COM 249

Mass Media and Mass Culture

Section 001

Spring 2004

MWF11:00 a.m. to 11:50 a.m.

Don Lowe

CB 304

Office Hours: 240 GrehanBuildingMWF 11-12/TR 1-2

Office Phone: 257-2954

E-mail:

Teaching Assistant: Zhiwen Xiao

Office Hours: 124 GrehanBuilding T 11-12/R 3:30-4:30

Office Phone: 257-1365

E-mail:

COURSE DESCRIPTION: An examination of the interplay between the technology and content of the mass communication media and culture .

TEXTBOOK: Mass Media/Mass Culture: An Introduction by Wilson

Wilson (McGraw Hill, 1998), 5th Edition

ATTENDANCE POLICY:

I expect you to be in class each day. For any day you miss, you will be allowed to make up work only if the absence is officially excused by me as your instructor (based on evidence such as a letter from physician, or other evidence requested by me). You are responsible for contacting me regarding any absence. You must present written documentation for any university-approved activity (field trips, band trips, athletic competitions, etc.) in advance of the advance and for any other absence within two weeks of your return to class.

For unanticipated emergencies of any variety:

1. Call my office number (257-2954) and leave a message for me

2. Send me an e-mail message with the necessary information.

ACADEMIC OFFENSES: PLAGIARISM AND CHEATING:

I expect that all your work in COM 249 (and in all your other classes, too) will always be of your own. You have already signed a form indicating that you have read and understood the definitions of two academic offenses--plagiarism and cheating-- and the penalties for committing these offenses are taken from the UK Student Rights and Responsibilities Handbook. This information is also available at the website: These offenses are serious and we do pursue each case.

In addition, we have a department site which offers several resources available for you to use to determine in advance whether you might inadvertently be using others' work improperly. I encourage you to use this website as often as you need it. we also have a department 'report' line to use if you suspect that cheating and/or plagiarizing is occurring in any way in this class, you report this electronically (and anonymously if you choose) via the site: Whatever you write in your message will be sent to the Department Chair (Dr. Nancy Harrington) as well as to me--but unless you provide your name, there will be no way to trace a message to you.

If you have any questions about whether you may be plagiarizing in your work, please contact me or the Course Director well in advance of the due date. Afterward may be too late, and the minimum sanction fro these offenses is an E grade for the entire course!

IF YOU NEED HELP

If you have a particular question or concern, please contact me by e-mail or come by during my scheduled "Office Hour" times.

You can get help with oral presentation skills by meeting with the CommSult consultant, Cyndy Harbett Miller, in 250 EGJ. Her office hours are posted on her door. Call 257-6137 for an appointment or just come by; if no appointments are scheduled; first come will be first served on a drop-in basis. If you need another time, contact Ms. Miller at .

If you need help with your writing skills, you'll want to contact the WritingCenter in W. T. Young Library (257-1356). For special online help go to:

Please ask questions whenever you're not sure of something (or just to double check).

IF YOU HAVE SPECIAL NEEDS

If you have a special need that may require accommodation or assistance, please let me know as soon as possible since I cannot being to make accommodation until I know your particular needs. You need to provide documentation; then, we'll work to make reasonable accommodation so your course work can be meaningful.

COM 249

Spring 2004

Daily Schedule

Jan 14Orientation/Reaction and Final Papers Assigned

16 Chapter One: Culture & Communication: Basic

Concepts

19Chapter Sixteen: Media Research, Effects &

Consequences

21Chapter Sixteen: Continuation

23Quiz One/Chapters One and Sixteen

Discussion One: Research on Effects

26Chapter Fifteen: Media Ethics

28Chapter Fifteen: Continuation

30Discussion Two: Media Ethics

Reaction Paper Due

Feb 2Chapter Two: Culture and Mass Communication:

How They Interact

4Review for Test One/Quiz Two: Chapters Two

and Fifteen

6Test One/Chapters One, Two, Fifteen, Sixteen

9Debrief Test One/Chapter Three: Globalization

of Information on the World Wide Web

11Discussion Three: World Wide Web

13Chapter Four: Legal Controls of the Media

COM 249

Spring 2004

Daily Schedule p.2

16 Quiz Three: Chapters Three and Four

Chapter Five: The News Media, Keeping The

Culture Informed

18Chapter Five: Video The Myth of The Liberal Media

20Discussion Four: News Media

23Chapter Six: Books, The Permanent Medium

Review for Test Two

25Test Two

Chapters: Three, Four, Five, and Six

27Chapter Seven: Newspapers Past, Present,

and Future

Mar 1Chapter Seven: Continuation

3Quiz Four: Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight: Magazines, The Specialized

