Monday, February 27, 2017
gone
“After an extensive review process,” said Philip Bilden, Trump’s nominee for Navy secretary, “I have determined that I will not be able to satisfy the Office of Government Ethics requirements without undue disruption and materially adverse divestment of my family’s private financial interests.”
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
gone
Today, Andrew Puzder, Trump’s nominee for labor secretary, withdrew from consideration amid growing resistance from all Senate Democrats and a growing number of Republicans. His confirmation hearing was set to begin tomorrow.
Monday, February 13, 2017
gone
Michael Flynn, Trump’s national security adviser, resigned amid questions of competence and legality of his communication with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak prior to the Trump Administration taking office. As CNN notes, “The sudden exit marks the most public display yet of disarray at the highest levels of the new administration, which has faced repeated questions over a slew of controversies and reports of infighting among senior aides during its first three weeks.”
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
community garden outreach syllabus (spring 2017)
Community Garden Outreach
Farmstands and Community Dinners: The heart of this class is the campus farmstands and community dinners. Occurring three times a semester, the campus farmstand takes place in Gleeson Plaza. Students are responsible for all aspects of the farmstand, including organizing, publicizing, harvesting, gleaning, cooking and preparing the food, setting up, serving, cleaning up, and documenting. Also occurring three times a semester, the community dinners take place at St. Cyprian's Church (at Turk and Lyon) on the first Thursday evening of each month. Again, students are responsible for all aspects of the community dinner.
Out-of-class volunteering: Each student is required to make at least three visits to an urban farm or food-related event in the city. We will talk more about this but in general students visit the urban farm during work days, work in the farm for about two hours, and write a one page reflection about your experiences. Possible urban farms include: Alemany Farm, Garden for the Environment, and Tenderloin People’s Garden. Students can also volunteer at USF’s Stress Less Day (February 28) and the Earth Day Seed Swap at San Francisco Public Library (on April 22).
Thursdays,
11:45 am – 3:25 pm & 5-9 pm on 1st Thursdays
Class
location: USF Garden, Gleeson Plaza, & St. Cyprian’s Church (Turk and Lyon)
Twitter: @USFgarden
/ Instagram: usfgardenoutreach
Professor
David Silver (dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu)
Office /
hours: Kalmanovitz 141, MW, 1-2 & by appointment
TA: Santiago Delgadillo (sdelgadillo [ at ] dons [ dot ] usfca [ dot ] edu)
Course Description: Community Garden Outreach
introduces students to ideas, skills, and practices in ultra-local, urban-based
food production and distribution. Through readings, reflections, and
discussions, students will explore various social, cultural, and economic
issues around food, food production, and food distribution. Through cooking and
preserving workshops, urban farm visits, monthly campus farmstands in Gleeson
Plaza, and monthly community dinners at St. Cyprian’s Church, students will
engage directly with community food practices.
Learning Goals:
- Develop practical skills in preparing, preserving, and distributing local, seasonal food;
- Design, implement, and administer the campus farmstand and St. Cyprian’s community dinner;
- Design and implement outreach methods to publicize class events; and
- Demonstrate effective and creative collaboration with class members and community partners.
Grading:
50% Participation
in and contribution to 3 USF Farmstands and 3 St Cyprian’s Community Dinners
10% Recipe Project
20% Family Cuisine Project
10% Homework assignments and reflections
10%
Out-of-class volunteering
Farmstands and Community Dinners: The heart of this class is the campus farmstands and community dinners. Occurring three times a semester, the campus farmstand takes place in Gleeson Plaza. Students are responsible for all aspects of the farmstand, including organizing, publicizing, harvesting, gleaning, cooking and preparing the food, setting up, serving, cleaning up, and documenting. Also occurring three times a semester, the community dinners take place at St. Cyprian's Church (at Turk and Lyon) on the first Thursday evening of each month. Again, students are responsible for all aspects of the community dinner.
Out-of-class volunteering: Each student is required to make at least three visits to an urban farm or food-related event in the city. We will talk more about this but in general students visit the urban farm during work days, work in the farm for about two hours, and write a one page reflection about your experiences. Possible urban farms include: Alemany Farm, Garden for the Environment, and Tenderloin People’s Garden. Students can also volunteer at USF’s Stress Less Day (February 28) and the Earth Day Seed Swap at San Francisco Public Library (on April 22).
