LIB1201 OL50

  

New York City College of Technology LIB 1201, OL50 – Research & Documentation for the Information Age Class Time: Monday & Wednesday 10:00-11:15 AM, please see details under course communication Faculty: Prof. Nandi Prince

Email: nprince@citytech.cuny.edu

Office Hours: via Zoom on Wed 11:30 am -12:30 p.m.(phone by appt.)

  

Course Communications

  1. Classes meeting dates and times are a combination of synchronous, meaning via Zoom video conferencing and asynchronous. Asynchronous class days will not be live meeting dates, but you will be expected to review the work posted and complete the assignment by the required date and time which counts as the class participation grade for the days we do not meet live.
  2. Students are expected to check Black Board and Open Lab regularly for course announcements, additional readings and projects. Direct communication with me should be through your Citytech email only. Email subject line “LIB1201

OL50FirstNameLastName-Topic, e.g. LIB1201OL50PrinceNandi – Research Paper. All email communication will be read and replied to between Monday and Friday, excluding Thursday. If you wish to have an individual consultation, a telephone conference or Zoom meeting may be arranged outside of office hours.

  1. We will use: Blackboard, OpenLab and Zoom

Course Description

In this course we will explore issues in research and documentation for text (in print and online), images, sound, and multimedia. You will investigate where information comes from and how it is organized in both traditional and emerging media. We will examine the ethics of information use and determine how to critically evaluate sources. Throughout the course, you will create and present research and documentation projects using traditional and emerging media and technologies. We will be using the Sackler’s family wealth from the sale of OxyContin and their philanthropy to the art world as a model for employing research and documentation skills. You should expect to spend 4-6 hours outside of class time preparing for class each week. Learning Outcomes

For the successful completion of this course, you should be able to:

  • Describe the ways that information is produced and organized in a variety of formats
  • Create and articulate a relevant, manageable research topic for your assignments
  • Successfully search for and acquire appropriate information about your research topic in a variety of media and formats
  • Critically evaluate and select information sources for your assignments and projects
  • Use information ethically and responsibly with an awareness of copyright and fair use
  • Synthesize information on a topic from a variety of sources and present your analysis in writing and orally
  • Collaborate with a group to complete, modify, and document a process online
  • Apply documentation methods and citation styles appropriately in your own work

READINGS

This is a writing intensive course! No Required Textbook!

Materials to read or watch are assigned for each class and listed on the syllabus. You are expected to complete the reading for each class day prior to the class meeting time as they are No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for that day.

Reliable access to the internet and to a computer with word processing software are essential for successful completion course assignments. For technical support contact http://it.citytech.cuny.edu/, you may email the  student’s help desk at StudentHelpDesk@citytech.cuny.edu between or call them at 718-260-4900 between 9:00 am and 5:00 pm.

Blackboard and OpenLab will serve as a discussion forum that you will use throughout the term. You will also be placed into groups. Use these opportunities to demonstrate understanding and thoughtfulness of the course. You will focus on your group, but you are free to observe the conversation from other groups as well.

 

Assignments and Grading: Your grade in this course will be based on: •Participation in class discussions and in-class assignments 15% •Blog posts 20% • Topic selection and Proposal 5% Annotated bibliography 10% •Research paper 20% •Online documentation project 15% •Class presentation 15%. Rubrics for each assignment are on Blackboard.

Assignments

Participation 15%: This grade rewards those who participate in large and small group discussions actively, attentively, and put in the extra work needed to improve their skills. Blog Contributions 20%: Short blog posts are related to the assigned readings are required throughout the course. You will need to post all 10 blog entries, answering the prompts. You must post your own blog by the assigned date and be prepared to discuss in class. You will interact with your fellow classmates online by posting and commenting  on their blogs. Research Project 35%: The research project is comprised of topic selection and proposal 5%; Annotated Bibliography 10%; and Research Paper 20%. More details and guidelines for each component of the assignment will be posted on the course website and discussed in class. Each student will write an argumentative 5-page paper, not including the bibliography. You will first select any topic covered in the lectures and identify a specific arguable issue approved by me. Must use fives sources, 2 must be peer- reviewed. More details and guidelines for the assignment are  provided during the lecture and posted to Blackboard.