Medium

5Discussion Five: Magazines

8Chapter Nine: Motion Pictures, Cultural

Reflections

10Chapter Nine: Video Hollywood Goes Commercial

12TBA

Com 249

Spring 2004

Daily Schedule p. 3

22Chapter Twelve: Television, From Soaps

to Satellites

24Quiz Five: Chapters Eight, Nine & Twelve

Chapter Eleven: Recorded Music, Powerful

and Controversial

26Review for Test Three

29Test Three Chapters : Seven, Eight, Nine andTwelve

31In Class Extra Credit

Apr 2SSCA Convention/No Class

5Chapter Eleven: Recorded Music:

Powerful and Controversial

7Chapter Ten: Radio: A Wireless Wonder

9Discussion Six: Recorded Music

12Video: Early Radio

14Chapter Thirteen: Advertising: Selling the Message

16Final Papers Due

19Xhiwen's Class

21Chapter Fourteen: Public Relations: Creating an Image

23Discussion Seven:Advertising Ethics

26Chapter Fourteen: Videos PSAs

28Quiz Five: Chapters Eight and Nine

30Review for final examination/All Chapters/Handout

May 510:30 a.m. FINAL EXAMINATION

Com 249

Spring 2004

Grading Scale/Criteria

Test One100

Test Two100

Test Three100

Test Four100

Quiz One 20

Quiz Two 20

Quiz Three 20

Quiz Four 20

Quiz Five 20

Reaction Paper50

Final Paper 100

Scale

A650-585

B584-526

C 525-474

D473-427

E426-0

Com 249

Spring 2004

Assignments

TESTS/EXAMINATIONS

There will be a total of four examinations throughout the semester. Each examination will be multiple choice in format and will consist of 50 recall and/or application questions from the chapters assigned prior to the examination. Examinations are NOT cumulative. HOWEVER, the FINAL EXAMINATION is cumulative. *You will be required to purchase Scantron Examination Answer Sheets (available at the campus bookstore for a small fee) for both the examinations and the quizzes and you will be responsible for having a Number Two pencil as well.

QUIZZES

There will be a total of five quizzes throughout the semester. Each quiz will be multiple choice in format and will consist of 10 recall and/or application questions from the chapters assigned prior to the quiz. Quizzes will be retroactive—meaning, you will not be quizzed over material not previously covered in class or assigned in the readings.

REACTION PAPER

Your first paper will allow you to discover your use/dependency on mass media. You will be put into one of two groups: Group A will record and discuss their use of mass media during a 24 hour period; Group B will not be allowed to use ANY form of mass media for a 24 hour period and will then write about their experiences. The paper should be presented in APA Style and be between 1 1/2 and 2 typed DS pages in length.

FINAL PAPER

Your final paper will allow you to apply your knowledge of Mass Communication Theory to a modern medium. You may choose any of the theories found in the text and discussed in class (a list follows this description). Your assignment is to examine a modern medium (website, tv program, movie , CD, CDrom, radio program, video game, news paper, magazine) through the application of your chosen theory—ie how does your medium support/contradict the theory. The paper should be presented in APA Style with an annotated bibliography and proper cover page. In addition to the text, you will need to reference a minimum of three academic sources. Your paper’s text should be no longer than 10 DS typed pages and no fewer than 5 DS typed pages.

Theories from Our Text

Magic Bullet Theory

Payne Fund Studies

Cantril Study

Lazarsfeld Study

Catharsis Theory

Aggressive Cues Theory

Reinforcement Theory

Observational Theory

Information-Imitation Theory

Positive Effects Research

Theories from Supplemental Text

Report of the Surgeon General

Selected and Limited Influences Theory

Uses and Gratifications Theory

Accumulation Theory

Adoption Theory

Modeling Theory

Social Expectations Theory

Stereotype Theory

Meaning Construction Theory