May 8, 2008
Deadline: FINAL EXAM
8:00 - 11:00 a.m. -- held in our usual room.
Deadline: DEADLINE: Turn in FIVE of the remaining blog posts for grading.
Using the instructions on the handout How to Turn in Blog Assignments for Grading, submit revised versions of FIVE of the seven blog assignments we have had after the midterm for grading.
- You can't turn in anything that was due before 3/4 -- we turned those in at the midterm.
- You can skip one of the 1984 blog posts but you can't skip both of them.
DEADLINE: 8:00 a.m. Thursday, 5/8 (Before the final exam.)
Assignment: EXTRA CREDIT BLOG POST: Tailenders Technology Case Study
(This extra credit post is optional. If you complete it, it will count for the same amount of credit as the other blog posts. Turning in this blog post does not count against the five blogs you are required to turn in -- it is EXTRA CREDIT.)
Many disciplines and professions use case studies, including medicine, industrial design and business. A case study is defined as "an educational, detailed example," or as "an intensive study of a unit that stresses factors that contribute to its success or failure." In this blog post you will write a case study explaining a communication technology from the film The Tailenders to the audience of your choice.
Part I. Choose one example of a communication technology shown in the documentary The Tailenders that you are interested in. State which communication technology you chose. There are many possible examples: The Cardboard Record Player, the Hand-Crank Cassette Player, the Untunable (or Pre-Tuned) Radio Receiver, and so on.
Part II. Specify the audience that you chose for your case study. This can be a discipline or a profession. You can choose from these examples or specify your own audience. Some examples:
- A Case Study for Technology Designers
- A Case Study for Entrepreneurs
- A Case Study for International Aid Workers Fighting Poverty in the Developing World
- A Case Study for Evangelists
Part III. Write your case study. Case studies are often divided into parts. Here is an example structure that you can copy, if you wish.
- Background/Goals. What is the technology and what is it for? Who made it? How does it work?
- Problems (or Successes/Failures). What works/doesn't work about this object? Were there unforeseen consequences?
- Discussion. This must answer the question: What can the audience you chose learn from the technology you chose? For instance, "What can International Aid Workers Learn from the Speakerphone?" Imagine you will be presenting this case study to your chosen audience. What is useful or interesting about this example?
If the object is not discussed in great detail in the film, you may have to make educated guesses or extrapolate from other course material about communication technology.
Important requirements:
- You must use at least one detailed example (such as a quotation or scene) from The Tailenders to support your case study. It must be clear that you watched and thought about the film. (The film is on media reserve in the Undergraduate Library if you need to refresh your memory.)
- You must also use at least one concept or quotation from any class reading or lecture. You must use it in a way that demonstrates your understanding of the concept.
Post an answer of at least 500 words* to your blog. (*Note that this extra credit blog post is slightly longer than the usual blog post.) DEADLINE: Post this blog at any time before the start of the final exam.
Extra tip: Last year's class wrote The Tailenders Wikipedia Entry. This may contain some inaccurate information! Use at your own risk!
This is the Web site for SPCM 199, Communication Technology and Society, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.