 

 

Online Technology Project 30%: In small groups assembled by yourself, students will build an OMEKA online resource and collaboratively document their process.  You will first select a topic of interest, and have it approved by the professor. Present an online exhibit detailing the research you have done on your chosen topic using Omeka. The project is divided into two sections and each is worth 15%. Creating the online OMEKA group project is 15% and the group oral presentation is 15%.

Online OMEKA documentation project   

Each group must upload work to Blackboard December 17 by 5:00 p.m., include the following:

Remember as part of the grade,

  • OMEKA URL
  • Group responsibility checklist.

 Include  members of the groups ;task assigned to each person and due date

how many times did you meet as a group and who were present? How did you document your collaboration: Google spreadsheet; Dropbox; Word document; etc.  3) A reflective journal of 1 paragraph about yourself and the project, which includes (non-onerous individual work). Your personal learning discovery about the project, (if they are 4 members in a group you will include 4 journals). Only talk about yourself here, think of it as a diary entry.

What did you learn about yourself doing the project?

What did you do well?

What did you enjoy?

What would you do differently?

 4) Peer assessment evaluation. If they are four members in a group, you will each include 4 assessments.  

OMEKA Peer Assessment Evaluation

Name___________________________________________                        Date_________________

3=done well       2= done okay     1= not as expected         0= not done

Attribute

Myself

John

Sue

Jackie

Leslie

Participated in group discussions

0

1

2

3

0

Helped keep the group on

task and worked

together

1

2

3

0

1

Listened to other group

members

’ideas and Open to suggestions

3

2

3

0

3

Knew what was expected of him,her,them

2

3

2

1

0

 

A list of topics of  some thematic virtual exhibits to research  and present on are:

Cultural appropriation in art: Jimmie Durham – Native American Art

Censorship –objectionable art. What debates might be made upon art considered repugnant art and public funding?Paintings embroiled in protest. E.g. Balthus, “Therese Dreaming” Creates a Ruckus at the Met Dana Schutz, Emmett Till; Sam

Durant’s Scaffold Comes Down at the Walker Art CenterSun Yuan and Peng Yu’, Dogs

That Cannot Touch Each Other.Removal of confederate monuments, e.g.

VirginiaBrooklyn Museum “The Play of the Unmentionable”Degenerate Art project at MoMA

1969 Stonewall riots

Social Movements: Black Lives Matter, Me Too; Tiananmen Square

Compilation of  US Strikes/Labor Unions

Religious rituals  & artifacts

Economic projects: Erie Canal, Panama Canal

Eco environmental companies’ initiatives

Native American and global Indigenous Communities iconography in western cultures – representation in society

Objects, practices & cultural associations

OMEKA Group Oral Presentation 15%:

Group Oral Presentation and discussion forum 15%: Each student group will give a 10 to 15minute class presentation describing their topic. Some of the groups will go on December 14th  and the remaining groups will go on the16th,   groups will be assigned one of the two dates.  The class will engage in a discussion forum. Each student in the group must take a turn presenting a portion of the presentation they contributed to.

 

Full details and requirements for each assignment will be discussed in class and posted on the course site.

Mid-Term Self Evaluation Due Oct 26

Compose an email to me (nprince@citytech.cuny.edu) with answers to each of the following questions. No need to use an attachment, just write and cut and paste your answers directly into the email. You are welcome to approach this self-evaluation either as a series of answers to questions or as a less formal letter to me about the course.

