Media and Communications Buildings + Other Important Places
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
This is one of our speech rooms in the mass communications building. It seats about thes air made size classes about thirty, thirty to forty people. On average, it can fit between three hundred to five hundred students at a time, though professors ten. Despite their lectures up into threes, you could be taking the same classes, your friend, your peers, but it doesn't mean you're there at the same time. This keeps it easier on Professor's Keepmoat Workload light, and it can be a little bit more intimate, though it is still split up. It's still a couple of hundred, but it keeps things fresh, and it allows the professor to teach two smaller groups instead of that one large group. When you will see, the large group is usually during finals and Exam week, where everyone to be in the same room together. I've seen some crazy things during finals week. I wrote down some information for you. Advertising, communications, digital media and professionals, communication journalism created MIT media interactions, media strategies, public relations and graduate programs are offered. I would definitely guarantee success out of this school because professors, eh? Really challenging. I thought it was gonna be a cakewalk because I was already familiar with some of the terms, but it just proved even for that, I didn't know as much as I thought I did. Classes tend to be a little less interactive in the large lectures than in the smaller lab classes. Just because professors can't speak directly to three hundred students every single day, every single class. It tends to be more attendants base and more lecture specific. So they'll focus on taking a tendency to ensure that you're there in your seat. Or the professor like I usually have randomly calls upon your name.