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Film and Media Studies

Overview Degrees/Certificates Courses Faculty

Associate Degree

A.A. in Film & Media Studies

The Film & Media Studies program is designed to foster critical thinking and media literacy skills, interrogate the multiple histories of film and media, and contemplate the role of film and media texts as artifacts that shape and reflect popular culture. Students engage in practical and theoretical discussions about film and media in a variety of courses on aesthetics, screenwriting, genre, narrative, and representations of race, sex, class and gender. This major is encouraged for students who intend to transfer to university film and media programs, or pursue careers that demand a high level of media literacy or analytical writing skills. The production of digital film and broadcast television are taught through the Radio, Television and Film production program.

** Students planning to transfer to a four-year institution should complete the lower division major requirements and general education pattern for the appropriate transfer institution and major. If you are interested in transferring to a four-year college or university to pursue a bachelor’s degree in this major, it is critical that you meet with your CRC counselor and/or FMS professors to select and plan the courses for your major. Schools vary widely in terms of the required preparation. The courses that CRC requires for an Associate’s degree in this major may be different from the requirements needed for the Bachelor’s degree. Exact major requirements for UC and CSU institutions can be found on www.assist.org.

Career Opportunities: Filmmaker, Entertainment Writer or Editor, Producer, Screenwriter, Professor, Script Supervisor, Story Editor, Digital Content Producer, Film Festival Programmer, Film Publicist.

** Some career options may require more than two years of college study. Classes beyond the associate degree may be required to fulfill some career options or for preparation for transfer to a university program.

Catalog Date: August 1, 2025

Degree Requirements

Course Code Course Title Units
FMS 300 Introduction to Film Studies 3
FMS 305 Film History I (1895-1949) (3) 3
   or RTVF 305 Film History I (1895-1949) (3)
FMS 307 Film History II (1950-present) (3) 3
   or RTVF 307 Film History II (1950-present) (3)
FMS 320 Film Genre 3
JOUR 320 Race and Gender in the Media 3
A minimum of 6 units from the following: 6
FMS 310 Introduction to Screenwriting (3)
FMS 321 Film Genre: Horror (3)
RTVF 368 Scriptwriting for Film, Video & Multimedia (3)
FMS 488 Honors Seminar: Introduction to Critical Theory (3)
   or HONOR 350 Honors Seminar: Introduction to Critical Theory (3)
FMS 489 Honors Seminar: The Films of Alfred Hitchcock (3)
   or HONOR 352 Honors Seminar: The Films of Alfred Hitchcock (3)
Total Units: 21

The Film & Media Studies Associate in Arts (A.A.) degree may be obtained by completion of the required program, and either (a) the Local General Education Pattern or (b) the California General Education Transfer Curriculum (Cal-GETC), plus sufficient electives for a total of at least 60 units. See CRC graduation requirements.

Student Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this program, the student will be able to:

  • Analyze, interpret and exercise critical judgment in the evaluation of film and media forms and cultures. (PSLO-1)
  • Recognize, articulate and judge the visual, verbal and audio conventions through which images, words and sounds make meaning in film and media texts. (PSLO-2)
  • Write clear, concise and well-developed analyses of film and media texts. (PSLO-3)
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the professional, technical and formal choices that realize, develop, or challenge existing practices and traditions in film. (PSLO-4)
  • Determine what type of information is needed for a research question, problem, or issue, and identify, evaluate and effectively apply this information in scholarly or visual projects. (PSLO-5)
  • Articulate the history, development, genre and movements of the film medium, and recognize the contributions of national, minority, diasporic and subaltern filmmakers. (PSLO-6)
  • Explain the processes, current structure and ethical norms of American media. (PSLO-7)
  • Evaluate research on and popular claims of the media's social, political and individual effects. (PSLO-8)

Career Information

Filmmaker, Entertainment Writer or Editor, Producer, Screenwriter, Professor, Script Supervisor, Story Editor, Digital Content Producer, Film Festival Programmer, Film Publicist. ** Some career options may require more than two years of college study. Classes beyond the associate degree may be required to fulfill some career options or for preparation for transfer to a university program.