not the current syllabus!
NCLC 375 Information in the Digital Age - Spring 2000
M 4-30 - 7-10
s&tII, 9 & RobA,106
     
Virginia Montecino's Web site e-mail RobA, 405B
Lesley Smith's Web site e-mail RobA, 405C
course home page  |  non graphical syllabus
Day-by-day Schedule
Townhall
Course Description and Goals
Disability Support Services
Major Assignments and due dates
Honor Code and Plagiarism Statement
Required texts
Writing Center
Course Description and Goals
The digital information revolution is causing an explosion in the creation and distribution of  information. The nature and form of digital information is constantly evolving. In this 6 credit course, we will examine how purpose and function relate to form and how digital material can attract or hinder audience receptiveness.  We will also learn to evaluate digital information (text, graphics, etc.) to distinguish between "junk" and useful information.

We will examine the unique concerns about copyright, security and privacy in a digital environment. We will look at significant social, cultural, ethical, business, educational and economic consequences of the digital age, such as who are the "haves" and the "have nots" in the digital age? Lab classes will provide hands-on learning experiences. Some of your work will be published on your Course Web Page.  There may be some components which, because of privacy issues, may be turned in via a different medium.

 If you elect to participate in the experiential learning component,  you  will perform a technology outreach (i.e., design or redesign a Web site, teach Internet skills, perform Internet research) community service for a non-profit organization. You will meet with the organization members and submit a proposal.  You are expected to contribute 45 hours of time outside of class to fulfill the one (1) extra credit experiential learning component.  The work load will be commensurate with the number of hours. You must get a course form from your NCC advisor to take the experiential learning component.  This course form is not part of the Service Learning paperwork.
 
 


Course Goals
  • become knowledgeable about and critique various forms of digital information
  • publish in a digital environment
  • become knowledgeable about social, political, legal, ethical, commercial and psychological aspects of  a digital environment
  • learn how to research, analyze, and critique digital resources
  • understand and observe copyright laws
  • create Web pages using HTML code and some advanced concepts, such as working with HTML editing programs and ".gif" and ".jpg" graphics files).
  • engage in and critique communication on a variety of computer-mediated communication mediums
  • further develop your collaborative work skills and teach each other
  • compose well written compositions for a variety of audiences and purposes
  • articulate how your learning experiences in this course relate to the New Century College Competencies.
  • if you choose the service learning option, gain real world work experience through the experiential/service learning component of the course - using your technology skills to provide some technology service (create or redesign a Web site, do Internet reserch, teach Internet skills, etc.) for a non-profit organization.

Required Texts
The Wired Society, Carol Lea Clark, Harcourt Brace, 1999 (paperback)
Hypertext: The electronic labyrinth, Ilana Snyder, Melbourne University Press, 1996; Service Learning Handbook - if you choose the service learning option (Pick up in course materials copy center).  We will also have some online readings.

Participation
You will be assigned to groups and are expected to work with group members on group projects and help each other as you are learning new technology skills. If a student does not actively participate in the group projects, that student's individual project grade may be downgraded accordingly. You will evaluate each other's group performance at the end of the semester, using this form. Participation in in-class and electronic class discussion is included in your participation grade. You are expected to come to class having read the material for the class having ready any course work due for that class. (Always bring your coursework on a disk when you come to class.) You are expected to  have your work posted by the due dates. We, your professors, I feel no obligation to accept or respond to work turned in late. Quality of work, not just completing it, determines the grade you earn.

Class Discussion
We will engage in in-class and online discussion. Come prepared for discussions by keeping up with the readings and the assignments. Some of our discussion, synchronous and asynchronous will take place online on Townhall (http://townhall.gmu.edu)  See instructions for registering for and using Townhall.
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Major Assignments and Due Dates
You will be simultaneously working on different stages of various assignments.
Assignments - 90%: Participation - 10% of total grade
See Assignments page to  print  out just assignments and due dates.
Percent Due Date
1. Research and analyze digital "texts"
15%
2/14
2. Research and analyze a multimedia "text"
15%
3/27
3. Build on course Web site (continuous throughout semester)
15%
5/1
4. Group Project and proposal (20% total)
a. Proposal (post in Townhall for faculty and peer feedback)
5%
2/28
b. Draft  (peer and faculty feedback)
4/17
c. Final Project
15%
5/1
5. Class citizenship assignments (leading discussions, sharing knowledge in short reports, etc.)
a. Townhall  class discussion (responses to readings - group led)
10 %
 varies 
b. Mini research reports (digital journal on topics relevant to your majors, such as e-commerce, digital art, hypertext literature, etc.)
15%
see mini report due dates
Physical (body and mind) and virtual/digital class participation
10%
Total points for class
100%

 * Optional extra credit for experiential learning: 1 credit for 45 hours extra work    proposal 2/14, reflections 4/24 
All work must be the student's own effort, in accordance with the GMU honor code and copyright rules
Give credit to group members when you collaborate on projects. See guidelines on how to avoid plagiarism.


