pathology with emphasis on candidacy for cochlear implantation.
- 761Habitation of Children with Cochlear Implants. (13) Clinical techniques for the communication assessment and habilitation of the child post cochlear implantation.
- 770Observation of Speech Language Pathology. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Introduction to the clinical process through observation of various diagnostic reports and intervention programs included.
- 771Observation of Audiology. (13) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Introduction to the clinical process through observation of various diagnostic and therapy sessions. Experience in reviewing case histories, diagnostic reports and intervention programs included.
- 772Practicum in Speech Language Pathology and Audiology. (113) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Supervised clinical practice in screening, diagnosis, and therapy.
- 774Internship in Speech Pathology. (313) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Supervised internship in diagnosis and treatment of children and adults with communicative disorders in clinical and public school settings in field situations.
- 790Introduction to Research in Speech Pathology and Audiology. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) An introduction to research methods applicable to and utilized in speech pathology and audiology. An analysis of basic and applied research.
- 791Research Methodology. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Preparation of research designs, procedures of sampling and use of statistical measures.
- 799Thesis Preparation. (19)
- 800Seminar in Speech Pathology. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) An in-depth exploration of problems, theories, and research in a specific area of speech pathology. May be repeated for credit when the topic(s) covered is different. Individual topics to be announced with suffix and title.
- 801Advanced Topics in Speech Pathology. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) A series of lectures, presentations, and discussion sessions in a selected area of speech pathology. May be repeated for credit when the topic(s) covered is different. Individual topics to be announced with suffix and tide.
- 802Contemporary Issues In Speech Pathology. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Issues of local, state, and national import related to the prevention or solution of problems in speech pathology.
- 803Advanced Study of Clinical Phonology. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Introduction to nonlinear phonological theory (e.g., autosegmental, metrical) and its application for assessment and intervention of children with phonological disorders.
- 805Advanced Study of Language Disorders in Adults. (3) Theories of language processing, language development, and the effects of neural pathology on the normal language process.
- 820Advanced Speech Science. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Advanced study of the physical and related psychological attributes of sound and measurement of acoustic variables of sound and speech. Review of current research in speech science.
- 821Advanced Hearing Science. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) The normal auditory system; middle ear and cochlear physiology as determiners of auditory psychophysics.
- 822Normal Bases of Speech Production. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Processes underlying speech production, including neural control, respiration, phonation, and articulation; theories explaining the processes; measurements of physical properties of speech.
- 823Normal Bases of Language. (3) (Prereq: permission of instructor) Advanced study of the effects of pathology on the normal language processes. Theories of language processing and development over the life span. Effects of focal and diffuse neutral pathologies on language processes.
- 840Seminar in Audiology. (3) (Prereq: consent of instructor) An in-depth exploration of problems, theories, and research in a specific area of audiology. May be repeated for credit when the topic(s) covered is different. Individual topics to be announced with suffix and title.
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