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STAS 341 L20 P08

 

Science, Technology and Society (STAS) 341 L20

Information Technology and Society

Spring 2008

Tuesday, Thursday: 18:00-20:45        Room: SS113


Instructor: Delia Dumitrica

Office Location: SS 323

Office Phone Number: 220-3925

Email: dddumitr@ucalgary.ca

Office Hours:

Tuesday, Thursday: 17:00-18:00


Calendar Description:

A study of the implications of information and communication technologies (ICTs) for political, social and economic organization, individual psychology, and concepts of knowledge. Historical, ethical and legal implications will be discussed.

 

Course Description:

In this course, we will focus primarily on the internet and its societal implications. The purpose of the course is to make you reflect on the complexity of the relationship between ICTs and society. From a critical standpoint, we will discuss mainstream portrayals, as well as our own beliefs and understandings of the internet. Starting from our everyday life, we will ask ourselves about those societal implications that are visible to us, but also about those that are not so obvious. We will try to connect our everyday life experiences to the wider social structures/ processes in which we live, such as the nation-state, capitalism and globalization. You will be expected to participate in class discussions, to reflect critically on your own ideas, beliefs and practices, and to observe things/ processes from various perspectives. Classes will combine lecture with group work and guest speakers.

 

Course Objectives:

By the end of the course, you will:

  • - be familiar with a number of theories about ICTs;
  • - be familiar with the history and development of ICTs in their social context;
  • - be able to think critically about such technologies in terms of the social context of design, marketing and use;
  • - develop in-depth knowledge about the societal implications of ICTs in particular sectors (e.g. health, personal identity, surveillance etc.).

Required texts:

Terry Flew (2008) New Media. An Introduction 3rd edition. Oxford University Press

 

Required website:

STAS 341 Students Website available at wcm2.ucalgary.ca/stas341

(Note: you do not need to login).

Assignments and Evaluation:
You will be graded based on four components:

  • Examinations (50%)
    • Midterm (25%) - Tuesday,  June 10, 2008
    • Final  (25%) - Friday, June 27, 2008 (to be confirmed)
  • Group project (30%)
    • Proposal (5%) - Thursday May 27, 2008
    • Presentation (20%) - June 24 & June 26, 2008
    • Webpage (5%) - June 24 & June 26, 2008
  • Class Participation (10%)
  • Reflection Journal (10%) - Thursday, June 19, 2008

 

It is the student's responsibility to keep a copy of each submitted assignment.
Note: Please hand in your essays directly to me if possible. If it is not possible to do so, a daytime drop box is available in SS110; a date stamp is provided for your use. A night drop box is also available for after-hours submission. Assignments will be removed the following morning, stamped with the previous day's date, and placed in the instructor's mailbox.

 

Please note: If your class is held in the evening, the Registrar's Office will make every attempt to schedule the final exam during the evening; however, there is NO guarantee that the exam will NOT be scheduled during the day.

Description of assignments

•1.      Examinations (50%) - Midterm (June 10, 2008) (25%), final (June 27, 28 , 30 Scheduled by Registrar) (25%)

The two exams will cover lecture material (including guest lectures and group projects) and assigned readings. The exams will contain factual questions, synthesizing questions, and critical analysis questions.

 

2. Group projects (30%) - June 24 & 26, 2008

This assignment will give you the chance to explore more in-depth the complexity of the relation between internet and society, and to gain some specialized knowledge in the presentation area. The focus should be on the interplay between technology and the social sphere of your choice. You will think critically about this interplay by choosing a specific topic (e.g. privacy in social networks), summarizing the problematic around it and raising relevant questions dealing with both positive and negative aspects of this interplay.

Students will work in small groups. The assignment has three components:

Group project proposal (May 27) (5%) which will contain a description of your proposed topic, one major author which has been writing on this topic and which you plan to use, and an outline of the presentation. I will consider the clarity of the proposed topic and the evidence of doing some preliminary research on it. You will receive feedback before you start working on the presentation.

Length: 1-2 pages.

Presentation (June 24 & 26) (20%): The group will give a 20 minutes presentation, followed by a 10 minutes Q&A session. I will consider the clarity of your presentation, the organization of the material/ arguments and the integration of readings and class work in your approach to this material. I will look specifically for how you have presented the interplay between technology and its social context.

Webpage (June 24 & 26) (5%): Instead of a final report, you will submit a mock webpage summarizing the main points of your presentation and including links to further resources. Please familiarize yourself with the STAS341 website and try to follow the format for your mock webpage. Use a simple Word document, but include references to any links or multimedia. The best webpages will be inserted into the website.

Length: 1-2 pages.

Note: Students will be required to do a peer-evaluation of their team members.

 

3. Class participation (10%)

You are expected to actively participate in class discussions and to be present for the group presentations. We will do several small class activities, which will be handed in to the instructor in the end of the class or submitted via email. If you fail to submit more then 2 such class assignments, your class participation mark will be affected.

 

4. Reflection Journal (10%) - June 19, 2008

You will keep a journal about your learning experiences in this course (6 entries spread throughout the duration of the course). The purpose of this assignment is to trace the development of your own reflection as you go through this course. You should use a personal voice, noting your own expectations, questions and thoughts about ICTs. I expect to see that everyday encounters with ICTs provoke you to reflect along the lines of this course.