Attendance
Policy: Missing class, or attending class unprepared,
will significantly affect your final grade. If you do miss class, contact a
classmate to find out what we discussed in class and ask to borrow her or his
notes. Then, do the same with a second classmate. After this, if you still have
questions about missed material, visit me during office hours or email me.
Course
Rules
1. No
late work accepted.
2. No
drinking out of non-reusable containers during class, during farmstands, and
during community dinners.
3. Unless
extremely necessary, stay off your phones during class.
Course Calendar
Thursday, January 26: Class and individual
introductions. Food icebreaker. Tour USF Garden. Make a salad. Review syllabus.
Homework: Visit a Farmer’s Market, preferably the Ferry Building Farmer’s
Market on Saturday, to assess what makes a successful farmer’s market. Compile
your observations into a one page reflection and bring to class on February 2.
Thursday, February 2: Discussion: What makes a stall
at the farmer’s market good or bad? What’s a farmstand? What kind of farmstand
do we want ours to be? Tour G05. Visit USF Seed Library and meet Gleeson
librarians Debbie Benrubi and Carol Spector. Harvest for evening cooking
workshop. Evening (5-9 pm): Cooking workshop and group dinner at St Cyprian’s.
Dinner guests: Bruno Peguese, Senior Warden of St. Cyprian's Church; and Rev.
Thomas Jackson, Vicar, St. Cyprian’s Episcopal Church. Homework: farmstand
preparations, harvest/cook/coordinate with your team for next week’s farmstand.
Thursday, February 9: USF Farmstand 1. Class
meets at Gleeson Plaza. After farmstand, we will have a brief visit from Lauren
White, a representative from the HECUA Internship Program in Tuscany (“Sustainable
Agriculture, Food and Justice in Italy”). Homework: Listen to TED Radio Hour,
“The Food We Eat” (52 minutes), NPR.
Thursday, February 16: Recipe workshop.
Homework: Readings on seeds and seed libraries distributed in class.
Thursday, February 23: Seed packet design
workshop with Maren Salomon, Debbie Benrubi, and Carol Spector. Class meets
near the USF Seed Library in Gleeson Library.
Thursday, March 2: Class meets at St.
Cyprian’s to cook and prepare community dinner. Evening (5-9 pm): Community
Dinner 1. Homework: farmstand preparations, harvest/cook/coordinate with your
team for next week’s farmstand.
Thursday, March 9: USF Farmstand 2. Class
meets at Gleeson Plaza.
Thursday, March 16: No class: Spring Break
Thursday, March 23: Mexican food and culture workshop with Josah Perley, owner of
small-scale taco business, Tacoschani. Homework: Read Melati Citrawireja, “Deepa Natarajan: Ethnobotanist and natural fabric dyer,” Berkeleyside, November 9, 2015; and selections from John
Keay, The Spice Route.
Thursday, March 30: Chai and spices workshop
with Deepa Natarajan.
Thursday, April 6: Class meets at St.
Cyprian’s to cook and prepare community dinner. Evening (5-9 pm): Community
Dinner 2. Homework: Read Sandra Cate, “‘Breaking Bread with a Spread’ in the
San Francisco County Jail,” Gastronomica,
Summer 2008, pp. 17-24.
Thursday, April 13: Baking workshop. Guest baker: Samantha Blackburn. Class meets at St Cyprian’s kitchen. Homework:
farmstand preparations, harvest/cook/coordinate with your team for next week’s
farmstand.
Thursday, April 20: USF Farmstand 3. Class
meets at Gleeson Plaza. Homework: Family cuisine assignment.
(*** On Saturday, April 22,
there will be an Earth Day Seed Swap at the main branch of the San Francisco
Public Library. The USF Seed Library is a co-organizer of this event and all
CGO students are required to attend and participate in it.)
Thursday, April 27: Family Cuisine Project
due in class.
Thursday, May 4: Class meets at St. Cyprian’s to cook
and prepare community dinner. Evening (5-9 pm): Community Dinner 3. Homework:
final reflection assignment.
Thursday,
May 11: Last-day-of-class potluck party in USF Garden.
This class has no final.
