Course Description

An overview of twelve media technologies, including print, photography, motion pictures, advertising and public relations, telegraph and telephone, radio, television, computers, Internet, and globalization. We will examine the technical development of each technology, the function of each, and the impact each had on the cultures adopting it.

This is a three-unit (3) class: you’re expected to spend an average of nine (9) hours working on each module.

Remote Online Asynchronous Course

This course will be conducted remotely over the Internet.

All course material is available on the course website at https://juanmonroy.com/mediatechnologies. Assignments are are available on Microsoft Teams. We will not be using Blackboard.

All learning activities will be asynchronous, meaning that you will complete learning activities on your own time by the deadlines noted on this course website.

This course consists of twelve modules on media technologies. For each module, there will be:

  1. assigned readings from the textbook
  2. a reading quiz covering the material you just read
  3. a set of pre-recorded video lectures
  4. comprehension questions on each video lecture

After four modules, there will be an exam on the material you have covered.

Although the course is asynchronous, you must complete each module, each quiz, and each exam by the deadline specified on this course website.

Queens College offers loaner devices to students who need them for remote instruction. Contact Queens College ITS for how to request a device.

Learning Objectives

In this course, we will aim to accomplish the following:

  1. learning the history and evolution of media technologies, including print, electronic, and digital media
  2. understanding the relationship between media and society
  3. building a foundation for more advanced and in-depth courses in media studies

CUNY Microsoft Office 365

To access CUNY Microsoft Office 365,

  1. go to the following website on your browser: https://login.microsoftonline.com/?whr=login.cuny.edu
  2. sign in to CUNY Web Applications using your firstname.lastname##@LOGIN.cuny.edu credentials

If you’re having trouble joining the course on Microsoft Teams, take these steps:

  1. In your web browser, go to https://myaccount.microsoft.com and click on your initials in the top right corner of the screen.
  2. Do you see an option to “Sign in with a different account?” Click that and then “Use another account.”
  3. Under “Pick an Account,” select “+ Use Another Account"
  4. Type in your username (firstname.lastname##@LOGIN.cuny.edu) and click “Next”
  5. Wait for the page “Taking you to your Organization Page” to finish loading
  6. Sign in to CUNY Web Applications using your firstname.lastname##@LOGIN.cuny.edu credentials
  7. Test that it works by completing the Welcome Survey at https://juanmonroy.com/welcomesurvey

Microsoft Teams

We will be using Microsoft Teams for all graded assignments, including exams.

To join the Microsoft Team for our course:

  1. Go to https://teams.microsoft.com
  2. Sign in using your CUNY credentials
  3. Click to Join or Create Team
  4. Select Join Team with a Code
  5. Enter the code that I emailed you

After this initial set up, you can find our Team through this direct link, or finding it at https://teams.microsoft.com.

Instructor

Juan Monroy

Office Hours

Office hours will be held remotely. Sign up for an appointment at https://juanmonroy.com/officehours.

After you sign up, I will email you a Zoom Meeting link for you to join the meeting.

Need to Borrow a Computing Device for this Class?

Queens College offers loaner devices to students who need them for remote instruction. Contact Queens College ITS for how to request a device.

Counseling Services at Queens College

Counseling Services are available to any Queens College student. They assist students with personal concerns that can affect their enjoyment of and success in college. Services are free and confidential. All sessions take place on Zoom or by telephone, depending on student preference.

To make an appointment, students should call 718–997–5420 and leave a message with their phone number and CUNY ID. You can also e-mail counselingservices@qc.cuny.edu to set up an appointment.

https://www.qc.cuny.edu/studentlife/services/counseling/counseling/Pages/default.aspx

Reasonable Accommodations for Students with Disabilities

Students with disabilities needing academic accommodation should register with the Special Services Office by emailing QC.SPSV@qc.cuny.edu​. For more information about services available to Queens College students, visit the Office of Special Services website: https://www.qc.cuny.edu/studentlife/services/specialserv/Pages/default.aspx.

CUNY Policy on Academic Dishonesty

Academic Dishonesty is prohibited in The City University of New York and is punishable by penalties, including failing grades, suspension, and expulsion as provided at https://www.cuny.edu/about/administration/offices/legal-affairs/policies-procedures/academic-integrity-policy/.

Netiquette

Please maintain a professional demeanor when posting online. You can be respectful even when you have a difference of opinion. Treat others as you’d want to be treated yourself. Don’t type in all caps, as that is the online equivalent of shouting. If you need to emphasize a word or phrase, use italics.

