IS407: Politics of CyberspaceSPRING 2012As computing and networking technologies increasingly pervade the
worlds of business, government, science, law enforcement, the military
and entertainment, political and policy considerations also increase
in importance as the Internet reaches an ever-greater portion of humanity.
Highly controversial subjects involving government actions, legal
theory, ethical judgements, international relations, and economic
analysis are introduced with reference not only to historical developments
of the last several decades but also to recent news reports. The course
assumes only a rudimentary familiarity with the basic concepts and
terminology of modern Internet usage and computing and is not a technology-focused
course. This course offers students from all majors the opportunity
to explore policy issues in greater depth than in technology-oriented
courses they may have taken. Information-technology courses are not
a prerequisite and students from all majors are welcome. |
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(PDF FILES unless otherwise indicated)
Updated 2012-01-12 Course description -- detailed assignments, grading, standards, requirements, policies, rewards, penalties, and also the Secret of Life, the Universe and Everything.Syllabus/schedule -- day-by-day listing of every required reading, quiz, exam, and deadline.Term-Paper Guidelines -- how to avoid falling into a swamp of errors.Term-Paper Topic Ideas -- suggestions, just suggestionsTerm-Paper Outline -- example from Anna Knapp of organizing one's researchTerm-Paper Sample -- used by kind permission of alumna Anna Knapp NU ('07).Grading Standards for Essay Exams (JPG)Weekly Resources -- Links to Required and Optional Readings/MediaPresentation Schedule -- TBAInstructor Office Hours / Schedule JPG PDF_______________________________________________________________ For additional useful tips and tricks, click on the Methods link: seeCATA Frequently Corrected Errors On Writing SQ3R
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