Grading formulas:
Assignments and Quizzes = ([Enrolling]+[Penguin Chapters 1 to
5]+[My Yahoo Page]+[Personal Home Page]+[Global Brain & the
Future]+[Writing Ch 26 27]+[American Values]+[Outline for Hyperlink
Essay]*2+[Essay Posted]*3+[DiscussionList]+[Historical
Trends]*2+[Library Assignment]*2+[Literature Review &
References]*3+[McLuhan, Turning Points and Politics]+[Triumph of the
Nerds]+[Data Fair]+[Final Gathering])/24
Total Score = [Attendance]*0.1+[Assignments & Quizzes]*0.2+[Midterm
Essay]*0.1+[Midterm Objective]*0.15+[Five Paragraph
Essay]*0.1+[Research Paper]*0.2+[Research Presentations]*0.15
December 7: To practice public
speeching, we will listen to
some great speeches, then try to read them ourselves imitating the
original speakers. The texts are at:
JFK Inaugural Address
- Martin
Luther King "I have a Dream" speech-Winston
Churchill's Battle of Britain speech. (These are available
online History
Channel or other sites). Shakespeare: To
Be or Not to Be. Tomorrow and Tomorrow
and Tomorrow.
December 5: We worked in the lab on our presentations.
November 30: We will work on
preparing presentations in Word,
which is easier than Powerpoint.
You can begin with your research paper and select three graphs, charts
or tables to present to the class. Make sure these are corrected
if I
indicated that they weren't done correctly when I reviewed the
paper.
You then write three bullet points to describe the main point in the
table or graph and put them on the page. Just
put each table or chart on the top of a page, with the bullet points
below it. The key step here is to make sure your graphs or charts
are good and that you have three good points to make about each
one.
If you pasted Microcase graphs into Word, there may be a lot of empty
space around them. You can open the "picture" toolbar in Word and
use the "crop" tool to cut out this space. Excel graphics
generally look better. These should be graphs or tables that you
create yourself, not ones copied from another source (which I did allow
in the Research Paper to supplement your own work - there is nothing
wrong with incorporating the work of others in a research paper as long
as it is credited).
Do not try to incorporate all the text you wrote in your paper into the
presentation. In a presentation, you show only the graphics and
an outline of key points. The text is used as the bases for your
oral remarks.
To prepare a presentation in Word, don't fill more than half a page at
a time, so that it can all be
viewed at once. You won't be able to animate the bullet points. A
sample
presentation in Word is available. If you
wish to do Powerpoint, a
sample
powerpoint presentation is available that you can use as a
template. If you open it in Explorer,
you will need to save it to disk and open it in PowerPoint to be able
to edit it. You can then just replace the graphs and text
with your own material, saving as much of the formatting as you wish to
use.
November 28.
We will discuss
creating presentations in Powerpoint and with other media.
Powerpoint
logic.
Sontag on photographs.
Gettysburg Address in Powerpoint.
Breaking
Up by Powerpoint.
There's Something
About South Jersey.
Trends in Camden:
www.invinciblecities.com. Making Powerpoint
Presentations. Powerpoint
Tips. PowerPoint
Tips and Tricks - includes a History of Powerpoint.
Earlier in the semester we viewed The Purdue University Writing
Labs powerpoints covering:
Finding Your Focus: The Writing Process Organizing
your Argument. Organizing Your Argument is especially
relevant here.
November 18 - We attended the
Beyond the
Post-Industrial City presentation.
November 14 and 16 - Viewing of
Triumph of the Nerds. Here is a brief review from a reader on
Amazon.
Sociopaths, egomaniacs, hippies
and nerds., September 19, 2000
And we have THEM to thank for all of this.
Your
humble author can't help but wonder how Bob Cringely got the likes of
Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Steve Wozniak, Paul Allen and others in front
of the cameras for an honest look inside the slightly twisted minds
that begat the personal computer.
At 3 hours in length, "Triumph
of the Nerds" isn't just a PBS miniseries. On home video, it becomes an
epic. And why shouldn't it be? The personal computer has an impact on
our lives equal to that of the light bulb and the automobile. But in
the case of the PC, most of the people responsible for its creation and
worldwide influence are still alive. These are flesh and blood humans,
not fading historical sketches like Henry Ford and Thomas Edison.
"Triumph
of the Nerds" was originally produced as a 20-year retrospective on the
personal computer. But the PC will be 25 years old in the year 2000. I
can't wait to see Bob Cringely's follow up.
