DIGITAL MEDIA WORKSHOP II

 

JRL365Z

Spring 2002 semester, University at Albany

Instructor: David Washburn

Room: Digital Workshop 3, Science Library

Time: Mondays, 7:15-10:05 p.m.

Phone: 242-8934 (work), 587-7138 (home)

e-mail: Canadaeh@nycap.rr.com (home) or davidw@nycap.rr.com (work)

Office: Humanities 363 (442-4051)

 

Course overview

For academic year 2001-2002, Digital Media Workshop has been split into two parts. DMWI, taught in the fall, focused on online journalism. DMWII focuses on print journalism.

 

This course explores the science and art of editing and design required in today's evolving world of digital journalism for print, aka newspapers and magazines. This class is intended for anyone who is interested in the process, design, presentation and implementation of message-making through text, images and computer screens and software. This class is conducted in a hands-on workshop atmosphere. Four major projects – two individual and one each two-person and three-person -- together with two small-scale individual assignments, class participation and attendance, count toward the final grade.

 

Books and supplies

The text is only $18.95, but there are other associated costs.

Text: QuarkXPress for Windows 4 by Elaine Weinmann; $18.95

            In addition, you will need to buy:

·         a zip disc for file storage (do this in the first week)

·         newspapers and magazines

·         film and developing costs (if you don’t have a camera, then you’ll need to buy a disposable one)

 

Goals

To provide students with an overview of desktop publishing and to enhance students’ editing, design and computer skills. You will also be graded on your journalism skills – choices and use of headlines, writing, reporting and, yes, spelling and grammar.

 

Grading

Each of four major projects is worth 20 percent of your final grade. Each of two smaller, individual assignments is worth 5 percent. The other 10 percent is based upon attendance. Perfect attendance equals 10 points; one absence equals 9 points; two absences equals 6 points; three absences equals 3 points; more than three absences equals 0 of possible 10 points and means you will struggle to achieve a passing grade and hurt your teammates in the workshop atmosphere. Please be considerate.

This is a journalism class, so a late assignment is the equivalent of missing a deadline. For each week an assignment is late, one full letter grade will be deducted.

 

 

 

WEEK 1            Monday, Jan. 28

 

WEEK 2            Monday, Feb. 4

 

Note: Tuesday, Feb. 5 is last day to add/drop a semester-length class.

 

WEEK 3            Monday, Feb. 11

 

No class Feb. 18 -- Holiday

 

No class Feb. 25 – Spring break

 

WEEK 4             Monday, March 4

 

WEEK 5             Monday, March 11

 

WEEK 6             Monday, March 18

 

WEEK 7            Monday, March 25

 

WEEK 8            Monday, April 1

 

WEEK 9            Monday, April 8

 

No class April 15 – Personal break

 

WEEK 10            Monday, April 22

 

WEEK 11            Monday, April 29

 

WEEK 12            Monday, May 6

 

WEEK 13            Monday, May 13

No final exam, but we’ll use this as class time if we are snowed out during the semester. If that happens, all assignments and class schedules on syllabus will back up one week.