SCHOOL
OF COMMUNICATION
CMNS 261-3
| Donald Gutstein |
Spring
2003
|
| CC 6147 / 291-3858 |
Burnaby
campus - day
|
| gutstein@sfu.ca |
DOCUMENTARY RESEARCH IN COMMUNICATION
Overview:
The purpose of this course is to help communication students develop skills
in finding and interpreting print and electronic documents, skills you will
need for other communication courses. It is a course in which you learn
by doing, so most of the mark (75 percent) derives from research assignments.
The first assignment is about corporate media power, since corporations are
key players in communication industries. Then we turn to the running of government
and survey executive branch (policy) documents and legislative branch (laws)
documents. The third major topic is sources of statistical information. And
finally we turn our attention to legal research. Between the assignments we
discuss additional topics of relevance to documentary research: documents and
secondary sources, non-profit organizations, libraries and archives, and access
to information and how knowledge gained in this course can empower citizens.
Prerequisites:
CMNS 110 or CMNS 130
Required Texts:
- Course Notes are available for purchase in class (about $10)
- We will use the Library's Communication web page as a basic resource: <http://www.lib.sfu.ca/researchhelp/subjectguides/cmns/cmns.htm
>
See especially the links to CMNS 261 assignments
Course Organization:
A two-hour weekly lecture presents the background concepts and sources necessary
to do the assignments. A one-hour weekly tutorial (held in the library) is available
to provide group and one-on-one help in undertaking the assignments.
Grade Distribution:
(to be confirmed at the first class)
- Corporate profile (due week 4) 25%
- Government documents (due week 7) 25%
- Statistical information (due week 10) 25%
OR
- Legal research (due week 13) 25%
- Final exam 25%
Week-by-week outline:
Week 1: Introduction
to the course
Week 2: Media power research 1 -- the board of directors
Week 3: Media power research 2 -- the company
Week 4: Documents and secondary sources
Week 5: Government documents 1 -- legislative branch
Week 6: Government documents 2 -- executive branch
Week 7: Non-profit organizations as document generators
Week 8: Statistical sources 1 -- Canadian resources
Week 9: Statistical sources 2 -- international resources
Week 10: Libraries and archives
Week 11: Legal research 1 -- issues, principles
Week 12: Legal research 2 -- primary and secondary sources
Week 13: Conclusion -- research and access to information
The School expects
that the grades awarded in this course will bear some reasonable relation to
established university-wide practices with respect to both levels and distribution
of grades. In addition, the School will follow Policy T10.02 with respect to
"Intellectual Honesty" and "Academic Discipline" (see current
Calendar, General Regulations section).