FRS 002AA —
Sec. 001 — (2
units) — CRN 55891 —M 2:10-4:00 PM — 245 AOB IV
“Underreported News”—Issues That Transform the
World and the Media System That Neglects Them
Instructor: John Theobald, Department of Communication,
College of Letters
& Science
Description: The theme of the proposed freshman seminar is the
underreporting of important contemporary developments by American news media.
The seminar will (1) examine expert accounts of several issues in
order to gauge
the importance of these issues in contemporary life and (2) compare
the prominence
with which these issues are treated by contemporary media. Although
the instructor
and participants will resist arriving at conclusions before examining
data, experience
in CMN 142 (News Policies and Practices) and the studies of numerous academics
and journalists indicate that many very important stories receive
relatively little
attention from American newsrooms. Participants in the seminar will
evaluate the
coverage accorded to several issues in search of those that might be considered
"underreported. Participants in the proposed seminar will become
acquainted
with the writing of several observers who contend that a number of
highly consequential
issues are severely underreported--they will learn what prominent news analysts
view as a problem with American journalism. Participants will learn to evaluate
the claims of experts in specific contemporary problem areas--they will learn
about the severity of several contemporary issues. Participants will
develop their
own analyses of specific problem areas in relation to amount of news coverage
devoted to the issues--they will select an issue, learn about it, and evaluate
the coverage accorded to it.
Format: The general design is 1) brief
lecture/video/discussion,
2) small group projects and presentation, and 3) paper research and
writing. The
first part of the course is designed to introduce students to the subject and
will include significant video supplements The small group part is designed to
encourage students to analyze issues associated with the subject. The
paper will
be an independent case study focusing on a particular issue and
related news reporting.
The course begins with a series of brief lectures, audio-visual segments, and
discussion. It is expected that the seminar will be visited by one or
more individuals
with experience analyzing the topic. Senior Elizabeth Warren, writing an honors
thesis on underreported news stories directed by the instructor, will
participate
in class discussions, helping us with analysis of particular issues
and describing
her interviews with experts in several different issue areas.
Students will read
selections from such academic and/or journalistic writers as Carl Jensen, Lance
Bennett, Garrett Hardin, and Ross Gelbspan. Three weeks into the
seminar, students
will begin working in small groups to produce an analysis of an issue that may
be appropriately labeled an underreported story. The last few course meetings
will be devoted to discussion of students' individual analyses leading toward
(7 to 8 page) course papers. Students will acquire materials unique
to their own
research and present them to the class for discussion.
Grading:
There will be two grade components to the course that will be equally weighted.
They will include: I) a participation grade that will be based on regular class
contributions and, in particular, presentation of small group
individual research
work, and 2) a course paper as described above. Students will receive informal
instructor evaluations of their participation as the course progresses.
They will
write a short proposal/outline of the paper and regularly consult
with the instructor.
About the Instructor: John Theobald is Continuing Lecturer in
the Department of Communication, where he has been on the faculty since 1991.
His primary course offerings include The Media Industry, News
Policies and Practices,
Media Analysis, and Media Effects. These courses include many themes,
among them:
media ownership, social consequences of technology, globalization,
media and global
security, news bias, journalism practices, commercial effects of contemporary
media, media and ecological systems, and a range of politically-related themes.
Recent research interests include college orientation for high school students,
ecological communication campaigns, and the selling of the tourism industry in
the western United States. John has been a frequent commentator on
media-related
issues for print, radio, and television news agencies. He studied at UCLA, San
Diego State University, and the University of Texas at Austin.