Technical Support

The Queens College Helpdesk, (718) 997–4444, helpdesk@qc.cuny.edu) is located in the I-Building, Room 151 and provides technical support for students who need help with Queens College email, CUNY portal, Blackboard, and CUNYFirst.

Welcome Survey

Please complete the Welcome Survey for this course.

The survey serves to ensure that you can access Office 365 and Microsoft Teams and that you agree to abide by the course policies.

Please complete the Welcome Survey by Wednesday, June 8, 6:00 PM. If you cannot complete this by the deadline, please email me. Otherwise, I will have to report you as not attending the class and you will be dropped from the course.

Modules

This course is broken up into twelve modules. Each module consists of:

  • assigned readings from the textbook, listed in the course schedule on the course website,
  • a set of pre-recorded video lectures, available on CUNY OneDrive,
  • a reading quiz, available on Microsoft Teams, about the assigned readings,
  • a lecture quiz, available on Microsoft Teams, about the lecture videos

Modules are released, one at a time, Tuesday through Friday, for a total of four modules per week, and are due the following Monday at 11:59 PM. See the course schedule for exact dates.

Assigned Readings

Each module requires you to read a chapter or two from the following textbook:

  • Kovarik, Bill. Revolutions in Communication: Media History from Gutenberg to the Digital Age. 2nd ed. New York and London: Bloomsbury, 2016.

Complete these readings first. Take notes and pay attention to the headings to help you understand how the chapter is organized.

Lectures

Each module requires you to watch a recorded lecture and answer the comprehension question based on that material. The recorded lecture is split into a series of videos, between three and five videos, and each video is between five and fifteen minutes in length.

Each video contains captions generated by Microsoft OneDrive.

The videos move through the course material quicker than an in-person lecture. As you watch each video, pause and rewind the video as necessary to take notes on the material. This will help ensure you’re ingesting the course material.

Each video is linked on the course schedule below.

Quizzes

For each module, you will take two quizzes: one on the recorded lectures and another on the assigned readings.

Lecture Quizzes

Each module requires you to take a quiz on the lectures from the textbook. Each lecture quiz consists of a mix of true-false and multiple-choice questions. The quiz will be available on Microsoft Teams as a Microsoft Form.

Note the quiz deadlines on the course schedule and on Microsoft Teams. No late quizzes will be accepted.

There will be a total of twelve quizzes. I will drop your two lowest lecture quiz scores. The remaining ten quizzes are collectively worth 25% of your final grade.

Reading Quizzes

Each module requires you to take a quiz on the readings from the textbook. Each reading quiz consists of a mix of true-false and multiple-choice questions. The quiz will be available on Microsoft Teams as a Microsoft Form.

Note the quiz deadlines on the course schedule and on Microsoft Teams. No late quizzes will be accepted.

There will be a total of twelve quizzes. I will drop your two lowest reading quiz scores. The remaining ten quizzes are collectively worth 25% of your final grade.

Exams

You are required to complete three exams. Each exam will consist of objective questions, a mix of true-and-false and multiple-choice, and subjective questions, requiring answers in the form of explanations. Your answers to the exam questions should synthesize what you learned in the recorded lectures and the textbook readings.

Exam are available and due on Microsoft Teams, according to the following schedule:

  1. Exam 1, available Monday, June 13, 8:00 AM, due June 16, 11:59 PM
  2. Exam 2, available Tuesday, June 21, 8:00 AM, due June 24, 11:59 PM
  3. Exam 3, available Monday, June 27, 8:00 AM, due June 30, 11:59 PM

All three exams are required and constitute 50% of your final grade. Your highest score will be worth 25%, your second-highest exam score will be worth 15%, and your lowest exam score will be worth 10% of your final grade.

All exams must be submitted by the deadline, otherwise they will be penalized by reduction in a grade, according to the course policies.

Grading

Please submit your work on time. Late quizzes and take-home final exams will not be accepted. In some cases, assignments due at the end of the term will not be accepted. In-class exams must be taken at the date and time listed below unless we make other arrangements.

All other work will be penalized as follows: - Fall and Spring Courses - After a 24-hour grace period, late work will be penalized by a 10% reduction for each 24-hour period it is late. After one calendar week, the assignment will not be accepted, and you will likely fail this class. - Summer and Winter Courses - There is a 24-hour hour grace period. Late work will not be accepted after 24 hours. - All courses - No work will be accepted after the last class session.

Course Schedule

As this course is asynchronous, you may complete each module as your schedule permits. However, the due dates for each assignment—including quizzes, lectures, and exams—are firm and must be completed on-time in order to receive credit. Please plan accordingly.

