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Students who earn a bachelor's degree in communication sciences often continue their education with graduate studies in speech-language pathology or audiology. For professional clinical practice, a master's degree serves as the minimum requirement in speech-language pathology, while audiology requires a clinical doctorate (AuD). Consequently, an undergraduate degree in communication sciences frequently serves as foundational preparation for advanced studies. The undergraduate curriculum focuses on understanding typical communication development across all ages. Graduate programs then shift attention to communication disorders. Students pursue a communication sciences major with a specialization in communication disorders, completing 45 credit hours of core coursework. These required classes cover topics in communication sciences and disorders, psychology, English/linguistics, plus statistics and research methodology.