Sunday, January 22, 2017
intro to media studies syllabus (spring 2017)
Introduction to Media
Studies
Section 1: MWF 9:15-10:20 am
Section 2: MWF 10:30-11:35 am
Kalmanovitz 311
Professor David Silver
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, MW, 1-2 & by
appointment
Contact: dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu
This course introduces students to the field of media
studies. Beginning with the printing press and ending with social media,
students will examine various media developments and eras and begin to
appreciate the complex interactions between media and larger cultural,
economic, political, and social conditions.
Upon completion of this course, students will:
o Be
able to explain the key developments and social actors of media history;
o Be
able to explain how these developments were and continue to be embedded within key
cultural, economic, political, and social conditions; and
o Be
able to read various media texts critically and creatively.
Course Costs
o All
readings will be emailed to you as PDFs or are available online for free.
o Documentaries
like The Sun Never Sets and Women in Comedy are available for free
on Kanopy and Films on Demand via Gleeson Library’s web site.
o For
class on February 3, you are required to purchase one print version of the San Francisco Chronicle. It will cost
between $1 and $1.50.
o Finally,
you are required, by April 7, to watch a film at a “movie palace” like San
Francisco’s Castro Theater or Oakland’s Grand Lake Theater. General admission
is $12. (Castro matinees are $9; Grand Lake’s cost $6.)
Grading
30% — Midterms (10% x 3)
20% — Exhibits (10% x 2)
20% — Group Exhibit (Trump’s First 100 Days)
30% — Homework, quizzes, and in class assignments
30% — Midterms (10% x 3)
20% — Exhibits (10% x 2)
20% — Group Exhibit (Trump’s First 100 Days)
30% — Homework, quizzes, and in class assignments
Attendance Policy
Missing class, or attending class unprepared, will
significantly affect your final grade. If you do miss class, contact a classmate
to find out what we discussed in class and ask to borrow her or his notes.
Then, do the same with a second classmate. After this, if you still have
questions about missed material, visit me during office hours or email me.
Course Rules
1.
No late work accepted.
2.
No drinking out of non-reusable containers
during class.
Course Calendar
WEEK 1
Mon, 1/23:
Introduction, distribute syllabi.
Wed, 1/25: Read
Ken Auletta, “Outside the Box: Netflix and the Future of Television,” The New
Yorker, February 3, 2014.
Fri, 1/27: Read
Mara Einstein, “Introduction: Why Ads Don’t Look Like Ads,” in Black Ops Advertising (2016), pp. 1-23.
Unit One: Words
WEEK 2
Mon, 1/30: Read Michael
Schudson, “The Revolution of the Penny Press,” in Discovering the News: A Social History of American Newspapers
(1978): pp. 14-31, 196-7.
Wed, 2/1: Watch The Sun Never Sets: A Small Town Newspaper
(2012, 55 mins) Video available on Kanopy via Gleeson Library. Watch selections,
in class, from Stop the Presses (2008;
48 mins).
Fri, 2/3: Read,
front to back, the Thursday, February 2 print edition of the San Francisco Chronicle. Observe
everything. Bring entire paper to class and be prepared to discuss.
WEEK 3
Mon, 2/6: Read
Ellen Gruber Garvey, “Reframing the Bicycle: Magazines and Scorching Women,” in
The Adman in the Parlor: Magazines and
the Gendering of Consumer Culture, 1880s to 1910s (1996): pp. 106-134.
Wed, 2/8: Midterm 1 review.
Fri, 2/10: MIDTERM
1
Unit Two: Sounds
WEEK 4
Mon, 2/13: Read
Edward D. Miller, “David Bowie, Alladin Sane, and America,” in Tomboys, Pretty Boys, and Outspoken Women:
The Media Revolution of 1973 (2011): pp. 83-118.
Wed, 2/15: Exhibit
workshop
Fri, 2/17: POPULAR
MUSIC EXHIBIT (to get ideas flowing, check out 60+ student exhibits from spring 2016 and 70 student projects from fall 2015)
WEEK 5
Mon, 2/20: No
Class: Presidents’ Day Holiday
Wed, 2/22: Read
Susan J. Douglas, “Amateur Operators and American Broadcasting: Shaping the
Future of Radio,” in Joseph J. Corn, ed., Imagining
Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future (1986), pp: 35-57.
Fri, 2/24: Read
Michael Brian Schiffer, “The Radio Craze,” in The Portable Radio in American Life (1991): pp. 48-62.