Getting Started

  1. Read the Getting Started Message for this course
  2. Get the required textbook: Revolutions in Communication, 2nd ed.
  3. Join the class on Microsoft Teams
  4. Complete the Welcome Survey by Wednesday, June 8, 6:00 PM. If you cannot complete this last step by then, please contact me. Otherwise I will have to report you as not attending the class and you will be dropped.
  5. Begin work for Module 1

Module 1 • Early Print, June 7

Gutenberg launches a print revolution in Europe that ultimately leads to several other revolutions: the Protestant Reformation, the Renaissance, the Scientific Revolution, the Enlightenment, the Free Press, and the American and French Revolutions, as well as the Partisan Press.

Assignments

Module 2 • Mass Print, June 8

The introduction of steam power to printing presses at the beginning of the 19th century radically changes the nature of print, its scale, and the content to reach a mass audience like never before possible.

Assignments

Module 3 • Contemporary Print, June 9

Print would serve as a muckraker, a reformer, a war correspondent, a tool of authoritarian governments, the voice of the marginalized, a watchdog, and finally, a way to wrap fish.

Assignments
  • Read Kovarik, Chapter 3, “Print Media in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries.”
  • Watch the recorded lectures on CUNY Drive:
    1. Progressive Era (7 min.)
    2. Wartime Censorship (6 min.)
    3. Watchdog Role (10 min.)
    4. End of Print (6 min.)
  • Complete Lecture Quiz 3 on Microsoft Teams, due June 13, 11:59 PM
  • Complete Reading Quiz 3 on Microsoft Teams, due June 13, 11:59 PM

Module 4 • Photography, June 10

In the nineteenth century, inventors improve how to use chemicals to expose light and record it on various media; thus bringing photography to existence. Since then, photography would move from the portrait studio, to the battlefield, and to our own pockets.

Assignments

Exam 1, June 14

Exam 1 covers the material for the Modules 1–4 and is available on Microsoft Teams

Module 5 • Motion Pictures, June 14

The development of motion pictures in the nineteenth century has made possible an entire industry and new form of entertainment that has captivated us—in different ways—in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

Assignments

Module 6 • Advertising and Public Relations, June 15

Advertising and Public Relations rise with print and broadcasting to persuade the public throughout the nineteenth and twentieth century and, of course, using digital technologies in the twenty-first century.

Assignments
  • Read Kovarik, Chapter 6, “Advertising, Public Relations, and the Crafted Image”
  • Watch the recorded lectures on CUNY OneDrive:
    1. Advertising (14 min.)
    2. Public Relations (10 min.)
  • Read “How Companies Learn Your Secrets,” New York Times, February 19, 2012
  • Complete Lecture Quiz 6 on Microsoft Teams, due June 21, 11:59 PM
  • Complete Reading Quiz 6 on Microsoft Teams, due June 21, 11:59 PM

Module 7 • Telegraph and Telephone, June 16

The telegraph and telephone both emerge in the nineteenth century, inaugurating the electronic communications era, and both building immense corporate, communication empires in the process.

Assignments

Module 8 • Radio, June 17

The discovery of electromagnetism in the nineteenth century opened new possibilities: wireless telegraph, wireless telephone, broadcast radio, and even other uses—from Wi-Fi to podcasting.

Assignments

Exam 2, June 21

Exam 2 covers the material for the Modules 5–8 and is available on Microsoft Teams.

Module 9 • Television, June 21

The invention of electronic televisions creates a new communications empire for radio companies in the United States. It ultimately becomes the dominant communications medium of the 20th century.

Assignments

Module 10 • Computers, June 22

The development of digital computers since the mid–20th century had made it possible to expand what we as humans can do.

Assignments

Module 11 • Internet, June 23

Digital networks that developed in the post-World War II era and the proliferation of computers offered to extend the possibilities of what humans can do with computers and their networks. But who would control these networks?

Assignments
  • Read Kovarik, Chapter 11, “Digital Networks”
  • Watch the recorded lectures on CUNY OneDrive:
    1. Invention (9 min.)
    2. Computer Networks (9 min.)
    3. World Wide Web (6 min.)
    4. Control (9 min.)
  • Complete Lecture Quiz 11 on Microsoft Teams, due June 27, 11:59 PM
  • Complete Reading Quiz 11 on Microsoft Teams, due June 27, 11:59 PM

Module 12 • Media and Global Culture, June 24

The global digital revolution—made possible by the communications technology and global social networks—has brought us back to rethink how communication can change our world and how we have to protect the freedom to communicate.

Assignments

Exam 3, June 27

Exam 3 covers the material for the Modules 9–12 and is available on Microsoft Teams