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The following are required assignments in the course. For grading
policy, see Assessment: Grading
Policy. No technical skill is required for these assignments
beyond the ability to use e-mail and a Web browser, though there
is opportunity for those interested in learning
Web-authoring or digital image work to express themselves.
(For a guide to the technology used in this course, see Technology.)
- Team Onlne Project
- Short Individual Online Essay
- Final Individual Essay
- Discussion Participation
- Attendance
- What is Not Required
Team Online Project: "Artists of Information"
(see "team-concept")
The Basic Idea:
Students will break into teams of two to four students each.
Each team will conceive, research, and produce a Web site
(using pre-designed templates and an automated database
that can be edited through a Web browser). The Web site
will be part of the "Artists of Information" section
of the Transcriptions Web site. Each team will create a
"Case Study" on some writer, artist, musician,
philosopher, director, theorist, architect, designer, engineer,
or other figure (or group or movement)--whether past or
present--whose art exists in implicit or explicit relation
with the information media and technology of the time. The
idea is to create a view of artists or intellectuals in
their information environment (which artists variously collaborate
with, contest, influence, are influenced by, etc.). This
assignment will require research into the life and work
of the chosen artist(s); and it will also require research
into the information environment of the artist's time. The
following are examples of possible topics:
- The Wordsworth Circle and Information Culture circa
1800
- Hemingway and Media
- Pynchon and Information
- Faulkner and the Entertainment Industry
- War and the Art of Information
- How Information Works in a Hitchcock Film
- Maya
Lin, the Vietnam War Memorial, and Monuments of Information
- The Art of Computer Games
- Neal Stephenson
and the Art of Code
- Paul Rand, Designer for IBM
- Contemporary Women's Hypertext Fiction Writers (e.g.,
Deena
Larsen, Shelley
Jackson, M.D.
Coverley)
Choose a tight focus (a single artist, work, or movement)
that can provide an anchor for a broader look at information
culture. Alternatively, focus tightly on both a single artist/work
and a single, illuminating aspect of information culture (e.g.,
Hemingway and the typewriter, Sinatra and the microphone,
Blair Witch Project and the Internet, etc.).
Components of
an "Artist of Information" Case Study Page:
The following are the core elements of the Web page (on
"PersonX") you will be producing. You can see
the template for such a Web here.
- Overview statement
(the equivalent of just a few pages in print) about PersonX
and his or her relation to information. You can create
this overview in a word processor or (if you want to try
your hand at putting links in your text) in an HTML
editor. Prof. Liu or one of the Transcriptions research
assistants can put this online for you on the home
page for your project on the Transcriptions
site. If you want to experiment, the statement might
include as part of its presentation an interesting non-linear
graphical or hypertext segment--for example, a juxtaposition
of quotations, the staging of a fictitious or real interview
with PersonX, etc. (Fancier variants will likely require
some Web-authoring knowledge on the part of one of your
team.)
- Timeline of events in
the life and times of PersonX. Material for the timeline
will be entered in the Transcription Project's Filemaker
Pro database through a Web interface. Once the material
is entered (by writing or cutting-and-pasting into a Web
form through any browser), Filemaker will automatically
generate Web pages for the Timeline that can be dynamically
adapted to the user's search criteria. For an example
of a Transcriptions timeline built by a course in Spring
1999, see Postmodernism
Timeline.
- Linkbase of annotated links
to online resources related to the PersonX timeline.
These links will be entered in the Transcription Project's
Filemaker Pro database through its Web interface; Filemaker
then automatically generates the Web pages for the linkbase
(see paragraph above). For an example of a Transcriptions
linkbase built by a course in Spring 1999, see Postmodernism
Linkbase.
- Bibliography of works
and online sites consulted in creating the above Overview,
Timeline, and Linkbase.
- Critical Issues: suggested
questions for discussion. For an example of critical issues
on a Transcriptions topics page, see Weaving
Webs: Discussion Issues. These questions will also
be a springboard for your short-essay assignment (see
below).