November 7 - Political Communication. We'll discuss
chapters 8, 9 and 10 in Taking Sides. You can find
chapter
summaries online. Also, students in this class last semester
wrote
essays
on these chapters that are still available on the WEB sites (in most
cases at least). Their powerpoints on the essays are in
WEBCT. In our discussion today, we can look at the current
gubernatorial election in New Jersey. Here are some links.
Wikipedia
-
NJ.com
Corzine for Governor
-
doug.com
-
Rasmussen
Reports -
Marist Poll
-
Jewish Press Editorial citing NY Times Editorial -
South
Jersey Last Battlefield -
Independent
Candidates -
Millionaires
Fight Dirty -
Latest
Forrester Ad Quoting Corzine's Wife -
Here's a NY Times Story on attack ads in the NJ campaign:
October 29, 2005
Attack Ads Continue, to New Jersey's Dismay
TRENTON, Oct. 28 - One commercial shows a gallery of disgraced or
imprisoned public officials spinning on a roulette wheel around a
picture of Senator Jon S. Corzine, with
the words "Now in Prison" and "Pay-Off" stamped onto the screen.
Another ad features a young quadriplegic man in a wheelchair. "Doug
Forrester doesn't support embryonic stem cell research," he says,
looking directly at viewers, "therefore, I don't think he supports
people like me."
As the race for New Jersey
governor enters its final 10 days, the two candidates, both wealthy,
have spent an unprecedented tens of millions of dollars on television
and radio advertising, much of it attacking each other and, according
to polls, turning off voters in the process. And more of those
commercials are on the way.
"I think this is just bombardment after bombardment after
bombardment," said Edward J. Rollins Jr., a Republican political
consultant who knows a thing or two about tough campaigns and has seen
most of the ads. "The reality is that people have gotten to the point
where they're so oversaturated."
The candidates spent $17 million in just the last three weeks,
according to their most recent campaign reports, nearly all of it their
own money. Over all, the two men have spent $46 million since the June
7 primary, with Mr. Corzine, a former co-chairman of Goldman Sachs, at
$29 million, and Douglas R. Forrester, the founder of a prescription
benefits company, at $17 million.
The New York Times Poll recently found that 32 percent of voters
said each candidate was attacking the other unfairly. Other recent
polls have made similar findings.
The race contrasts sharply with the campaign for mayor in New York
City, where Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg,
leading by more than 20 percentage points, according to recent polls,
has spent nearly $30 million on upbeat advertising.
But in New Jersey, Mr. Corzine leads by only single digits, and
with many voters still undecided, the two campaigns are taking no
chances.
"Unfortunately, races seem to get more negative every year," said
former Gov. Thomas H. Kean,
who appeared in a positive ad for Mr. Forrester. "I think the public is
sick of it. People respond to positive campaigns," he added.
Loretta Anderson, 67, a Democrat from Ocean City who was interviewed
after the Times Poll was completed, complained that the race was "the
same old rehash."
"No one is saying what they will do," Mrs. Anderson said.
But she said one ad by the Corzine campaign spotlighting Mr.
Forrester's support for President Bush changed her mind about which
candidate she would support. "I'm voting for Corzine because Forrester
is aligned with Bush," said Mrs. Anderson, a retired insurance
administrator.
In random interviews with about two dozen voters, nearly all said
the candidates should spend less time attacking each other.
Not that the campaign has been devoid of positive commercials. For
the Democrats, the most memorable one showed former President Bill Clinton
raving about Mr. Corzine's leadership abilities. For the Republicans,
one featured Andrea Forrester, Mr. Forrester's wife, talking about the
virtues of her husband.
But even the ad with Mrs. Forrester elicited some cynical reactions
from voters.
"At first, I liked it, family values and all," said Lisa
Mermelstein, a software writer from Hoboken. "But after all the
negativity from all of his other ads, I started to think that it was
creating a picture that wasn't telling the truth. Now I think that it
was too Dan Quayle for me."
But positive ads have been the exception. In two ads featuring the
roulette wheel of disgraced or imprisoned officials, Mr. Forrester
attacks a woman, a union leader with whom Mr. Corzine was romantically
linked; in others, he links Mr. Corzine with former Gov. James E. McGreevey.
Mr. Corzine has approved ads linking Mr. Forrester to President Bush,
and another attacking Mr. Forrester's prescription benefits firm,
BeneCard Services, with the words "Sued for Fraud" on the screen.
The stem-cell research ad from Mr. Corzine, featuring Carl Riccio, a
19-year-old Villanova student who is a quadriplegic, drew the ire on
Thursday of the Jersey Guys, a popular radio pair on WKXW-FM, known as
New Jersey 101.5.
"It's almost like, 'If you vote for Jon Corzine, I'll walk again,
but if you vote for Doug Forrester, I'll be locked in a wheelchair for
life,' " said Craig Carton, one of the hosts, in an interview on
Friday. "My thing was, Do you need to put a paralyzed child on TV to
win an election? What's next? Are we going to start putting on mentally
ill people? The guy with one leg?"
Both campaigns say they do not like the tone of the advertising. In
an interview this week, Mr. Corzine said: "It's just awful. Whoever
wins, after all this junk flying around, the first thing they're going
to have to do is try to restore people's faith in government."
But both candidates were not exactly surprised by the negative
advertising, either. Mr. Corzine hired a team of veteran Democratic
media consultants who have worked on - and won - the last few statewide
races in New Jersey. And Mr. Forrester sought out Greg Stevens, whose
firm created the Swift boat ads that damaged Senator John Kerry last
year in the presidential race.
Over all, the primaries included, the two candidates have spent $62
million. And though voters and politicians may insist that they do not
like all of that money, and all of the tough ads, there are reasons the
strategy works, said Stephen Ansolabehere, a political science
professor at M.I.T. and co-author of "Going Negative."
He said that while independent voters become so turned off by the
mudslinging, party loyalists tend to be energized by negative campaigns.
"The irony is that these are the voters who already have their minds
made up, so they see what they want to see in the ads," he said.
Marina Stefan contributed reporting for this article.
November 4 - working in lab on literature reviews.
November 2
Theories of
Marshall
McLuhan. Reading Assignment:
Understanding McLuhan Notes on
McLuhan.
October 31.
Abstract - one paragraph summary
Introduction - identifies the problem,
reviews previous research, state the "hypothesis"
Methods section -
Results -
Discussion -
We will discuss the organization of research
reports. Our model is the sample paper on Body Objectification in
the Penguin Manual, chapter 23. It comes with
audio
commentary on the web site for the textbook. We will modify
this model for our purposes since we are doing secondary analysis of
survey data. We do not need to say nearly as much as this author
does about methodology. Most of our data will be presented in
graphs done with the Historical Trends software, although you are
welcome to incorporate other kinds of tables and charts you have
learned about in Methods of Research. Fulano de Tal has prepared
a sample paper for us which is
available
on his WEB site. You have to open it in Word.
October 26. Discussion of trend analysis, including an essay
"September 11, 2001:
A Turning Point for America's Future" also available in powerpoint format.
We also discussed materials from http://www.futureswatch.org/,
including the Trends Timeline chart available there in flash
format.
October 24 - discussion of the library assignment.
October 21 - we worked in the lab on trend analysis.
October 19 - Trend Analysis using Microcase. This software is
available in the computer centers on campus, or you can download it
from the readings and software folder on our WEBCT.
October 17. Midterm to be taken with WEBCT in BSB
108. There will be two quizzes in WEBCT - one will be
multiple choice and short answer and will be graded
automatically. The other will be essay format and will require
rewriting some sentences. The test will be closed book and you
will have only one try on each quiz. Some of the questions will
be taken from quizzes we have done as assignments.
Readings to be covered will include:
Chapter 8 in
Towards a Global Brain. and Methods
and Approaches of Future Studies.
Part I in Taking Sides (Issues 1, 2, 3,
4)
Penguin Handbook Chapters 1 to 5,
8 (7 in the first edition), 26, 27, 28, 29
October 14. Chat room review for midterm - this will
be held in 117 BSB to permit verbal as well as online discussion, but
you may log on from home if you wish.
October 12 Presentation and discussion of more hyperlink
essays. Everyone should be prepared to be called on. This
means you should bring a printed copy of your essay. You can also
update the online version of the essay.
October 10. Presentation of hyperlink essays: Colleen
Redman, Shareda Coleman, Jenny Popov, Rodney Washington,
Kimberly Yumul. Volunteers. These essays should be
acessable frm our home pages on the
photo
directory page. Those whose essays are not accessible
or does not work properly should come by my office this afternoon for
help or get it up themselves by 5 p.m. today: Anthony Manello (no
link to essay), Christie Henning (link does not work), Steven Sooy
(paper not posted), David Wilson (links to news sources are to your
hard drive not to the WEB site).