Length: 4-6 pages.

Policy for Late Assignments

Assignments submitted after the deadline may be penalized with the loss of a grade (e.g.: A- to B+) for each day late.

 

Writing Skills Statement

Faculty policy directs that all written assignments (including, although to a lesser extent, written exam responses) will be assessed at least partly on writing skills. For details see www.comcul.ucalgary.ca/info. Writing skills include not only surface correctness (grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, etc) but also general clarity and organization. Research papers must be properly documented.

If you need help with your writing, you may use the Writing Centre.  Visit the website for more details: http://www.efwr.ucalgary.ca/ 

 

Grading System

The following grading system is used in the Faculty of Communication and Culture:

A+ (96-100); A (92-95); A- (86-91); B+ (81-85); B (77-80); B- (71-76);
C+ (65-70); C (62-64); C- (59-61); D+ (55-58); D (50-54); F (0-49)

 

Plagiarism

Using any source whatsoever without clearly documenting it is a serious academic offense. Consequences include failure on the assignment, failure in the course and possibly suspension or expulsion from the university.

You must document not only direct quotations but also paraphrases and ideas where they appear in your text. A reference list at the end is insufficient by itself. Readers must be able to tell exactly where your words and ideas end and other people's words and ideas begin. This includes assignments submitted in non-traditional formats such as Web pages or visual media, and material taken from such sources.

Please consult your instructor or the Writing Centre (SS 106, efwr.ucalgary.ca) if you have any questions regarding how to document sources.

Students with Disabilities

If you are a student with a disability who may require academic accommodation, it is your responsibility to register with the Disability Resource Centre (220-8237) and discuss your needs with your instructor no later than fourteen (14) days after the start of the course.

Students' Union

For details about the current Students' Union contacts for the Faculty of Communication and Culture see www.comcul.ucalgary.ca/su

 

"SAFEWALK" Program -- 220-5333

Campus Security will escort individuals day or night -- call 220-5333 for assistance. Use any campus phone, emergency phone or the yellow phone located at most parking lot booths.

Ethics
Whenever you perform research with human participants (i.e. surveys, interviews, observation) as part of your university studies, you are responsible for following university research ethics guidelines.  Your instructor must review and approve of your research plans and supervise your research.  For more information about your research ethics responsibilities, see

The Faculty of Communication and Culture Research Ethics site: http://www.comcul.ucalgary.ca/ethics

or the University of Calgary Research Ethics site: http://www.ucalgary.ca/research/compliance/ethics/info/undergrad/

Tentative Schedule of Lectures and Readings

Date

Topic

Readings (all readings are from Terry Flew, required text)

Assignments Due

May 15

Introduction

  • - Logistics
  • - Key concepts

 

NO READINGS FOR CLASS

Read for midterm: Chapter 2: Twenty Key New Media Concepts

 

 

May 20

History & Theory

  • - Internet history
  • - Thinking about technology

Chapter 1: Introduction to New Media

 

From Chapter 3: Approaches to New Media, read sections: Beyond hype and counter-hype, Approaches to technological change (38-49)

 

 

 

May 22

Culture

  • - ICTs & utopias in popular culture: from Neuromancer to Matrix and beyond.
  • - Community on and through the internet

From Chapter 3, read section: Technology and Culture (53-54)

 

From Chapter 4, read entries for: Manuel Castells, Henry Jenkins.

 

Chapter 5: Social Networking Media

 

 

May 27

Culture

  • - Virtual identity: on the internet, nobody knows you are a dog...
  • - Gender online: men and women of desire...
  • - Participation: new and old forms of civic engagement

From Chapter 3, read section: Social psychology: identity and interpersonal relations online (49-52)

 

From Chapter 4, read entries for: Daniel Miller and Don Slater, Mark Poster.

 

Chapter 6: Participatory Media Cultures

 

Group project proposal

May 29

Powers

  • - Governance
  • - Regulating the internet: policy and legal frameworks
  • - Work in the time of the internet

 

From Chapter 4, read entries for: Lawrence Lessig, Tiziana Terranova.

 

Chapter 11: Internet law, policy, and governance

 

Chapter 10: The Global Knowledge Economy

 

 

June 3

Powers

  • - Political economy of ICTs
  • - Digital capitalism & the global knowledge economy Creative industries
  • -

From Chapter 4, read entries for Scott Lash, Dan Schiller.

 

Chapter 9: Creative Industries

 

June 5

No class (reading day)

 

No readings

June 10

MIDTERM EXAM

 

No readings

MIDTERM EXAM

June 12

Sectors

  • - From telehealth to health consumption
  • - Media and the new journalism

Chapter 8: Citizen Journalism

June 17

Sectors

  • - Gaming
  • - What do we learn and how?

Chapter 7: Games: technology, industry and culture

 

 

June 19

Transformations

  • - What do biotechnologies, cybernetics, smart homes and AI have in common?

 

No readings

Reflection Journal

June 24

Group presentations

No readings

Webpage

June 26

Group presentations

No readings

Webpage

June 27,28,30 Scheduled by Registrar

FINAL EXAM

No readings

FINAL EXAM

 

  • Last Modified:
    Wednesday, October 8, 2008 - 09:32