WEEK 6
Mon, 2/27: Read Susan Smulyan, “Toward National Radio,” in Selling Radio: The Commercialization of American Broadcasting, 1920-1934 (1994): pp. 11-36.
Wed, 3/1: Read Melvin Patrick Ely, “White Men, Black Voices,” in The Adventures of Amos ‘n’ Andy: A Social History of an American
Phenomenon (1991): pp. 1-10.
Fri, 3/3: Guest
lecture: Miranda Morris, KUSF General Manager. In preparation for
Miranda’s visit, take some time to listen to KUSF. Also, watch Basile
Inman's “Sister Lazarus" and Cristina
Pachano-Lauderdale's “Rock N Swap." And then read Kevin Lozano's “Does College Radio Even Matter Anymore?” Pitchfork, February 8, 2017
WEEK 7
Mon, 3/6: To be
determined
Wed, 3/8: Midterm
review
Fri, 3/10: MIDTERM
2
WEEK 8
Spring Break
Unit Three: Images
WEEK 9
Mon, 3/20: Read Steven
Lubar, “Pictures,” in InfoCulture: The
Smithsonian Book of Information Age Inventions (1993), pp. 51-64.
Wed, 3/22: Watch John
Berger’s Ways of Seeing, Part I (YouTube)
Fri, 3/24: Photography workshop
WEEK 10
Mon, 3/27: William
Boddy, “The Beginnings of American Television,” in Anthony Smith, ed., Television: An International History
(1995): pp. 35-61.
Wed, 3/39: Kristen
Hatch, “Selling Soap: Post-war Television Soap Opera and the American
Housewife,” in Janet Thumim, ed., Small
Screens, Big Ideas: Television in the 1950s (2002): pp. 35-49
Fri, 3/31: Susan
J. Douglas, “Sex and the Single Teenager,” in Where the Girls Are: Growing Up Female with the Mass Media (1994):
pp. 61-81.
WEEK 11
Mon, 4/3: Class-generated
readings on Reality Shows.
Wed, 4/5: Watch Pioneers of Television. / Game Shows (56
mins).
Fri, 4/7: By today’s class, you
are required to have to watched a film at a “movie palace” like San Francisco’s
Castro Theater or Oakland’s Grand Lake Theater. This is required. Also, read
Laurel Hennen Vigil, “Why the Curtain Fell: During the Golden Age of cinema, Oakland and Berkeley boasted dozens of grand, historic movie palaces,” East Bay Express, December 16, 2015.
WEEK 12
Mon, 4/10: Watch Women in Comedy (PBS, 2014: 54 mins).
Wed, 4/12: Read
Andrew Marantz, “Ready for Prime Time: After twenty-five years as a road comic, Leslie Jones becomes a star,” The New
Yorker, January 4, 2016, pp. 22-29; and Amanda Hess, “Asian-American Actors Are Fighting for Visibility. They Will Not Be Ignored,” New York Times, May 25, 2016.
Fri, 4/14: No
class: Easter Holiday
WEEK 13
Mon, 4/17: Guest
lecture: Michael Robertson, professor of Media Studies and Journalism, USF.
Readings to be determined.
Wed, 4/19: Midterm
review
Fri, 4/21: MIDTERM
3
WEEK 14
Mon, 4/24: Guest
lecture: Danny Plotnick, director of Film Studies minor, USF. Readings to be
determined.
Wed, 4/26: Exhibit
workshop
Fri, 4/28: FAVE
FILM EXHIBIT (here’s 62 student exhibits from last year’s class)
WEEK 15
Mon, 5/1: Trump’s
First 100 Days research workshop
Wed, 5/3:
(continued)
Fri, 5/5: (continued)
WEEK 16
Mon, 5/8: Trump
group exhibit workshop
TUESDAY, 5/9:
Pop-up group exhibit (“Trump’s First 100 Days”) in Thacher Gallery in Gleeson
Library (here’s some examples from fall 2014’s #everydaymedia pop-up)
Wed, 5/10: End-of-the-semester
party
There is no final in this class.
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
gone
Former Fox News personality Monica Crowley was Trump’s selection for senior director of strategic communications at the National Security Council. After CNN reported at least 50 examples of plagiarism in her book What the (Bleep) Just Happened? The Happy Warrior’s Guide to the Great American Comeback and Politico found more than a dozen instances of plagiarism in her PhD dissertation, Crowley took herself out of the running. Instead, she would "remain in New York to pursue other opportunities."
