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An Inside Look at the MSC Admissions Process

Sometimes the application process is enough to deter some prospective students from pursuing a master’s degree.

Time is precious, so we’ve removed many barriers from the Master of Science in Communication application process. We’re shedding light on the subject here so you can see—it’s not as complicated as it may seem.

How the Process Works

First, to begin the application, you need just a few basic materials (we don’t expect you to complete the entire applica

tion at once, so you can revisit at any point to continue):

  1. A professional résumé that features a snapshot of job responsibilities
  2. Academic transcripts
  3. A personal essay that tells a story about how you’ve gone above and beyond, been recognized as a leader, or accomplished a goal
  4. Contact information for two people who can provide letters of recommendation

A helpful hint about letters of recommendation: After you enter your recommenders’ contact information into the system, they receive an automatic email containing a link they can use to complete a form. Recommenders will not need to  create a letter from scratch. They answer a few questions, share feedback, and tell us about their core competencies and how they align with the MSC program. We know they’re busy, and we want to make it as seamless as possible.

Once application materials are submitted, you may be invited to participate in a one-on-one interview (virtual) with a member of the admissions committee, which is made up of admissions faculty and staff. During this hour, we want to hear your stories. Tell us about a time you were part of a challenging team dynamic. Describe a situation where you had to teach something new to someone. We’ll also talk about career goals and aspirations.

After the interview is complete, every application is examined independently by each committee member. Then the group comes together to make final decisions, keeping these questions in mind: Will you be able to do the work and manage the academic rigor? Do we agree with your assessment of what you think you can provide to the program? Are your goals consistent with the experience we provide?   What value will you be able to add and how are you going to contribute?

 

Put Your Best Foot Forward

As you complete your application, keep these hints in mind to help you stand out.

1. Essays are Important!

Personal essays matter (a lot). Instead of trying to guess what the admissions team wants to hear—or what you think the “right” answers are— tell us a genuine, real-world story. We want to experience a piece of your personality so we can learn more about you.

It’s less about telling us what components of the program appeal to you and more about telling us why you want to be here, what you hope to contribute, and how you can bring people together. The people who stand out are those who tell us stories, what they want to do with this program, and what they will bring to the classroom.

2. Keep Future Classmates in Mind

The MS in Communication is a cohort program—you’ll experience everything together. Interactivity and dynamics within the group are important.

In your application, highlight how you can add unique expertise or experience or serve as a voice of connectivity among classmates. The more we think you can bring with you to the program, the higher your potential of being admitted.

3. Ask For Insight from People You Trust

Although you’re working toward your own goals, this isn’t a process you have to complete on your own.

Have conversations with friends, family members, coworkers, and recommenders. Explain why you’re applying for the program and how you hope to represent yourself. Then ask for feedback on stories you should consider sharing—or strengths you should consider leveraging.

And, above all, trust the process.

 

Meet Our New Faculty Director: Erik Nisbet

Instead of transitioning straight from an undergraduate to a PhD program, Erik Nisbet decided to first build some professional experiences in research, strategic marketing, and branding.

He joined the workforce in the late 1990s, conducting national marketing/brand management work for a corporate apparel company, as well as tracking and reporting on lodging supply data as a director of strategic market research.

After spending seven years developing his skills, Nisbet then worked for Cornell University as a senior research associate before earning his PhD in Communication and Comparative Politics. From there, he joined Ohio State faculty to teach undergraduate and graduate-level communications courses.

Now he’s adding a new role to his repertoire: Nisbet is the new faculty director for the MS in Communication (MSC) program. He came to Northwestern University a year ago as an Owen L. Coon Endowed Professor for the School of Communication’s Center for Communication & Public Policy.

“I do a lot of research that informs strategic communication,” he explains. “I focus on message design, the impact of message framing, and the impact of different types of media sources on public opinion and policy attitudes around certain issues. I’m combining that work with my professional experiences to help create a professional MSC program that is intellectually rigorous yet provides skills, principles, knowledge, and career coaching to help students.”

His plan is to build on the program’s solid foundation and three core curricular themes—complexity management, collaborative leadership, and elegant communication—to make sure students get more than just a degree.

“We’re creating leaders and managers in communication and giving them tools so they can transform their own organizations. They will be able to find their place and customize the program to suit their needs.”

