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Theater arts explore the essence of humanity, demanding a diverse range of abilities, methods, and knowledge from both professionals and learners. Students pursuing theater degrees examine dramatic texts and their staging processes. Their curriculum encompasses theater's historical evolution, literary works, theoretical frameworks, societal influences on performance, scriptwriting, acting techniques, and production direction, alongside technical aspects like illumination, set construction, and attire creation. This academic path equips graduates for advanced studies in MFA and doctoral theater programs while opening career pathways in: Performance Arts, Production Direction, Script Development, Dramatic Analysis, Theatrical Critique, Therapeutic Drama, Set Creation, Attire Conceptualization, Wardrobe Supervision, Garment Construction, Cinematic Production Teams, Illumination Engineering, Acoustic Design, Promotional Strategies, Production Coordination, Technical Theater, Fundraising, Venue Operations, Arts Policy, Cultural Administration, Teaching, and Media Relations.
Theater students undergo intensive preparation in either performance or design/technical disciplines, cultivating self-assurance, innovative cognition, effective presentation methods, analytical problem-solving, cultural literacy, interpersonal skills, poise, and emotional intelligence. They additionally master structured planning, efficient scheduling, public speaking ease, teamwork with varied perspectives, unconventional thinking, and adaptability to evolving circumstances.
If you have successfully completed your high school degree (12 years of primary and secondary education), you are considered an undergraduate student at CSU.
Meet minimum test score requirements:
TOEFL iBT (Internet-Based): 78 and at least 17 in each section
TOEFL PBT (Paper-Based): 550
IELTS: 6.0 and at least 5.0 in each section
PTE (Pearsons Test of English): 50
iTEP: 3.8
ACT English Score: 20
SAT Critical Reading Score: 470