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
urban ag classes - summer and fall 2016
Urban Ag Summer 2016
Course Offerings
ARCD 348: Nicaragua Outreach
Immersion (Core SL), Professor Hana Mori Bottger
Nicaragua-Leon Campus, MTWRFS (May
23 – June 10, 2016)
ENVA 145: Community Garden Outreach
(Core SL), Professor Rachel Lee
Thursdays, 8:45 am – 1:20 pm (May
23 – July 1, 2016)
Urban Ag Fall 2016
Course Offerings
ANTH 235: Anthropology of Food (Core
CD), Professor Lindsay Annette Gifford
Thursdays, 12:45 – 2:30 pm
ENVA 130: Urban Ag: Fall (Core E),
Professor Novella Carpenter
Wednesdays, 11:45 am - 3:25 pm
ENVA 145: Community Garden Outreach
(Core SL), Professor Rachel Lee
Thursdays, 11:45 am - 3:25 pm
(& first Thursdays of the month from 5-9 pm)
ENVA 390 - 01: Food Activism in San
Francisco, Professor Antonio Roman-Alcala
Wednesdays, 11:45 am - 3:25 pm
ENVA 390 - 02: New Liberation
Garden, Professor Melinda Stone (2 units)
Every other Tuesday 12:45 - 4:25 pm
at New Liberation Garden
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Summer undergraduate RAships with the USF community garden
The Urban Ag minor at USF is looking to hire three undergraduate research assistants to manage the USF Community Garden this summer. The RAships run from May 23, 2016 - August 17, 2016.
RA duties include:
1. Plan and plant summer garden beds;
2. Maintain garden - weeding, watering, oversee irrigation, manage compost;
3. Plan, manage, and implement weekly community work days - publicize work days, organize group tasks, and hold open garden hours;
4. Work on monthly community dinners at St. Cyprian's;
5. Work with and teach garden skills to Upward Bound students;
6. Harvest and deliver weekly fresh produce to USF’s cafeteria/Bon Appetit;
7. Work with and on San Francisco’s New Liberation Garden (on Divisidero and Eddy);
8. Maintain @USFGarden's multiple social media platforms;
9. Start starts for fall classes; and
10. Keep the garden kitchen clean.
Ideal candidates have experience in the USF Garden (either through classes and/or workdays), work well in collaborative situations, are self-directed, and enjoy working with the public. Each summer research assistant will work a total of 100 hours over the summer and be paid around $10.50/hour. RAs will report to Novella Carpenter.
Interested USF students must email David Silver (dmsilver@usfca.edu) no later than Friday, April 15 by 5 pm. Graduating seniors can apply. In your email, please describe your qualifications, state your availability for summer, and tell us why you want the job. The Summer RA committee (consisting of professors Novella Carpenter, David Silver, and Melinda Stone) will notify all candidates by April 22. Good luck!
RA duties include:
1. Plan and plant summer garden beds;
2. Maintain garden - weeding, watering, oversee irrigation, manage compost;
3. Plan, manage, and implement weekly community work days - publicize work days, organize group tasks, and hold open garden hours;
4. Work on monthly community dinners at St. Cyprian's;
5. Work with and teach garden skills to Upward Bound students;
6. Harvest and deliver weekly fresh produce to USF’s cafeteria/Bon Appetit;
7. Work with and on San Francisco’s New Liberation Garden (on Divisidero and Eddy);
8. Maintain @USFGarden's multiple social media platforms;
9. Start starts for fall classes; and
10. Keep the garden kitchen clean.
Ideal candidates have experience in the USF Garden (either through classes and/or workdays), work well in collaborative situations, are self-directed, and enjoy working with the public. Each summer research assistant will work a total of 100 hours over the summer and be paid around $10.50/hour. RAs will report to Novella Carpenter.
Interested USF students must email David Silver (dmsilver@usfca.edu) no later than Friday, April 15 by 5 pm. Graduating seniors can apply. In your email, please describe your qualifications, state your availability for summer, and tell us why you want the job. The Summer RA committee (consisting of professors Novella Carpenter, David Silver, and Melinda Stone) will notify all candidates by April 22. Good luck!
Sunday, January 31, 2016
Capstone Practicum in Environmental Studies syllabus (spring 2016)
ENVA 450: Capstone Practicum in Environmental Studies
Lone Mountain 244B
Fridays, 11:45 am - 3:25 pm
Professor David Silver
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, Mondays & Wednesdays, 12-1 & by appointment
Contact: dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu
Capstone Practicum in Environmental Studies, affectionately known as “Capstone,” is intended to represent the culmination of your Environmental Studies degree. As such, you will engage in reflection about your course of study, consider your role in creating social and cultural change towards a sustainable human-environmental relationship, and work on real-life projects related to sustainability. Our work will center on four community sites and projects: 1) New Liberation Garden in the Western Addition; 2) Recyclemania run by USF’s Office of Sustainability; 3) The USF Seed Library housed in Gleeson Library; and 4) Artist Christina Conklin’s USF exhibit “Worlds in the Making: New Ecological Rituals.” Based on your interests and specializations, students will choose to work creatively, collaboratively, and intimately with a number of our community sites. Through hands-on projects, field trips, in class discussions, and personal reflections, students will test their ideas, learn to work as part of a team, and activate their post-college careers.
Learning Outcomes
Upon completing Capstone, you will:
o Learn how to tap into your own knowledge of Environmental Studies and apply it towards real-life, collaborative projects;
o Work with community partners to develop, design, and implement projects that work towards the broad goal of sustainable practices;
o Learn to work – and thrive – in collaboration with others, especially your Capstone peers; and
o Communicate how your understanding of and interest in a diverse range of perspectives and knowledge of environmental problems can be applied to specific career pathways or domains of environmental work.
Class Assignments
o Weekly Reflection: Each week you are required to engage in 5 hours of activity that relate to your class project/s and/or your interest in environmental studies. In other words, you can work 5 hours on the USF Seed Library or New Lib Garden. Or you can work 2 hours on Recyclemania and 3 hours on “Worlds in the Making.” You can also use some of your hours to attend a film screening, lecture series, or workshop related to your project or interest. On Friday, you are required to submit a two-page reflection of your work, due at the beginning of class. Be ready to share your reflection.
o Class Project: Each student will choose to participate in one or more of the following projects: 1) New Liberation Garden; 2) Recyclemania; 3) The USF Seed Library; and 4) “Worlds in the Making: New Ecological Rituals.”
o After a period of project briefs and observations, each student submits a proposal for the project(s) they wish to participate in. The proposal is due in class on Friday, March 11. For the remainder of the semester each student works on the project, participates collaboratively, and at the end of the semester presents a final presentation of the project.
o CARD Presentation/Participation: In addition to class projects, each student is responsible for submitting a proposal to USF’s Creative Arts and Research Day taking place on Friday, April 22. Proposal due date March 4. All students are required to attend CARD.
Grading:
50% - Weekly Reflections (due Friday in class)
30% - Participation/contributions to Class Projects
10% - Class participation
10% - Participation in Creative Activity and Research Day
Part ONE: OBSERVATION
Week One: Friday, January 29
Introductions, distribute syllabi, and discussion of four community sites and projects. Discuss how the course works. Prepare for next week’s overnight field trip to Regenerative Design Institute.
Week Two: Friday, February 5
Project Brief # 1 (with Cornerstone): RecycleMania with Richard Hsu, USF's Sustainability Coordinator. In preparation for our visit with Richard Hsu, please read and be ready to discuss case studies from 2015 and 2014 RecycleMania.
OVERNIGHT field trip (with Cornerstone) to Regenerative Design Institute, in Bolinas. We will return to USF on Saturday, February 6, by 6 pm.
Week Three: Friday, February 12
Project Brief # 2 (with Cornerstone): USF art exhibit “Worlds in the Making: New Ecological Rituals” with artist Christina Conklin. In preparation for our meeting with Christina Conklin, please read “Rooftop Sculpture Terrace” press release and selections from Conklin's master's thesis Immanence: Reconsidering the Spiritual in Art. Beginning at 1 pm, we will attend the opening talk and tour of "Worlds in the Making," an exhibition of four site-specific, participatory installations at USF’s Rooftop Sculpture Terrace, followed by a (catered!) reception for the artist.