Class Schedule
(subject to change, if necessary, to achieve learning objectives) 
The readings should be read before the class meeting in which they are listed. 
Wk 1 - 1/24 - First day of  classes - Course overview and review of assignments & service learning. What is digital information, how is it created, and what are the various forms? Explanation of  assignment one. 
Readings for Week 2: In Wired: The  Late Age of Print, Bolter (279); Bards of the Internet (298); Rise and Swift Fall of Cyberliteracy  (301);  What is Digital Information? (http://classweb.gmu.edu/classweb/nclc375/375digits.htm).

Wk 2 - 1/31- Web Class - Rob A, rm 106 - Technology survey. Register for Townhall. Explanation of student-led Townhall discussions. Class discussion of readings and digital genres. Extend discussion to Townhall. Creating digital text and hypertext. Creating student course Web pages. 
Readings for Week 3: In Wired: When Your Toast Starts talking to you (49) ; The Same Mindless Stupid Process ( 154 ); Luddite vs. Fetishists; On the Web: Lecture on The Garden in the Machine: The Impact of American Studies on New Technologies, Randy Bass, Georgetown University, http://www.georgetown.edu/bassr/garden.html (read the section: Resisting the Myths of the Electronic Frontier). Post on Townhall (by midnight Friday) your individual response to the readings.

February 1 - Last day to drop with no tuition liability

Wk 3 - 2/7 -  Group-led discussion of readings. Historical and cultural context: collapsing of time, space and hierarchy.   Technophobes, technophilia: What are people afraid of?  Information overload, asynchronous anxiety,. Explanation of Major Project and Project Proposal. 
Readings for Week 4: In Wired: Virtual Reality Check - ethical implications of cyberspace (166); Civil Liberties in Cyberspace:  When does hacking turn from an exercise of civil liberties into a crime? (208): A Convergence of Distribution; Supreme Court Ruling on Communications and Decency Act (219); A Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace (201); Independence Daze (204). Post on Townhall (by midnight Friday) your individual response to the readings.

Wk 4 - 2/14 - Web Class, Rob A, rm 106 - Research and analyze digital "texts" assignment due. Dangers of broad-based information access and sharing.  Class discussion :  Ethics, Netiquette, Computer Crime, Privacy, Copyright, Censorship. Evaluate Web sites. In-class evaluation exercises.  Search lists of listservs and newsgroups. Listservs/Newsgroups.  Investigate listservs and newsgroups and subscribe to one which relates to your major group project.  Include the listserv/newsgroup in your evaluation of your digital sources for that project. 
Mini-research project (due 21 February): Evaluate a web site using the criteria discussed in class. 
Readings for Week 5: Chapter 1, "Electronic Writing," in Hypertext, Snyder; Chapter 2, "Explaining Hypertext," in Hypertext, Snyder; (Copy Shop Reader (there are two very short ones)) Nicholas Burbules, "Rhetorics of the Web; " Wired," McLuhan, The Medium is the Message" (139). Post on Townhall (by midnight Friday) your individual response to the readings.  You must discuss both  chapters from the Snyder book and refer to your own experiences of reading and writing hypertext (for example, in your reading, analysis and writing for the 'digital texts' assignment).
[For those students doing the experiential learning option, please submit your proposals today.]