Distribution
of Responsibilities:
- You are free to distribute the work on your project
among your team as you like to take account of varying
interests and skills. For example, one of you can be the
specialist on PersonX, another the specialist on information
technology or media in the era of PersonX, another the
technical specialist for the team, etc. Or again, one
of you can be in charge of the Overview, another of the
Timeline, another of the Linkbase, etc.
- It is highly recommended that you carve out defined
areas of responsibility. That way, everyone on your team
will be responsible for something in particular--often
a more productive situation than if everyone is responsible
for anything and everything. At least one of your team
must also exercise editorial control over your work (editing
for consistency, quality, typos, etc.). Imagine that you
are part of a highly-skilled work
team in charge of creating a professional product.
- An outline or organizational chart of the way you have
distributed your tasks is due shortly after you submit
a prospectus for your project (see below).
Schedule
of Project Tasks:
- Class 4, Workshop 1
for Team Projects: Break into teams and begin brainstorming
about possible projects.
- By Class
7, Workshop 2 for Team Projects: Your team must post
to the class e-mail list (english165ci@humanitas.ucsb.edu)
a prospectus of your intended project. The prospectus
need be only a page or so. It should describe your idea
and the areas of research you intend to pursue. If you
are still up in the air about your project, you can post
a couple of ideas and ask for feedback. (The Web
archive of the class e-mail list conveniently organizes
any responses to or discussion of the prospectuses into
"threads.")
- By Class
9, you must e-mail to Prof. Liu a statement about
how you have distributed responsibilities for your project
(see above). From this
point on, every member of your team must at the end of
each week submit an online weekly
project log form that records roughly what you have
been doing on the project that week. (This is to protect
teams from bad situations in which one of its members
never does anything at all and lets everyone else carry
the burden.)
- Class
11, Worshop 3 for Team Projects: This class will be
devoted to a show-and-tell about what the class teams
have been thinking and doing.
- Class 12: Short
individual essay relevant to your project is due on this
date (see below). These mini-essays will be put online
as part of the "critical issues"
part of your project Web site.
- Classes 13-16: Each team
will be assigned one other team's project to critique.
The medium for this critique will be a "threaded"
Web discussion forum (enabled by the Transcriptions Exchange
Server program). You post your comments through a
Web browser, and others can respond or append to the thread
of discussion you have started about a particular team
project. For a guide to evaluating Web pages, see here.
- Class
20: Formal presentation of projects to the class--a
sort of fast-paced Emmys or MTV Awards show.
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Short Individual Online Essay (due Class
12)
A 600-800 word essay (about two to three pages in print)
that gives a perspective on some issue relating to the artist
of information page your team is working on. The essay may
take off from, or contribute to, one of the "critical
issues" you will be mentioning on your site. The
idea is to find a provocative, interesting, tightly-conceived
issue. Think about that issue carefully, define it and what
is at stake clearly, and point toward possible theses or
solutions. This essay must be submitted in digital form
(on a diskette, by e-mail attachment, or in some other way)
so that it can be put online as part of the Web page your
team is building. (If you have some Web-authoring skills,
you can include links or create a hypertext essay.) For
a guide on how to cite Web pages in a paper, see here.
If you can read Adobe Acrobat (or .PDF) files (which requires
the free Adobe Acrobat reader or plug-in available at ),
Prof. Liu will mark up your essay and return it to you in
.pdf format. (More on
Adobe Acrobat) (download
site)
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Final Individual Essay (due Dec. 13th in Prof. Liu's
mailbox by 5 pm, when the English Dept. closes).
This essay must be 8-10 pages. It can build from your work
on the team project, or it can be on a different topic relevant
to the course. The essay must use or discuss some of the
course readings. For a guide on how to cite Web pages in
a paper, see here.
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Discussion Participation
Participation in class or e-mail discussion will be a
definite plus for the final grade. See Assessment:
Grading Policy.
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| What is Not
Required
There is no mid-term or final exam in this course.
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