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SyllabusSpring 2004, Tues. and Thurs. mornings, 8:00 -9:15 in Campus Center 42. Section 01, Course number 47272, Course home page: http://www.d.umn.edu/~cstroupe/sp04/5250/ Dr.
Craig Stroupe, 726-6249, Humanities 424 Purpose | Expectations | Resources Needed | Grades PurposeMoving from California to Minnesota three summers ago, I shot the photograph above approaching the Continental Divide, the point in the Rockies east of which water flows to the Atlantic rather than the Pacific. In this course, we will map the Great Divide between the practices of traditional print culture and the forms of electronic communication operating in digital environments where various "multimedia" are converging into a single, integrated meta-medium which we'll call "New Media Writing." This course is designed to give you skills, practice and understanding toward realizing the following goals:
Purpose | Expectations | Resources Needed | Grades | Top ExpectationsExercises and ProjectsThis course comprises a series of exercises and projects. We'll do the exercises together in class to learn particular skills or techniques, and you'll have 24 hours after the class meeting to complete and post each exercise to the Web for credit. As described on the Assignments Page, the projects are larger pieces of work that you'll complete individually over a period of two or three weeks using the skills you learned from the exercises and insights from the readings and class activities. Four of the projects are Web sites/hypertexts. Two of them are essays about the New Media. There is a three-point penalty per day for late projects, including the annotations that are explained below. Due dates for all requirements are included in the online schedule, which will be updated throughout the semester. Annotated Printouts Annotated Printouts I will give you specific directions for submitting the finished projects and exercises. All Web-based projects should be posted to the Web, the URL sent to the Webx discussion board, and all the pages printed out and handed in. Be sure to number the pages of your printout. You should also "annotate" the printout before you hand it in. This means typing up a series of comments about particular features in the project which you want me to pay attention to or understand more about. Each of these comments should be labled to refer both to the page number on the printout and to a number you've handwritten on the page to point to the particular feature. For instance, the banner on the first page of your site's printout might have a circled (1) next to it, and, on your typed comment sheet, the annotation on that banner should be labeled 1.1 (page 1, numbered item 1). Annotate items that
Other Writing and Design Work In addition to the design, creation and writing of the exercises and projects themselves, you will complete:
Readings On days when readings are assigned, please do the following:
Attendance Since this class will function as a community of writer-designers, your regular attendance is absolutely necessary.
Participation A larger goal of this course is to establish a community or network of writer-designers--with a wide variety of backgrounds, expertise, and interests--to enhance your learning and enjoyment during the next sixteen weeks. The class is designed to provide a number of avenues for this community building, including peer workshopping and critiquing, in-class production work, support groups, and various Internet-based communications and collaborations. Your sincere and regular contributions to maintaining this collaborative environment will count in your grade, and of course will greatly benefit your final products in the course. Because your work is the subject matter for this course, turning in all projects and writings on time is critical; work turned in late will be assessed a 3% penalty per day. Incompletes Incompletes for the semester will be given only in the following very limited circumstances:
Purpose | Expectations | Resources Needed | Grades | Top Resources Needed
Grades
Purpose | Expectations | Resources Needed | Grades | Top
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