Wk 5 - 2/21 - Convergence and intertextuality (multitextuality, video, TV, print, music, hypertext) Emerging/ mutating genres. What is a link?  Confessional culture, masquerades, self-promotion. 
Mini-research project (due 28 February): Analyze web and print versions of the same publication

February 25 by 5 pm - Last day to drop without dean's permission

Wk 6 - 2/28 - Web Class - Rob A, rm 106 - Proposal due for Group Project. Brushing up on Technology Skills.  Tweaking Web Sites & Sharing Knowledge. 
Readings for week 7: In Wired: Dibbell, A Rape in Cyberspace (98); Rheingold, Virtual Community (92); Joan Connell,  Session with the Cyber Shrink (380); Barrett and Wallace, Virtual Encounters (179); Kevin Manney, Technowomen (428); (Copy Shop Readers) Cynthia Selfe, "Lest We Think the Revolution is a Revolution: Images of Technology and the Nature of Change". On the WebHaves and Have Nots: The Digital Divide  (http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/digitaldivide/index.html); Introduction: Gender in the Internet Age) (http://www.cpsr.org/publications/newsletters/issues/2000/Winter2000/index.html). 

Post on Townhall (by midnight Friday) your individual response to the readings.

Wk 7 - 3/6  -  Identity & New Realities; Gender; Digital Divide (Haves & Have Nots. Who's got the power?): Open and closed frontiers to knowledge. 
Mini-research report (due 20 March): "Read" a gendered Web site
Readings for Week 8: (Copy Shop Reader) Gail Hawisher & Patricia A. Sullivan, "Fleeting Images: Women Visually Writing the Web;" Web sites: The View is Everything.  Watch for Openings; Plumb Design; Artistic Representations of Cyberspace. Your own personal web site.  Download Netomat to your computer and browse the web using its visual, rather than textual, interface.  Here's what its creators say: 

netomat(TM) eschews the anachronistic page structure of today's web by not privileging layout and design. It atomizes text, images and audio loosening them from web sites and web pages. This allows the data to be recombined or viewed independently in a context determined by you. 
Post on Townhall (by midnight on the Friday of Spring Break - sorry!) your individual response to the readings & viewings. 

SPRING RECESS - 3/13 - 3/19  Yeah!!!!

Wk 8 -  3/20 Web class - Rob A, rm 101- Visual Research and Assessment & Workshop in Internet Group Projects. 
Mini-research project (due 27 March):"Read" a web site in a language you cannot understandReadings for Week 9: in Wired,  John Gehl, Diary of a Telecommuter (439) Drucker: Beyond the Information Revolution (online); Readings on AOL/Time Warner merger; reading on credit-card extortion (Look in the discussion folder for Week 9) .

Wk 9 - 3/27 - Research and analyze a multimedia "text" assignment due. Business and E-Commerce.  Brainstorming digital metaphors. 
Mini-research Project (due 3 April): Being a digital consumer. Readings for Week 10: "Reconceiving Reading and Writing," pp. 61 - 79 in Hypertext, Snyder;  Introduction to A Life Set for Two, Robert Kendall (http://www.eastgate.com/hypertext/kendall/Mirrors.html). Create your own written and/or graphic piece inspired by Adrienne Rich's poem, "Artifical Intelligence."(in Townhall folder for week 10).  (Make sure your piece is original and something you are happy to share with others.). Bring to next week's class on disk. 

Wk 10 - 4/03 - Web Class - Rob A, rm 106- Death and Multiplicity:  In-class literary hypertext reading and writing. Readings for Wk 11: The (online) New York Times White House 2000 Campaign section (Please investigate all the sections, including ads. etc  If you do not normally read NYT you may have to register to view this page - junk mail from the Times is minimal); Project Vote Smart; The Vanishing Voter; C-SPAN Campaign 2000; Bush Campaign - Crash Ads (in Week 11: Additional Readings folder).

Wk 11 -  4/10 - Politics & Digital Information:   Is digital information a campaign equalizer?  Could you run for office?  How would you organize your digital campaign?  Who would be your audience? 
Mini-research project (due 17 April): "Read" political identity and information on the Web.

Wk 12 -  4/17- Web Class Rob A, rm 101- Draft of Group Project due. Web Class - Picasso Unleashed! Creating graphics (backgrounds, buttons, logos, photos, etc.) 

Wk 13 - 4/24 -Web Class - Rob A, rm 106 - Workshop on peer response to  the final project to the web. Bring all your project work to class on disk(s)! 
[Experiential learning projects due. Please turn in reflection reports and required paperwork to the Service Learning Center. Be sure you have submitted your paperwork for our signatures.]

Wk 14 - 5/1 - Web Class Rob A, rm 106 - GROUP PROJECTS HAVE TO BE ON WEB. Presentation of Projects.  Peer and faculty evaluation of projects. 


non graphical syllabus
syllabus assignments resources townhall exp.learning
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