Nisbet says his goal isn’t to teach—it’s to transform. The program goes far beyond classwork, offering co-curricular activities, personalized career coaching, cohort collaboration projects, and interactions with a robust alumni network (which he plans to expand in the future).

“We’re creating leaders and managers in communication and giving them tools so they can transform their own organizations. We want students to also be able to communicate their personal brands in a global marketplace and the complex cultural environment we’re in,” he explains. “They will be able to find their place and customize the program to suit their needs.”

He sees his strengths as complements to those of other faculty, with a strong emphasis on elegant communication: how to find audiences, how to connect with them, how to understand them, and which messages work best for them.

Nisbet will share his expertise as he leads Foundations of Strategic Management in the program’s spring quarter; he says one of the things he looks forward to most is engaging with students during that process. His teaching will focus on helping them create comprehensive marketing and branding initiatives for organizations while balancing and working with internal and external stakeholders.

In addition to serving as the program’s faculty director, Nisbet will continue his role with the Center for Communication & Public Policy, as well as teaching domestic and international workshops for the USC Annenberg Center on Public Diplomacy.

He’ll also continue to serve as a trusted source for local and national media as they report on public opinion and perceptions about public policy issues, such as COVID-19 vaccines and presidential races.

“I’m excited to work with students who are interested in leadership and management, as well as those who have strong interests in strategic communication, and provide more pedagogical pathways for them.”

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Turning Medical Data into Inspiring Messages

Shortly after 9/11, Lauren Pedi ’19 stopped at her local hospital to ask about volunteer opportunities. She had recently moved from Detroit to Chicago—where her family was from—to work full-time at an architecture firm.

She was thankful for the job, given the current climate, but felt like something was missing. Maybe spending time in a medical setting would satisfy her desire for rewarding work.

Instead of becoming a volunteer, however, she ended up meeting someone in the development office. Shortly after, Pedi landed a job at Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center as a development coordinator—and she loved it.

“I learned a little about everything,” she says, “from major gifts fundraising to event planning and stewarding donors. So much was transferrable from my time as a communication major at University of Michigan-Dearborn because so much was about relationship building and connecting with people.”

Four years later, she joined Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago to work with volunteer boards and fundraise for special events. At the time, the hospital had just announced plans for a 22-story, state-of-the-art medical center, slated to open in 2012: Pedi would be part of the team tasked with raising $600 million for the campaign.

“It was a really fun, rewarding, and memorable experience. We worked hard. We played hard. We had 30 events in 30 days, and we loved every minute of it,” she says. The experience also solidified her desire to use her skills to support groundbreaking work in healthcare.

In January 2014, Pedi left the team to move into major gift fundraising; she joined Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine to raise money for the Institute for Translational Neurosciences and its work on Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and ALS.

“I knew the fundamentals would not only help me in my job today but also in the rest of my career—no matter where I went.”

As she helped support this research, she decided it was time to explore a master’s program. After talking to colleagues, doing research, and attending information sessions, she discovered Northwestern’s MS in Communication program.

Pedi admits she was scared to return to the classroom after being out of school for nearly two decades, but her “colleagues spoke very highly of it,” she explains. “As a one year program, it seemed very approachable. And I knew the fundamentals would not only help me in my job today but also in the rest of my career—no matter where I went.”

Earning an MS in Communication gave her the opportunity and the confidence to put her skills to the test. For starters, she purposely chose an elective that she knew would be uncomfortable—but would pay off in the end: Professor Paul Arntson’s Leadership & Decision-Making class.

“You’re videotaped as you lead a group through a decision-making process based on an analysis of a business case study,” she explains. “Then you and the members of your team go back and evaluate how you did. When I first heard about it, I didn’t think I could ever do it. But I joined the program because I wanted to learn and push myself, so I decided to go for it.”

That confidence carried over into her work, too. While at the Feinberg School of Medicine, Pedi had agreed to share what she was learning in the program and lead the charge on a new project: finding meaningful ways to engage donors. After coming up with a plan, she took her team’s proposal to senior leadership and they moved forward. “I had the confidence to lead this small group through this process and present our ideas to leadership because of the experiences I had during the program,” she explains.

