The course will employ a variety of instructional methods to accomplish its objectives, including: lectures, small group discussions, visual presentations (PowerPoint, DVDs and online media), individual and team projects and/or presentations, field observations, guest speaker presentations, and map analysis. This course could be delivered in a team taught environment or by an individual instructor.
1. Course Introduction: Geography, Media, and Construction of Geographic Knowledge
- Geography and its major subfields
- Geographic inquiry
- Media representations and geographical knowledge
- Geographic approaches to media and communications
2. Cartographic Communication
- Maps as media
- Evolution of cartographic representations from historic terra incognita to GIS and Google Earth
- Mapping nature: Maps of natural hazards and climate change
3. Social Construction of Place and Nature
- Social construction of place
- Newspapers and sense of place
- Changing perceptions and philosophies of nature
- Geographic knowledge and visuality
- Visual portrayal of the natural environment in documentary and fictional film
4. Fear, Anxiety, and Media Depictions of Natural Hazards
- Geography of hazards
- Approaches to audience reception
- Social construction of geographic risk in news media
- Geographic media as life-saving source of information
- Fear and hazards in film
5. Climate Change
- Greenhouse effect and global warming
- Paleoclimatology and climate models
- Natural hazards and climate change
- Public policy and climate change
- Climate change mitigation and adaption
- Forced displacement
- Climate change in popular media
6. Avalanches
- Geography of avalanches
- Avalanches and society
- Snowpack observation
- Slab avalanche anatomy
- Human factors and avalanches
- Avalanches in popular media
7. Hurricanes and Storm Surges
- Geography of hurricanes
- Hurricanes and society
- Spatial distribution of hurricanes
- Hurricane mapping
- Storm surge engineering responses
- Societal response to extreme weather
8. Earthquake and Tsunamis
- Plate tectonics
- Geography of plate boundaries
- Tsunami warning system
- News media and response and preparedness
- Risk and society
- Earthquake education
At the conclusion of the course, successful students will be able to:
- Demonstrate familiarity with the overall field of geography as well as its human and physical subfields, and understand different types of geographic inquiry within and across those subfields.
- Describe and analyze the role of media in constructing geographic knowledge and shaping public perceptions of the environment and environmental risks.
- Demonstrate a foundation in scientific concepts and processes of physical geography, natural hazards and climate change.
- Interpret, utilize, analyze and create maps.
- Create media that displays competence in research, critical thinking, and analytical skills, as they relate to the field of geography.
- Communicate effectively orally, graphically, in writing, and using quantitative methods.
Evaluation will be based on course objectives and will be carried out in accordance with Douglas College policy. The instructor will provide a written course outline with specific criteria during the first week of classes.
An example of a possible evaluation scheme would be:
Preparation and participation: | 5% |
Film Analysis: | 15% |
Research Project and Presentation: | 30% |
Midterm Exam: | 25% |
Final Exam: | 25% |
A textbook or coursepack may be used. Texts and coursepack readings will be updated periodically. Examples of typical textbooks and coursepack articles are as follows:
Books
- Anderson, A. (1997). Media, Culture and the Environment. Abingdon: Routledge.
- Lester, L. (2010). Media and Environment: Conflict, Politics and the News. Polity Press: Cambridge.
Coursepack Articles
- Christophers, B. (2006). Visions of nature, spaces of empire: Framing natural history programming within geometries of power. Geoforum, 37, 973–985.
- Clague, J.J, Bobrowsky, P. (2010). International year of Planet Earth 8. Natural Hazards in Canada. Geoscience Canada. 37(1). 17 – 37.
- Ford, J., King, D. (2015). Coverage and framing of climate change adaptation in the media: A review of influential North American newspapers during 1993-2013. Environmental Science and Policy. 48. 137-146.
- Hansen, A. (2011). Communication, media and environment: Towards reconnecting research on the production, content and social implications of environmental communication. International Communication Gazette, 73(1-2), 7-25.
- Knight, J. (2004). Science in the movies: Hollywood or bust. Nature, 430 (7001), 720-722.
- Lachlan, K. A., Spence, P. R., Lin, X., & Del Greco, M. (2014). Screaming into the Wind: Examining the Volume and Content of Tweets Associated with Hurricane Sandy. Communication Studies, 65(5), 500-518.
- Meisner, M.S., Takahashi, B. (2011). The Nature of Time: How the Covers of the World's Most Widely Read Weekly News Magazine Visualize Environmental Affairs. Environmental Communication, 7(2), 255-276.
- Smith, N. (2006). There's no such thing as a natural disaster. Understanding Katrina: Perspectives from the Social Sciences. Social Science Research Council. Available at http://understandingkatrina.ssrc.org/Smith/.
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