October 7: Meet in BSB 117 to
publish our hyperlink essays.
Instructions for
publishing essays are in Publishing
Essay Files.
October 5: Discussion of chapters
28 and 29 in the Penguin manual. In-class writing exercise using
a
powerpoint
available here.
Oct 3: discussion of writing essays based on our outlines.
Materials discussed
"Growing
Up in the Peanut Gallery" and Red
Sluts, Blue Sluts and Tropes on TV.
September 30: a lab class devoted
to finishing up the outlines, most have been distributed?
September 28: We discussed outlines submitted by several
students. These are not posted.
September 26: We discussed organizing our five paragraph essays,
using an
Essay
Form that was distributed. I did an example with the form on
the board, and then did a sample outline on Growing Up in the Peanut
Gallery. The one I typed in class was as follows:
Title: "Growing Up in the Peanut Gallery"
by Ted Goertzel
- Introductory Paragraph
- Motivator: First generation to
grow up with TV, what did it do to us
- Subtopic One: A white bread, racially
homogeneous, middle class world.
- Subtopic Two: Individualis or
collectivism?
- Subtopic Three: Traditional Gender
Roles
- Transition to next paragraph: These topics are
illustrated by three television shows...
- First Supporting Paragraph
- Restate subtopic one in different words: Howdy
Doody was a mass TV show with a puppet, etc.
- First Supporting Detail or Example: It was a
homogeneous bunch of kids, a red haired pupper with freckles
- Second Supporting Detail or Example: It seemed a
conformist ethos, the kids just watched and were entertained
- Third Supporting Detail or Example: Girls and women
had only subordinate roles
- Transition: This was for little k ids,
a few years later we were watching the MMC
- Second Supporting Paragraph
- Restate subtopic two in different words: MMC, first
Disney mass TV show for kids, had an ongoing cast of children
- First Supporting Detail or Example Very white
middle class:
- Second Supporting Detail or Example: More individualism
is coming through in that the young people on it were real characters
we could identify with.
- Third Supporting Detail or Example: Girls were
striving to be attractive and cheerful, no discussion of careers.
- Transition: This may have been more for girls, boy
watched Westerns...
- Third Supporting Paragraph
- Restate subtopic three in different words: The Lone
Ranger was a character who appealed to boys, fitting into the genre of
the Western
- First Supporting Detail or Example: He was white, Tonto
was a stereotypical sidekick. The scenes were frontier small
towns, socially homogeneous
- Second Supporting Detail or Example This is a strongly
individualisti theme, the man on the white horse who saves people the
system has failed:
- Third Supporting Detail or Example Women are
totally in traditional and p eripheral roles.:
- Transition: We have had three somewhat
different shows, perhaps reflecting different age groups in the
audience or some development of the medium over time.
- Closing or Summary Paragraph
- Synthesis of Main Topic in Different Words: The examples
are all traditional in sex roles and in class homogeneity, but they
vary in terms of individualism
- Synthesis of Subtopic One: all the same except for Tonto
- Synthesis of Subtopic Two: HD was conformist, group
oriented, MMC had personalities, LR is an individualist crusader
- Synthesis of Subtopic Three: Traditional all the
way through
- Final Concluding Statement: TV did not anticipate change,
it was purely entertainment, had strong male leading figures.
September 23: We had an online
"chat room" class. The
Transcript is online.
Sept 21: Discussion of other issues in Part I of Taking
Sides: Television Violence, Body Images, Racial
Stereotypes. There are PowerPoints on these topics in our
WEBCT.
Sept 19: We will view a PowerPoint on "Are American Values Shaped
by the Mass Media" The PowerPoint is in our class WEBCT. We
will then talk about organizing an essay on how American Values have
shaped our values. Some other readings:
Evangelical
TV.
Blogs in
Philadelphia.
Blinq:
Blogs Philly.com
Sept 16: we will meet in BSB 117
to work on personal WEB pages. Some pointers:
- If you want to use Mozilla Composer, which I recommend, you need
to download the full Mozilla Suite
not just Mozilla Firefox which is only a Browser or Mozilla Thunderbird
which is just a mail server. The Mozilla Suite has everything,
including the Composer. You can find these products at: http://www.mozilla.org/products/
You need the Mozilla Suite which includes "HTML editing made
simple."
- An alternative is to prepare your page in Word or WordPerfect or
another word processor. In this case, you need to save the file
as a
web page, in *.html format, not in *.doc or another format. If
you do
this, you may have more problems, but it does work.