  1. Evaluate your work on the blog. What aspects of your work are the strongest? What could have used more work? How has your thinking evolved from one week to the next? Feel free to use the posted rubric to assess your own work.
  2. How would you characterize your involvement in discussions so far? What are your strengths and weaknesses in this regard?
  3. Have you completed all assigned work for the course (Worksheets, Blog entries /comments, Topic proposal, Annotated Bibliography)?
  4. What letter grade would you give yourself for the first half of the course and why? Consider preparedness, the strength of your written work, your participation in discussion, and your goals for the semester.
  5. How is the course meeting your personal learning goals?
  6. (Optional): What questions do you have for me at this point? About the subjects of the class? About your work/ progress this semester? Are there any aspects of your work that you would particularly like feedback on?

Self- Evaluation Due Dec 16

Compose an email to me (nprince@citytech.cuny.edu) with answers to each of the following questions. No need to use an attachment, just write and cut and paste your answers directly into the email. The questions are less prescriptive than on the mid-term self-evaluation, in order to give you an opportunity to reflect on the course in a way that feels appropriate to you.

Write  short evaluation of your performance in this class (250-500 words), addressing the following questions: How many blog entries/comments did you produce? Were you prepared for each class week? Did you do all the required readings and worksheets? How would you characterize your overall effort, interest, and commitment to the class? Did your engagement increase or decrease as the semester went  along? How did you meet the goals for this course?What letter grade would you give yourself for this class and why? Consider preparedness for class, the strength of your written work and other assignments, and your participation in discussions.

Netiquette” is the portmanteau for “network etiquette”, or the do’s and don’ts of online communication. The ground rules to observe when on online are:

  • respecting the right of each person to disagree with others;
  • responding honestly but thoughtfully and respectfully, using language that others will not consider foul or abusive;
  • always signing your name to any contribution you choose to make;
  • respecting your own privacy and the privacy of others by not revealing information you deem private and that you feel might embarrass you or others;
  • being constructive in your responses to others in the class;
  • being prepared to clarify statements that might be misunderstood or misinterpreted by others.
  • honoring their right to their opinions

One good way to avoid problems is to reread your postings before sending them. Something written in haste may not say what you really think, after the heat of the moment has passed.

A Special Note About Anger…

  • Do not send messages that you have written when you are angry. You will almost always be sorry because anger almost always inspires anger in others.
  • In the online world, angry messages are known as “flaming” and are considered bad behavior.
  • Do not send messages that are written all in uppercase; this is the visual equivalent of SHOUTING. It is considered aggressive, and in the online world, it is considered bad behavior. If you ever feel like shouting a message, take a deep breath and wait until you have calmed down before responding. Then, respond in a calm and factual manner.

Resources

Wellness: I also encourage you to take advantage of City Tech’s support resources by calling

718-260-5030 or visiting the Counseling Services Center

(http://www.citytech.cuny.edu/students/counseling/services.shtml). They can help address personal topics, and offer support for college-related stress.

Library: Website – https://library.citytech.cuny.edu/; Need to chat with a librarian: https://library.citytech.cuny.edu/help/ask/index.php

Accessibility Statement: City Tech is committed to supporting the educational goals of enrolled students with disabilities in the areas of enrollment, academic advisement, tutoring, assistive technologies and testing accommodations. If you have or think you may have a disability, you may be eligible for reasonable accommodations or academic adjustments as provided under applicable federal, state and city laws. You may also request services for temporary conditions or medical issues under certain circumstances. If you have questions about your eligibility or would like to seek accommodation services or academic adjustments, please contact the Center for Student Accessibility at 300 Jay Street room L-237, 718 260 5143 or http://www.citytech.cuny.edu/accessibility/.

The Academic Integrity Statement: Academic Integrity: Students and all others who work with information, ideas, texts, images, music, inventions and other intellectual property owe their audience and sources accuracy and honesty in using, crediting, and citing sources. As a community of intellectual and professional workers, the college recognizes its responsibility for providing instruction in information literacy and academic integrity, offering models of good practice, and responding vigilantly and appropriately to infractions of academic integrity. Accordingly, academic dishonesty is prohibited in The City University of New York and is punishable by penalties, including failing grades, suspension and expulsion.

Syllabus – Tentative Course Schedule (subject to change as dictated by the needs of the class). Please check the assignment each week before completing them. Our focus throughout the semester will be to enhance your research skills. Each unit will show the value of information and documentation to create and present projects using traditional and emerging media and technologies.  

Readings for the day that they are listed under should be completed prior to arriving at class and come prepare to discuss. Abbreviations: BB: Blackboard; OP: OpenLab

Week 1 The Information Landscape, Media, Production and Research Activity

Wed,

8/26

Zoom

Course Introduction

Syllabus overview

OpenLab account registration

Blackboard discussion board

Information and Research Introduction

Mon,

8/31

Zoom

Processing, Distribution and how it changes

Readings: Badke, William B “Welcome to the Information Fog.” Research Strategies:

Finding Your Way Through the Information Fog. 4th ed. Bloomington, IN: Universe, Inc., 2011.https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B33C3CjD2mm6OGZfUlRmT1YxMDA

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/25/arts/design/sackler-museumsdonations-oxycontin.html

 

https://sites.psu.edu/jmb7609/typesofinfo/

Week 2                                                                            9/5 -7: No classes. College closed 9/7

   9/2

Zoom

   

Information Cycle: time frame of an event affects the types of information available https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f-17MbjEws4

Who dunnit: Where does the information come

from? https://undsci.berkeley.edu/article/0_0_0/sciencetoolkit_03

Wed,

9/9

Zoom

Alternative media: zines, underground newspapers & presses, Blogs, wikis, ephemera, etc.

https://depts.washington.edu/moves/altnews_intro.shtml

https://www.nypl.org/about/divisions/general-research-division/periodicalsroom/zines

https://carleton.ca/edc/educational-technology__trashed/wikis-andblogs/#:~:text=Wikis%20are%20powerful%20(but%20easy,required%20%E2 %80%93%20just%20a%20web%20browser.

 

 

https://web.archive.org/web/20150530144950/http://www.rebeccablood.net /essays/weblog_history.html

Week

3

Multimedia                                                                           9/18-20: No classes scheduled

Mon,

9/14

Zoom

Social Media

Caulfield, Mike.   Web Literacy for students factchecker https://webliteracy.pressbooks.com/chapter/four-strategies/

 

Smith, Aaron; Anderson, Monica. March 1, 2018. “Social Media Use in 2018.” Pew Research Center  https://www.pewinternet.org/2018/03/01/social-media-usein-2018/

 

Ronson, Jon. “How One Stupid Tweet Blew Up Justine Sacco’s Life.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 12 Feb.

2015, http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/15/magazine/how-one-stupid-tweetruined-justine-saccos-life.html

 

Fake News: How A Partying Macedonian Teen Earns Thousands Publishing Lies. NBC News

 

https://twitter.com/sacklerpain

 

Blog Post # 1 Due:  According to Caulfield discuss one important item to check source credibility?

Wed,

9/16

Zoom

Multimedia, Organizing and Preserving Information

  https://www.encyclopedia.com/science-and-technology/computers-andelectrical-engineering/computers-and-computing/multimedia https://libraryofantiquity.wordpress.com/2017/02/24/online-vs-printsources/

https://jrtdd.com/a-comparison-between-electronic-and-printed-journals/( Do not read the paragraph on “About JRTDD)

Jakeway, Eileen. August 2020. Metaphors for understanding born digital collection access ( Part 1). https://blogs.loc.gov/thesignal/

Activist guide to archiving videos https://archiving.witness.org/ https://everestpipkin.github.io/image-scrubber/

Krensky, Alexander. 2012. “Privacy: The Archivist’s Dilemma.” History Associates, Archival collections and

privacy. https://www.historyassociates.com/resources/blog/privacy-thearchivists-dilemma/

Blog Post #2 due: Discuss one consideration for an archivist when preserving information.

Week

4

(Weeks 4-8 Current Issues in Information and Media)

Mon,

9/21

Zoom

Addressing Gaps in Wikipedia; Linked Data: Using Wikipedia to look at how Data is Organized

  

 

 

Inside the AlexaFriendly World of Wikidata (Wired Magazine 2/19)

 

 

http://blogs.stlukesct.org/slslibrary/why-use-databases/

  

Blog Post # 3 Due: The “Wired” article discusses the vast amount of information available, discuss in 4 -5 lines what is the purpose of Wikidata assistants like your self identifying every thing with a Q code?  What efficiencies results for the end user of wiki from doing this?  

 

Topic Proposal Due 9/21

Both Assignments are in Blackboard.

Wed,

9/23

Zoom

 

Metadata: information about information, taxonomies and controlled Vocabularies

Reading: Review – Harpring, Patricia. “Introduction to Controlled Vocabularies

(Getty Research Institute).” Understanding Formal Analysis, J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles,

2010. http://www.getty.edu/research/publications/electronic_publications/intr o_controlled_vocab/what.html.

About taxonomies & controlled vocabularies. (n.d.). Retrieved August 22, 2019, from http://www.taxonomies-sig.org/about.html

Blog Post # 4 Due before class (Discussion tab): According to Harping how does controlled vocabularies facilitate in finding information?

 

No live session scheduled (Lecture Notes tab). Review posted content and complete assignment at the end of the lecture slide, which will count as participation grade for today.

Both assignments are due today and can be found in Blackboard.

  

Week 5                                                                                       9/28: No classes scheduled

*Tues

,

9/29

Zoo m *Mon

classe s

meet  Tue

Access: digital divide, and social justice; and Practical application https://davidlankes.org/new-librarianship/the-atlas-for-newlibrarianship/threads-2/improve-society/social-justice-issues/ SPARC, Open Data. https://sparcopen.org/wp-

content/uploads/2017/04/Open-Data-Factsheet_SPARC.11.10-2.pdf

Engle, M. (n.d.). Libguides: How to prepare an annotated bibliography: the annotated bibliography. Retrieved July 28, 2020, from https://guides.library.cornell.edu/annotatedbibliography/home

 

McMullen, S. (n.d.). Libguides: Writing an annotated bibliography: tips.

Retrieved July 28, 2020, from https://rwu.libguides.com/c.php?g=58268&p=37480

 

 

 

 

Annotated Bibliography. Creating, summarizing and evaluating sources for an annotated bibliography. APA style examples.

Blog Post #5 Due: Find an article in an open access journal and write an APA style citation.

Wed,

9/30

Zoom

Preservation: paper, digital, other formats

  

What Are Archives? N.d. Society of American

Archivists. https://www2.archivists.org/about-archives  Accessed August 17, 2019.

 

Levine-Clark, Michael. 2015. “E-book Usage on a Global Scale: Patterns, Trends and Opportunities”. Insights 28 (2): 39–48. DOI: http://doi.org/10.1629/uksg.240 Cohen, Dan, 2019. “The Books of college Libraries are Turning into Wallpaper.” The

Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/05/collegestudents-arent-checking-out-books/590305/

Ozer, Nicole A. 2010. “Digital Books: A New Chapter for Reader Privacy.” ACLU of Northern

California. https://www.aclunc.org/sites/default/files/asset_upload_file434_999 6.pdf

In class exercise: (1) sorting sources and methodology.

(2) List the attributes you will use to choose the sources you will include in your research paper. These should be the ones you think are most important in destemming whether a source is appropriate for your research.  

Blog  Post # 6: List  4 pieces of data that digital book providers collect and describe how that the information is different from a library according to the Digital books article by Ozer,N.

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

Week 6

Mon,

10/5

Zoom

Privacy: changing definitions, challenges of networked digital media biases.

 

Barry, Christian. April 13, 2015. Is downloading really stealing? The ethics of digital piracy. http://theconversation.com/is-downloading-really-stealing-theethics-of-digital-piracy-39930

 

Scott, M. Zuckerberg: Facebook will apply EU data privacy standards globally. Politico. Available at: https://www.politico.eu/article/zuckerberg-facebook-eudata-will-apply-privacy-standards-globally/

Confronting Confirmation Bias: Giving Truth a Fighting Chance in the Information Age

By Alan C. Miller. https://newslit.org/updates/alan-miller-tacklesconfirmation-bias-in-ncss-journal/

 

Fake News, Combatting Viral Stories

 

 

How fake news go viral by

Mahehswari,Sapna https://docs.google.com/document/d/10eA5mCZLSS4MQY5QGb5ewC3VAL6pLkT53V_81ZyitM/mobilebasic https://www.ifla.org/publications/node/11174

 

(1)           No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

(2)           Blog Post # 7 : According to Barry, what are the fundamentalist protectors stance on intellectual property?

Wed,

10/7

Zoom

Information Ethics, Citizen Journalism, Social Justice

Jones, Barbara, 2011. Is the Line Between Librarianship and Journalism Blurring?https://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/2011/07/27/is-the-linebetween-librarianship-and-journalism-blurring/

Keller, J. (2011, April 4). Photojournalism in the age of new media. Retrieved August

22, 2019, from The Atlantic

website: https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2011/04/photojour nalism-in-the-age-of-new-media/73083/

 

Baker, S. (n.d.). When philanthropists’ reputations become problematic for art institutions. Retrieved July19, 2019, from Forbes

website: https://www.forbes.com/sites/samanthabaker1/2019/04/01/whenphilanthropists-reputations-become-problematic-for-art-institutions/  https://library.nmu.edu/guides/userguides/webeval.htm

 

Tracking statistics on issue. (n.d.). Retrieved August 24, 2019, from Issue Help

Center website: http://help.issuu.com/hc/en-us/articles/360001748613Tracking-Statistics-on-Issuu

 

Amy Mitchell, Jesse Holcomb and Michael Barthel.(Dec 15, 2016). Most Americans believe that Fake news is Sowing Confusion

by https://www.journalism.org/2016/12/15/many-americans-believe-fakenews-is-sowing-confusion/

 

Blog Post # 8: In the Jones article identify and describe one similarity between libraries and journalism professionals.  Annotated Bibliography Due

Week 7                                                                                     10/12: No classes scheduled

*Wed

,

10/14 *Mon

classe s

meet Wed

Zoom

 Copyright

 

Zhu, Q. (2001) We are all too Sensitive When it Comes to Awards! — Cai Guoqiang and the Copyright Infringement Problems Surrounding Venice’s Rent Collection Courtyard https://www.moma.org/momaorg/shared/pdfs/docs/learn/intnlprograms/6. %20CCA_Web_We%20Are%20All%20Too%20Sens.pdf

 

 

 

https://petapixel.com/2018/07/02/courtrulescopyingphotosfoundoninternet-is-fair-use/

 

 

Blog Post # 9 Due: Copyright law is complex, discuss some key ideas about copyright infringement.

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

Mon,

10/19

Zoom

Fair Use

Cox, Krista L. March 1, 2018. “Celebrating Fair Use Week: An Interview with Peter Jaszi.” Above the Law. https://abovethelaw.com/2018/03/celebrating-fair-useweek-an-interview-with-peter-jaszi/

 

Finkel, Jori. (Nov 3, 2017 After ‘Hope,’ and Lawsuit, Shepard Fairey Tries Damage Control

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/03/arts/design/shepard-fairey-damagedchinatown.html

  

Blog Post # 10 Describe what is meant by the Fair Use Exception

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

Week  8

Wed,

Oct

21

Zoom

 

Authority: Subject Expertise

 

Badke, William. Expertise and Authority in an Age of

Crowdsourcing. http://williambadke.com/BadkeExpertiseAuthority.pdf

Critical Thinking – RECAP

Distinguish scholarly vs popular; Define Peer Reviewed

Mon,

Oct

26

Zoom

Complex Evaluation – Authority Bias, Multiple Data SourcesIn-class worksheet

Week  9

Wed,

10/

28

Zoom

 

 The Research Paper, Selecting and Refining a Research Topic, Formulate Search Strategies

Browsing, Keyword searching, subject searching, Boolean logic. Essential questions and the thesis statement.

Library Guides: Information Literacy Tutorial: Module 4. Searching a Database. Delaware County Community College

Library. http://libguides.dccc.edu/c.php?g=386828&p=2624489

Mon,

11/2

Zoom

Algorithmic bias

  

Joy Buolamwini: How I’m fighting bias in algorithms

https://www.ted.com/talks/joy_buolamwini_how_i_m_fighting_bias_in_algorith ms?utm_campaign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshar e

 

 

 

Andreas Ekstrom:The morals bias behind your Google results

https://www.ted.com/talks/andreas_ekstrom_the_moral_bias_behind_your_sear ch_results?utm_campaign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedco mshare

  

Eli Pariser: Beware online “filter bubbles”

https://www.ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles?utm_camp aign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare

 

Grind, Kirsten, et al. “How Google Interferes with its Search Algorithms and Changes Your Results; the Internet Giant Uses Blacklists, Algorithm Tweaks and an Army of Contractors to Shape what You See.” Wall Street Journal (Online), Nov 15, 2019. ProQuest.

  

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

Week  10

Wed,

11/4

Zoom

Searching for Library Resources; Efficient Internet Searches to Retrieve Relevant Information

Specialized DB’s • Getting more out of Google – “hidden features” • Other general search engines – Bing, Wolfram, etc. • Specialized search engines – law, medicine, etc.

Finding and citing information from the Internet. Using browsers, search tools, find and cite authoritative information on a selected topic on the Internet.

Sources: Periodicals – Print Indices; References Sources, Encyclopedias

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

Mon,

11/9

Zoom

 Rationale for Documentation and Citation

Plagiarism

Paraphrasing

Types of Quotes

Attribution, Creative Commons Licenses

Peer Review Workshop

Week 11 Using Information and Media

Wed,

11/11

BB &

OP

Documentation: standards, methods and styles for citing text and non-text mediaFinding and citing newspaper, magazine, and journal articles.

 Identify articles on a selected topic using the City Tech College library databases.

 Formulate citations for identified articles.

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

Mon,

11/16

Zoom

 Documentation: Standards and Practical Applications, Citation tools & Managers

Reference Lists

Authority of Paper

Non-traditional sources

 

 

Government Documents: Retrieving and Citing; Accessing government information – Census, CDC, IPEDS. etc.

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

 

Week  12                                                                 11/25: Classes follow Friday schedule, 11/26 -29: College closed.                                                                          

 

Wed,

11/18

Zoom

 Digital & Data visualization – Infographic and ethical issues

Data Visualization & Digital Humanities

Artificial Intelligence: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/18/business/an-aiglossary.html

Julia Angwin, Jeff Larson, Lauren Kirchner, Surya Mattu.“Machine

Bias”. ProPublica. May 23, 2016.https://www.propublica.org/article/machinebias-risk-assessments-in-criminal-sentencing

Zorich, Diane M.  2012“Transitioning to a Digital World: Art History, its Research Centers, and Digital Scholarship.” Journal of Digital Humanities.  Vol1, No 2, 2012. http://journalofdigitalhumanities.org/1-2/transitioning-to-a-digitalworld-by-diane-zorich/

Research Paper Due

  

 

Mon,

11/

23

Zoom

Net Neutrality http://www.ala.org/advocacy/intfreedom/netneutrality

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

 

Week  13                                          

 

Mon,

11/30

BB&

OP

Evaluating Literature Reviews

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

 

Wed,

12/2

Zoom

Research Consultation

 

Week 14

 

Mon,

Dec 7

Zoom

Group work

  

No live session scheduled. Review posted content and complete assignment which will count as participation grade for today.

 

Wed,

Dec 9

Zoom

 Group work

 

 

Week 15

 

Mon,

12/14  Zoo m

Part A – Final Group Project Presentations

 

 

Wed,

12/16

Zoom

Part B –  Final Group Project Presentations

Incorporate feedback into your Omeka project and upload to course site by Thur, Dec 17 at 5 pm.