Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Your Opinion Is Needed

This MediaNote is a little different. Your Humble Blogger has been asked to poll MC101 students on their attitudes toward e-Textbooks. Clickers will be used in class to assure anonymous responses. Five multiple choice questions will be presented via PowerPoint.

•••Postscript: Friday, May 2, 2 pm*** Your Humble Blogger has tallied the results of the MC101 student poll on eTextbooks. You can read the report, which is fittingly in PDF form, on the MC101 Moodle page. It is between the entries for your textbook and Club MediaNote.

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Attention 2015-2016 Transfer Students

Dr. Kevin Meza, the Transfer Center Coordinator who did a star turn in MC101 earlier this semester, has posted photos on Facebook of the Spring Break Transfer Trip to Northern California campuses. If you want to apply for next year's trip, contact the Transfer Center around the beginning of the Spring 2015 semester. Your Humble Blogger recommends putting a note into your phone's calendar to remind you around Feb. 20, 2015. Below is the e-mail Dr. Meza sent with the link to this year's Transfer Trip photos...

Greetings!

I would like to share with you our photos from the Northern California college tours. We visited UC Santa Barbara, UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, UC Davis, and went sightseeing in San Francisco. You may notice students wearing T-shirts and sweaters from these campuses now that they have returned to GCC. Thank you all for supporting our efforts. We are at that point of the year where students are hearing back from 4-year colleges. It is a great time to discuss college options with students.

Enjoy!

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10152312835860516.1073741829.366771270515&type=1

Kevin A. Meza, PhD
Transfer Center Coordinator/Counselor
Academic Senator
Chair, Region 7 Transfer Center Directors

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Monday, April 21, 2014

Life After Textbooks

Some years ago, there was a Glendale College student who vowed to keep all his textbooks. He moved several cartons of textbooks when he transferred to UCLA. A small closet full of books went with him to his master's program at Cal Berkeley. He drove a pickup truck full of textbooks across the country to Harvard, where he was accepted into a doctoral program. Old textbooks lined the walls of his one-room apartment in Cambridge. With each semester at Harvard, he added to his stacks of textbooks, eventually needing a ladder because the books had reached the ceiling. He placed a hand-written motivational message above the huge wall of books.

His single-minded devotion to his studies was about to pay off. His classes were completed. His oral exams were a breeze. His dissertation was done. Now all that was left was to defend his dissertation to five Harvard professors, each of them asking the most difficult questions possible. He wrote down all the questions he could imagine being asked, and rehearsed his answers. He had terrific answers for every question except for one. That question, deceptively simple, could be answered with something he learned many years before in Mass Comm 101. But where was the textbook? He searched the towering stacks. Hmmm...it was near the bottom.

But maybe if he slid the book out very quickly the rest of the stack would be unaffected, like a waiter yanking a tablecloth off a table so quickly that the dishes, glasses and silverware stay in place. He got a good grip on the Mass Comm textbook... one... two... THREE!

That student, one of the finest to ever graduate from Glendale College, didn't show up for his dissertation defense. Several days later, a worried professor found him buried under a huge pile of textbooks. Near the ceiling, the student's hand-written motivational sign was now clearly visible:

"PH.D means PILED HIGHER and DEEPER"

This story is apocryphal. Clearly, Your Humble Blogger had too much time on his hands over Spring Break. But the story makes two points. First, the Internet is a very effective rumor mill. More about that in a few weeks.

Second, the story is slightly believable only because every college student is faced with what to do with old textbooks. And by the end of a college career, a student can accumulate quite a pile of them.

Some very inventive students have devised an answer, cclist.org. It is sort of like Craigslist, but only for textbooks. In keeping with today's student theme, the source for this Medianote is an article in the El Vaquero.

Questions...

•Does cclist fill a basic need? Why or why not?

•Would you consider cclist to sell your textbooks?

•What do you usually do with your old textbooks?

•Would you be more likely or less likely to keep e-textbooks?

•Do you feel cclist will help you save money?

•How is cclist an example of disintermediation?

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Wednesday, April 09, 2014

(TV) Pilots Are Crashing

In television, a pilot is the proposed first episode of a series. Characters are introduced and the premise of the show is revealed. Pilots are a way of determining a show's attractiveness to viewers and advertisers. But in today's changing world of television, fewer pilots are being made. The Los Angeles Times reports.

•Can you tell when a new show is destined to be a hit? How can you tell?

•Name all the reasons why shooting pilots are a good idea? Name all the reasons why pilots are a bad idea?

•Will the end of pilots mean that advertisers will be brought into the process earlier, or later? Why?

•As more and more TV is streamed online, how will this change television advertising? What will the TV ads of the near future be like?

•Is the growth of streamed television evidence of "The Long Tail" theory? Why or why not?

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Wednesday, April 02, 2014

Forget Waldo, Where Are Wiki Women?

Wikipedia is a growing force in the world of popular information. But not everyone contributes to this vast information source equally. In particular, women create and edit Wikipedia articles far less often than men. NPR reports.

Questions...

•How often do you use Wikipedia?

•In your opinion, how accurate are Wikipedia articles?

•If Wikipedia has an article about something, does it mean that thing is important?

•Does it matter that the vast majority of Wikipedia articles are written and edited by men?

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