Sociology of Mass Media. Mentors: Each student is assigned to a group and one of the following mentors.

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Sociology of Mass Media Instructor: Dr. Deana Rohlinger Professor Department of Sociology E-mail: drohling@fsu.edu or deana.rohlinger@fsu.edu Mentors: Each student is assigned to a group and one of the following mentors. Elyse Claxton etc11b@my.fsu.edu Pierce Dignam pad15b@my.fsu.edu Jessi Grace jng15c@my.fsu.edu Michael Turner mct13e@my.fsu.edu This distance learning course provides an overview and analysis of sociological perspectives regarding the role of mass media in American society. This is an important area of sociological inquiry because mass media shape American culture, politics, and social life. During the summer session we will examine the political economy of media, the role of news in democratic societies, media effects, and the role of technology in our lives. Course Objectives: 1. To provide you with a foundation in the major theoretical perspectives that guide how sociologists evaluate mass media and their influence on American society. 2. To introduce you to empirical methods in the study of mass media. 3. To strengthen your critical awareness and understanding of contemporary debates involving American media. The following book is required for this course: Croteau, David and William Hoynes. 2014. Media Society: Industries, Images, and Audiences (5 th edition). Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press. ISBN# 1452268371 This book may be ordered from the Bookstore, or from various online booksellers. Other required reading materials, films and PowerPoint lectures will be posted under course material in the appropriate week. If you are having difficulty with Blackboard or accessing materials via Blackboard, contact the Blackboard help desk. Be advised that Apple users tend to have more difficulty accessing course videos. 1

Help Desk Hours & Contact Information Monday- Friday, 8am - 9:30pm (EST) Saturdays 9am - 7:00 pm (EST) Sundays 12-9pm (EST) Email: help@fsu.edu (this generates a ticket) Phone: If you have difficulties with Blackboard call: (850) 644-8004. You can also go to Support in Blackboard (the tab on top furthest the right). Course Assignments Your grade for the course will be based on the total number of points you earn out of 200 possible points. The assignments are as follows: Completion of Online Bio on Blackboard You must complete the Online Bio before Midnight on Tuesday, May 10th to satisfy the first-day attendance policy. If you fail to do so, you will be dropped from the course. Your first task after you finish reading this syllabus should be to complete the Online Bio, which is a brief survey posted in the Syllabus section of the course. Five open-book quizzes, each consisting of 10 questions and 2 extra credit questions (50 points before the extra credit and 60 points after the extra credit) These multiple-choice quizzes will be posted in the Testing area on Monday on a weekly basis throughout the session. You will be able to find the answers to these quizzes in the assigned readings or online material. In order to help you prepare for these quizzes, I have provided reading, film, and PowerPoint questions for each week. These questions will help you identify the important ideas and concepts in the course material. You will have a seven-day window (Monday to Sunday) to take each quiz. Quizzes must be complete by Sunday at 11pm. No exceptions. You may take the quiz as many times as you want while the quiz window is open. The quizzes must be completed by Sunday at 11pm. Media Use Analysis Paper (100 points total) For this paper you will analyze your media habits relative to other students in the course. This paper has three parts: A five-day media journal due 5/20 (25 points) Two graph summary of your media use due 5/27 (25 points) Analysis paper due 6/3 (50 points) See the paper guidelines in the paper guideline and submission section of blackboard. You will need to submit your work to Turnitin by 11pm on the day the assignment is due. Students agree that by taking this course the required assignments they hand in will be submitted 2

to Turnitin for review. All submitted papers will be checked for originality, become source documents in the Turnitin database, and used for the purpose of detecting plagiarism in papers submitted in the future. Use of the Turnitin service is subject to the terms of the use agreement posted on the Turnitin website. BE SURE THAT YOUR SOFTWARE IS COMPATIBILE WITH THE Turnitin PROGRAM PRIOR TO THE DUE DATE. You will find the Turnitin links in the Paper Guidelines and Submission folder. Be sure to CONFIRM your submission. If you do not confirm the submission, the paper will not submit. Print your confirmation sheet, which verifies that you successfully uploaded your paper. This is very important because I have no way of verifying your attempts to turn in a paper and unsuccessful attempts will result in a late penalty. To be clear, navigating to the submission page does not prove that you submitted a paper (only that you went to the page) nor does the creation of a document prove you wrote the paper before the deadline. In short, there are NO exceptions to my late policy! To use this feature: 1. Click the paper guidelines and submission link in the course. 2. Click the view/complete link, which is under the analytical paper title. The submission form will open. 3. Click the browse button to locate the file you want to submit. Be sure to name your paper. 4. Click submit to upload the selected file to Turnitin. 5. Be sure to confirm your submission once it has uploaded. 6. You will get a confirmation, which verifies that you successfully uploaded your paper. This is very important because I have no way of verifying your attempts to turn in a paper and unsuccessful attempts will result in a late penalty (see above). 7. Look at the originality report provided by Turnitin and see if you need to make changes. The paper may be changed and the new version uploaded until the due date and time. Again, be sure to keep copies of your papers and your confirmation sheet for your records. A two hour (open book) exam (50 points total) The exam will cover material from the text, from the films, from PowerPoint lectures and from reading material posted on Blackboard. The exam will cover the entire course and will include 2-5 open-ended (short-essay) questions. The exam is worth 50 points. The questions will ask you to write a paragraph about important theories, concepts, research findings, criticisms, controversies, or other points discussed in assigned readings and online material. Use the reading/powerpoint/film questions that I have provided to prepare for this exam. The exam is scheduled for Monday June 13, 2016 and will be available to students from 8:00 a.m.to 8:00 p.m. Once you begin taking the exam, you must complete it within two hours. Exams must be taken during this window. No exceptions. 3

