COMT 109 Digital Media Pedagogy
  Brian Goldfarb,
Winter 2008
  Dept of Communication, UCSD

Overview

Meetings: Tuesdays 5 -7:50 PM
Office Hours: wednesday 10:30 am-12 pm or by appointment in MCC 205 
Email: bgoldfar[at]ucsd.edu  (note: email is preferable to phone messages)
Website: http://communication.ucsd.edu/goldfarb/comt109w08/

The class will be limited to 20 students.

Course Objectives:
To develop students' critical understanding of pedagogical uses of digital media technology and to provide first-hand experience engaging with students using digital media in educational settings. Participants will consider the challenges, benefits and pitfalls of educational application of communication technology through discussion of readings and experiences in public school classrooms. Questions addressed include:
How do digital media shift the relationships between various sites of learning including the school, the home and the workplace? What are the challenges digital media present to teachers, students and schools? How do educational uses of digital media compare to older technologies such as pen and paper, textbooks, typewriters, film cameras and analog video?  How do gender, class and age affect the way students and teachers respond to and learn digital media? Are computers improving school-based education?

Class meetings will be divided between seminar style discussions of topics from the readings and lab sessions dedicated to exploring examples of digital pedagogy online, becoming acquainted with software, and developing materials for use at our field sites. Some lab topics include: weblogs and web-publishing; wikis and collaborative writing; webquests and online research; distance learning; synchronous and asynchronous communication; computer games and learning; video and animation; etc.

Course Requirements:

Students must complete all readings and attend all class/lab meetings. In addition students are required to make weekly visits to one of the classroom sites associated with the course. These visits will involve participatory observation of teaching/learning with teachers and students at the site. Site visits will be approximately 3 hours each. Written work for the course includes: one set of lesson plans and learning objectives; observations and reflections on site visits; and a final paper which may draw on experiences in the classroom, readings and research.

Quality work is expected. This class requires dedication from the student at an advanced level in terms of time and academic considerations. 

Evaluation:

Grading is based on: attendance and participation in classroom discussions (25%), lesson plans and learning objectives (10%), and lab assignments (10%), , written observations from site visits (30%), and final paper (25%). You will be given handouts with more detailed descriptions for the lesson plans, site visit reports, and final paper (15-20 pages).

 No incompletes will be granted for this course!

Attendance and Participation:

Lab access and Technical Assistance:

We will be using the Sequoyah Lab for a number of hands on projects and exercises.  You will be given a code and have access to the lab during open hours (when there are no scheduled classes-- see web schedule: http://communication.ucsd.edu/courses/142sched.html). Please do not let anyone else into the lab. Bruce Jones handles any concerns relating to access to the Sequoyah Lab. If you have problems while using computers or programs in the lab please report them to ACS using the Web-based form (aliased on all the computers) and let me know via email.

Readings:

Materials for the course: