|
Kingsborough Community
College
The City University of New York
Syllabus
COM 11:
Mass Communication - 3 credits, 3 hours
Course Coordinator: Professor Sam Taitt
Course Description:
Communications have had a global impact on everyone's life, personal
and professional. Today's student must have a knowledge of print, film
and electronic media, including the information superhighway. This course
will provide an introduction to all areas of mass communication with an
emphasis on improving listening and speaking skills.
College Now
Description: Communications have had a global impact on everyone's
life, personal and professional. This course will provide an introduction
to all areas of mass communications and media literacy through the study
of radio, television, film, newspapers, magazines, books and the Internet.
Explanation:
There continues to be an explosion of communication through the mass media,
and more recently the information super-highway. Current consideration
of the mass media must recognize the global nature and impact of communications
systems and uses of the mass media. Students also need to acquire greater
skills in, and knowledge of, the areas of oral, written and mass communication
if they are to compete and succeed in this ever-changing and expanding
technological world.
Course
Objectives:
- To increase students'
understanding of the history of the various mass media and how they
operate.
- To increase students'
awareness of the personal communications skills required for effectiveness
in the mass media.
- To improve students'
appreciation of the ways in which the mass media affect everyday lives.
Topical Course
Outline:
- The Communication
Process
- Interaction of
Society and Mass Communication
a. Beginnings of Mass Communication
b. Mass production and mass consumption
c. The new mass culture
d. Developmental stages of mass communication and mass society
e. First amendment freedoms
f. Mass communication theories and their relationship to
governments and citizens
- Print
a. Origin of books
b. Origins of newspapers
c. Changing societies through the American press eras
d. News wire services
e. The electronic newspaper
f. History of magazines
g. Decline of general interest magazines
h. Specialized magazines and the popular culture
- Motion Pictures
a. Technologies that prepared the way for the motion picture
b. Social conditions and mass audiences
c. From silent movies to the talkies
d. Movies and changing moral values
e. From home video to High-Definition Television (HDTV)
- Radio
a. The development of sound through the air
b. Ham radio operators - the early broadcasters
c. The large corporations take over
d. The switch to specialized formats and maintaining community
responsibility
- Recorded Music
a. The talking machine
b. Recorded music and recent controveries
c. Recent technologies
- Broadcast Television
a. Yesterday's and today's genres
b. Talk shows and tabloid television
c. Impact of station and viewer preferences on programming, and
the effects of such programming on society
d. Television viewing and children
e. Broadcasting in the public interest
- Broadcast Journalism
and Public Affairs Programming
a. Television news
b. Television afternoon talk shows
c. The radio call-in program
d. Interviewing techniques and applicability to mass media and
personal communication
e. Community-access programming
- Cable TV
a. Problems that gave rise to cable television
b. Cable TV's development as a specialized service
c. Interactive TV
d. Community-access television
e. Merging of computers, television, cable and satellite
- The Information
Super Highway
a. History of the Internet
b. Use of the Internet for mass communication
- Advertising
a. Advertising theories
b. Propaganda devices - shaping and manipulating
c. Motivational research
d. Types of advertising media
e. Children's advertising
f. Impact of TV advertising on consumer and political decisions
- Public Relations
a. The purpose of public relations
b. Corporate PR practitioners, media specialists, political press
secretaries and consultants; who they are, what they do
c. PR strategies (i.e., corporate, political and personal) and
their impact
- Public Speaking
as a Mass Communication Tool
a. Techniques and exercises in delivery
b. Speech preparation
c. Listening habits and attitudes
- Impact of Mass
Communication on Today's Culture
a. Media ethics
b. Theories about TV violence
c. Regulations
- Mass Media in Other
Countries
a. How people from other countries are perceived
b. How developing countries are portrayed in the media
Methods of Teaching:
- Assigned readings
- Lectures
- Audio and video
tapes
- Visitations to
broadcast facilities
Assignments:
- Readings from text
- Readings from periodicals
- Viewing of and
listening to specific media events
- Written assignments
based on readings and/or research
- Trips to radio/television
stations and broadcast museums
- Presentation of
oral reports on specific media projects (individual and group)
- Performance-oriented
projects (i.e., presentation of TV talk show; writing and/or voicing
radio commercials)
- Preparation and
presentation of an effective speech
Method of Evaluation:
- Class attendance
- Student participation
- Written assignments
- Oral assignments
- Mid-term exam
- Final exam
Required Reading:
Baran, Stanley J.
Introduction to Mass Communication: Media Literacy and Culture, 2nd
edition. (Boston:McGraw Hill 2002).
Teacher Resource
Materials:
- Test Bank for
Mass Communication, 6th edition (Book or Diskette)
- "CNN Video
for Mass Communication, 6th edition," (26 segment video that corresponds
to course textbook)
- Various Videotapes
from "Mass Communication On Video" (Insight Media) 2162 Broadway;
New York, NY 10024
Phone: (212) 721-6316; FAX (212) 799-5309
a. Learn to Use the Internet - 45 min/1995/#J0414
b. Exploring Broadcast Television - 27 min/1995/#J0359
c. The Media and Presidential Politics - 12 min/1988/#J0206
d. Images - 15 min/1994/#J0390
e. First Amendment Freedoms - 30 min/1989/#J037
f. Are We Scaring Ourselves to Death? - 50 min/1994/#J0405
g. Teach the Children - 56 min/1992/#J0252
h. The Making of a Newspaper - 28 min/1988/#J0119
i. The World of Magazines - 30 min/1990/#J0362
j. How a Radio Station Works - 26 min/1989/#J0401
k. Hollywood, The Golden Years - 58 min/1988/#J0354
l. Invisible Persuaders: The Battle for Your Mind - 22 min/1994/#J0260
m. Newer Alternative Media - 20 min/1994/#J0264
n. Communication: Negotiation and Persuasion - 30 min/1989/#JJ0202
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bullock,
Penelope L. The Afro-American Periodical Press, 1838-1909. (Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1981).
Buxton,
Frank. The Big Broadcast, 1920-1950. (New York: Viking Press, 1972).
DeLong,
Thomas A. The Mighty Music Box: The Golden Age of Musical Radio.
(Los Angeles, California: Amber Crest Books, 1989).
Diawara,
Manthia, Ed. Black American Cinema. (New York: Routledge, 1993).
Emery,
Michael, and Edwin Emery. The Press and America. (Englewood Cliffs,
New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1988).
Fletcher,
Alan D., and Thomas A. Bowers. Fundamentals of Advertising Research.
4th ed. (Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing, 1991).
Harris,
Jay S, Ed. TV Guide - the First 25 Years. (New York: New American
Library, 1980).
Marshall,
Richard. The Golden Age of Television. (New York: Exeter Books,
1987).
Mast,
Gerald. A Short History of the Movies, 5th Ed. Revised by Bruce
A. Kawin. (New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1992).
Middleton,
Kent R., and Bill F. Chamberlain. The Law of Public Communication,
3rd Ed. (New York: Longman, 1994).
Nourie,
Alan, and Barbara Nourie, Eds. American Mass Market Magazines.
(New York: Greenwood Press, 1990).
Sterling,
Christopher H., and John M. Kittross. Stay Tuned: A Concise History
of American Broadcasting. (Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing
Company, 1990).
Sturcken,
Frank. Live Television: The Golden Age of 1946-1958 in New York.
(Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Co., 1990).
Szatmary,
David P. Rockin' in Time: A Social History of Rock and Roll, 2nd Ed.
(Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1991).
|