Note: You will have opportunities to earn extra credit points throughout the summer session. Use these opportunities to raise your score. Remember, extra credit is built into the weekly quizzes. Work Policy: In order to grade and get scores back to you in a timely manner in a mass section course, all students must take exams (and complete other assignments) during the times indicated on the syllabus. Make up quizzes and exams are only permitted in extraordinary circumstances and with the appropriate documentation. You may turn in your paper late but it will be penalized 25% each day it is late until there are no points remaining. You are expected to ensure that your computer and internet connection are functioning properly prior to exams or other online exercises. Computer and internet problems are not considered extraordinary circumstances and, therefore, are not a sufficient reason for assignment extensions or for waiving the late penalty. Note: Missing work is not sufficient reason for a grade of Incomplete (I). An incomplete will not be given except under extreme circumstances at the instructor s discretion. Note that College of Social Science guidelines require that students seeking an I must be passing the course. E-mail Policy: Students must use a FSU e-mail address for course correspondence. E-mails should include the following information: 1) the course name, 2) who you are addressing ( Hey is not an appropriate greeting), 3) the question, and 4) your name. REMEMBER: E-mail is professional communication and becomes part of your student record. Each student will be assigned an online mentor the first week of class. Students should contact mentors first with questions and concerns related to the course. Academic Honor Code. The Florida State University Academic Honor Policy outlines the University s expectations for the integrity of students academic work, the procedures for resolving alleged violations of those expectations, and the rights and responsibilities of students and faculty members throughout the process. Students are responsible for reading the Academic Honor Policy and for living up to their pledge, which reads I affirm my commitment to the concept of responsible freedom. I will be honest and truthful and will strive for personal and institutional integrity at The Florida State University. I will abide by the Academic Honor Policy at all times. The Florida State University Academic Honor Policy, found at http://registrar.fsu.edu/bulletin/undergrad/info/integrity.htm. Any form of academic dishonesty will result in a "zero" for that particular assignment or an "F" for the course, at the instructor s discretion, and may be reported to the university administration for further disciplinary action as specified in the Academic Honor Policy. Courtesy in the Virtual Classroom. During the semester we will discuss a range of topics as they relate to media and they may stimulate strong feelings and heated debate. While I encourage diverse opinions, all papers and postings need to be scholarly in their content. Scholarly comments are: Respectful of diverse opinions and open to follow up questions and/or disagreement; related to the class and course material; advance the discussion/thinking about issues related to the course and/or course material rather than personal beliefs; are delivered in normal tones and a non-aggressive manner. Failure to abide by these principles can result in 4

academic penalties ranging from a lowered grade, temporary removal from discussion boards, to failing the course. Cheating and Plagiarism. The Provost and legal counsel of Florida State University warn us that any uses of others' copyrighted materials without proper acknowledgement is unlawful and may lead to criminal prosecution. To this end, please be scrupulous in using the work of others by giving full and appropriate credit to the sources and materials that you use. Please use care when taking words and phrases from others. If you use a string of three or more exact words from another source, you must place the words in quotes and cite the author, year and page number. Be a stickler about citing; cite more rather than less; cite early rather than late. Do NOT appropriate the concepts, phrases, or ideas of other people without giving them credit. THIS INCLUDES DISCUSSION POSTS AND COURSE EXAMS. If you do so, you risk losing your good name and getting into legal trouble. Any form of academic dishonesty, including plagiarism, will result in a "zero" for that particular assignment or possibly an "F" for the course and may be reported to the University Judicial Office. Cheating and plagiarism will not be tolerated. Your paper would be considered as plagiarized in part or entirely if you do any of the following: Submit a paper that was written by someone other than you. Submit a paper in which you use the ideas, metaphors or reasoning style of another, but do not cite that source and/or place that source in your list of references. Submit a paper in which you "cut and paste" or use the exact words of a source and you do not put the words within quotation marks, use footnotes or in-text citations, and place the source in your list of references. You commit patchwork plagiarism by overusing quotations 25% or more of your paper. This is the most common form of plagiarism. Make good use of turnitin.com, which shows you whether/how much of your work is from others. Disabilities. Students with disabilities needing academic accommodation should: (1) register with and provide documentation to the Student Disability Resource Center; and (2) bring a letter to the instructor indicating the need for accommodation and what type. This should be done during the first week of class. This syllabus and other class materials are available in alternative format upon request. For more information about services available to FSU students with disabilities, contact the: Student Disability Resource Center 874 Traditions Way 108 Student Services Building Florida State University Tallahassee, FL 32306-4167 (850) 644-9566 (voice) (850) 644-8504 (TDD) 5

sdrc@admin.fsu.edu http://www.disabilitycenter.fsu.edu/ Enjoy the course! 6