As graduation approached, Pedi planned to take a few months off and re-evaluate next steps. But after lunch with a former Lurie Children’s Hospital colleague, she learned about an open fundraising position within the neurosciences program.

She returned to the hospital in November 2019 as a senior major gift officer, where she raises funds for the Division of Neurology and Division of Neurosurgery, among other areas.

Today, Pedi still reaps the benefits of her MS in Communication. Working with doctors, scientists, administrators, and donors, she says her job can be challenging as she breaks scientific and medical information into understandable messages to motivate donors.

“The program gave me the confidence to ask questions and probe deeper with doctors and scientists to get at the heart of their work and how it translates into something meaningful for donors,” she says. “It helps me do my job more effectively and successfully.”

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For One Communication Pro, Timing is Everything

Growing up in an Iowa farm town, Mia Roberts ’19 couldn’t have imagined the opportunities waiting for her after graduating from Graceland University: managing magazines for the Women’s National Basketball Association, working for the Olympic Games in Atlanta and Sydney, and helping Encyclopedia Britannica transition to digital content.

The desire for a master’s degree was always in the back of her mind, but the opportunity never seemed to come at the right time.

 Shortly after applying to Columbia University for a Master’s in Journalism program, for example, she received a job offer in Sydney and had to decide: move to Australia to work for the Sydney Olympics’ Internet Business Group or go to New York for a graduate degree?

“At the time, I chose to continue my career,” says Roberts. “Living in Australia was a dream. My path so far has been a series of happy accidents—being in the right place at the right time. I’ve had wonderful opportunities and experiences, and I’m very grateful to the people who helped me along the way.”

When she began her family in the early 2000s, she steered her career path toward flexible opportunities that also called for less travel: working for the YMCA of the USA, a group publisher for the Olympics, Feeding America, and the American Egg Board.

A few years after being diagnosed with and recovering from breast cancer, Roberts left the American Egg Board to focus on her family for a year—and decided it was finally the right time to think about her master’s degree.

“The goal of earning a graduate degree had always been there,” says Roberts. “At one point, I even took a few classes at the University of Chicago to begin my path to an MBA. Beating cancer brought into sharp focus the idea of unfinished business—and my master’s degree was one of those things. This time, it was right. I decided to do it.”

Roberts wanted a professional refresh to realize her professional goals, such as taking on additional leadership opportunities. She also wanted to learn more about managing communications complexity, which led her to Northwestern’s MS in Communication Hybrid Leadership Program.

“My job is to stay ahead of industry initiatives and find companies that want to work with us in bringing those initiatives to life. I feel even more prepared with my MS in Communication to face these challenges and lead our members through them.”

“I remember my first day and a discussion about intellectual praxis and fulfillment through deeper levels of understanding,” says Roberts. “That really resonated with me. As soon as I heard that, I knew I was in the right place.”

For Roberts, Michelle Shumate’s Foundations of Strategic Communication Management course was a great way to kickstart the program, beginning with the creation of a stakeholder salience model to better understand who stakeholders are, how they’re legitimized, and how to communicate with each of them. “That exercise blew my hair back. At that point, I knew there was so much more to learn.”

The focus on personal branding throughout the program helped her learn to effectively convey her strengths and weaknesses and communicate the value of her experiences. “After decades of working, you’d think you’d have this stuff down, but it’s an ever-evolving conversation about the benefits you can bring to an organization,” she explains.

Concepts of diversity, equity, and inclusion woven into the curriculum also helped Roberts develop the confidence to critically and respectfully challenge and interrupt norms. “I thought I was educated and enlightened, but everything I learned—and continue to learn—is giving me a much deeper understanding of what it means to be inclusive, equitable, and diverse in terms of thought, age, race, gender, and religion. I give all credit to the program for helping bring me along in this area.”

In February 2019—a few months before graduation—Roberts became the director of partnerships and industry affairs for the National Restaurant Association. In this role, Roberts focuses on creating industry partnerships to protect and promote the restaurant industry while helping members find new ways to drive business during and after the pandemic.

“My job is to stay ahead of industry initiatives and find companies that want to work with us in bringing those initiatives to life,” she explains. “I feel even more prepared with my MS in Communication to face these challenges and lead our members through them.”

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