- The "student homepage" feature in WEBCT doesn't work for our
purposes. we need to post them on clam. I took that link
off our
WEBCT homepage.
- The trick to publishing is to read the
instructions very carefully and follow them precisely.
- You may find it convenient to purchase a USB memory stick or
flash
drive for this course. According to a sign on the desk our
library
sells small ones (64 mb I believe) for only $15. That way
you can
keep all your files in one place and use them both at home and in the
labs. You can also use it to download papers in the library and
for
other things. You can also get larger ones from computer stores,
amazon.com, etc. You need a computer with a USB port. You
could also
keep your whole web site on one floppy disk if you don't get into video
or large files.
Sept 14: Discussion of the first five chapters of the Penguin
Manual. Some key points:
- In today's world we write with many different formats and using
different technologies. In our class we will write for the WEB,
for computer presentation, as well for printing on paper.
- Writing is often intended to persuade the reader. Key
factors which influence a reader are: ethos, pathos and logos.
- Visuals can communicate things better than words. Try, for
example, describing your mother's face in words.
- Visual texts are selected to make a point or express a point of
view, just as verbal texts are. Think of the focus and the frame in either kind of text
- Try to make writing interesting by using an active, personal
style and a variety of arguments and illustrations. Be lively.
- There are different ways to write. Some people like to be
well organized, others like to be more creative and freewheeling.
Probably it is best to start with an organization but not feel overly
committed to it. Brainstorming, idea maps and other creative
thinking techniques can be useful.
- Develop a working thesis which is specific and manageable and
interesting to the reader.
- Consider having an outline.
- Each paragraph should have a purpose, usually one of the
following: description, narration or process, examples and
illustrations, cause and effect arguments, classification and division.
- Paragraphs should be coherent. Each of the sentences should
contribute to a common purpose. We can use standard formulas such
as those in the five
paragraph essay.
- There are
critics of the Five Paragraph Essay format, but I have decided to
use it for reasons discussed here.
- We also want to develop skills in critically reading and viewing
the works of others. We will do this in discussing the texts in
the Taking Sides book.
- The Purdue University Writing Labs have prepared some attractive
Powerpoints covering some of these points:
Finding Your Focus: The Writing Process Organizing
your Argument.
- Your first writing project is to write a personal WEB page.
What is the theme? Will it have an argument? How will it be
organized. It should say something about YOU. A
straightforward example is Jay Herman's
page. You should feel free to express your creativity in preparing your
page. An example is Elizabeth
Brood's page. You should also add links to WEB sites that interest
you, although these can be added later. Later, we
will add links to assignments prepared for the course. You can
find many others on the WEB, including mine, my son's, Bob Wood's, Bill Gates, Steve Wozniak, Marshal McLuhan's, my (late)
brother's, Stephen Wolfram,
Oprah,
George
Bush, and many others that you can find with a search engine.
The ones done by last
year's students are available and include links to papers they
wrote on some of our reading assignments.
- Your second writing project will be a five paragraph essay on the
topic "How My Values have been Influenced by the Mass Media" See
the schedule and assignments page for details. The outline is due
on Sept 30 and the essay itself on Oct 7.
Sept 12: we used the My Yahoo pages as a way of introducing each
other, then discussed to how prepare personal WEB pages. The
sample web page we did (for "
Martha
Stewart") is available. (I mistakenly put .html twice at the
end of this file, you should not do that: Composer automatically
adds the file extension.)
Sept 9: we met in the computer lab, BSB 117 to work on My Yahoo
pages and other things.
Sept 7. We will begin with an overview of
methods
of studying the future. Each of these usually ends with a
written product, they can be thought of as outlines for a paper.
The methods considered are: trend analysis, cyclical pattern
analysis, environmental scanning, scenario writing, backcasting,
visioning and technological forecasting. Futurist research is
difficult to evaluate, and often use more than one method. They
can consider: possible futures, probable futures, preferable
futures and preventable futures. We look for reports that are well
written, complete, seem to consider all reasonable alternatives.
Today we will view a video called The Global Brain which is a classic
visioning exercise, first published as a book in 1983. Many of
the things envisioned in this movie may have already come true...
September 2. We went over the
syllabus and organization of the course and took class photos.
Anyone who wishes to send me a different photo (as a digital file) can
email it to goertzel@camden.rutgers.edu. If you have a paper
photograph you wish to use, scan it and send me the file in jpg format,
or bring it to class and I can scan it.
.