FALL TERM
Course Meeting Times
Lectures: 2 sessions per week, 1.5 hours per session
Lab: 1 session per week, 2 hours per session
Course Goals
■Develop the theoretical tools and human capital to interpret media and make meaningful decisions.
■Obtain greater insight into the modern social experience as well as our central institutions and their evolving practices that lead to the process of media transition and transformation, together with their influence on society and contemporary aesthetics.
■Understand the need for shared understanding across cultures and disciplines.
■Foster awareness and skills in media literacy, academic and reflective writing, openness and collaboration, identity and cross-cultural understanding, visual presentations and project completion.
■Contribute new ideas to the classroom. Explore perspectives. Competently field questions. Reflect on what is learned and think of ways to make improvements.
Instructor Expectations
Learn and have fun! Respect varying points of view. Be present for class. Arrive prepared with finished work and all appropriate materials. Embrace academic integrity. Take responsibility for your own learning.
Midterm Paper 15%
Final Paper 25%
Individual Presentation 15%
Group Presentation 20%
Student Portfolio 10%
(Used as a basis of continuous assessment.)
Participation 5%
(In-class contribution and interaction with other students and the instructor. Asking questions, offering answers, sharing opinions and ideas are all ways of demonstrating participation.)
Attendance 10%
(Punctuality counts. Attendance is taken sharp at the start of class.)
*Papers turned in late will receive one letter grade lower per day.
**Independent reading and media viewing are vital components of the course and to be completed outside of class.
***Drinks are permitted in the classroom. Students are expected to pick up after themselves.
****Plagiarism, cell phone use, text messaging during class…hmm.
*****The texts for the course are fast and easy reads.
Calendar
Week Topics Key Dates
1 Course Introduction
Communication Theory
2 Society and Culture
Advertising as a Pervasive Medium
3 Advertising Practices
Guest Speaker
4 Colloquium Portfolio Review
Network Television News
5 Sports Programming and Reality Shows
Music and the “New Cyborg”
6 Student Presentations
Student Presentations
7 Film and Society
Cinematic Storytelling
8 Guest Speaker
Colloquium Midterm Paper Due
9 Violence and the Media
Term Paper Preparation and Review
10 Online Social Spaces and New Media
Video Gaming and Stimulus Addiction
11 One-On-One Student Consultations, Group Preparation
One-On-One Student Consultations, Group Preparation
12 Group Presentations—Emerging Technologies
Group Presentations—Emerging Technologies
13 The New Millennium Portfolio Review
Waning Privacy, Waxing Propaganda
14 Consumerism + Corporatism
SMB—Stealth Media Broadcasting
15 Student Selected Topic(s)
Workshop—Media Fast
16 Media Illiteracy Final Paper Due
Course Review
Syllabus