Week Four: Friday, February 19
Project Brief #3 (with Cornerstone): New Liberation Garden Tour and Work Day. Located at the corner of Divisadero and Eddy, New Lib Garden is a former SLUG (San Francisco League of Urban Gardeners) garden that is currently being co-managed by USF and New Liberation Church. We will spend the day touring the garden, listening and learning from its participants, and getting our hands dirty working in it.
Week Five: Friday, February 26
In-class service learning orientation with Star Moore, Director of Community-Engaged Learning, Leo T. McCarthy Center for Public Service and the Common Good, from 11:45-12:45. In preparation for Star Moore’s visit, please read Christine M. Cress, "What is Service-Learning?" in Christine M. Cress, Peter J. Collier, and Vicki L. Reitenauer's Learning through Serving: A Student Guidebook for Service-Learning Across the Disciplines (Stylus Publishing, 2005): pp. 7-16; and Rachel Naomi Remen, "In the Service of Life," Noetic Sciences Review (spring 1996): 2 pages.
Project Brief #4 (with Cornerstone): USF Seed Library with Debbie Benrubi (Gleeson), Carol Spector (Gleeson), and David Silver. Readings to be determined.
Part TWO: VISUALIZE
Week Six: Friday, March 4
Workshop (with Cornerstone) with YES MEN.
Week Seven: Friday, March 11
Project proposals due in class. Discussion of class projects and proposals. Small group work on projects.
Week Eight: Friday, March 18
SPRING BREAK
Week Nine: Friday, March 25
Easter: No class
Part THREE: DESIGN/PLANNING
Week Ten: Friday, April 1
Project check-in. Social media and LinkedIn workshop.
Week Eleven: Friday, April 8
Field trip to and work day at Alemany Farm (with Cornerstone). Farm tour led by Antonio Roman-Alcalá, a longtime urban agriculture teacher, organizer, scholar, and writer.
Week Twelve: Friday, April 15
Project check-in. Small group work on projects.
Part FOUR: DEVELOPMENT/IMPLEMENTATION
Week Thirteen: Friday, April 22
This day will be spent attending and participating in the College of Arts and Sciences 6th annual Creative Activity and Research Day (CARD) in Fromm Hall. CARD is a celebration of the research and creative activity accomplishments of undergraduate and graduate students in the College and students have the option of creating a poster or giving a talk at the event. Please note: participating students are required to stand by their poster from 11am to 1pm which slightly conflicts with our class times; we’ll figure it out as it approaches.
Week Fourteen: Friday, April 29
Work day at New Lib Garden (with Cornerstone)
Week Fifteen: Friday, May 6
Final Presentations
This is no final exam for this class.
On Friday, May 13, there will be an Urban Ag end-of-the-year / graduation party in the USF Garden. Please join us.
Lone Mountain 244B
Fridays, 11:45 am - 3:25 pm
Professor David Silver
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, Mondays & Wednesdays, 12-1 & by appointment
Contact: dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu
Capstone Practicum in Environmental Studies, affectionately known as “Capstone,” is intended to represent the culmination of your Environmental Studies degree. As such, you will engage in reflection about your course of study, consider your role in creating social and cultural change towards a sustainable human-environmental relationship, and work on real-life projects related to sustainability. Our work will center on four community sites and projects: 1) New Liberation Garden in the Western Addition; 2) Recyclemania run by USF’s Office of Sustainability; 3) The USF Seed Library housed in Gleeson Library; and 4) Artist Christina Conklin’s USF exhibit “Worlds in the Making: New Ecological Rituals.” Based on your interests and specializations, students will choose to work creatively, collaboratively, and intimately with a number of our community sites. Through hands-on projects, field trips, in class discussions, and personal reflections, students will test their ideas, learn to work as part of a team, and activate their post-college careers.
Learning Outcomes
Upon completing Capstone, you will:
o Learn how to tap into your own knowledge of Environmental Studies and apply it towards real-life, collaborative projects;
o Work with community partners to develop, design, and implement projects that work towards the broad goal of sustainable practices;
o Learn to work – and thrive – in collaboration with others, especially your Capstone peers; and
o Communicate how your understanding of and interest in a diverse range of perspectives and knowledge of environmental problems can be applied to specific career pathways or domains of environmental work.
Class Assignments
o Weekly Reflection: Each week you are required to engage in 5 hours of activity that relate to your class project/s and/or your interest in environmental studies. In other words, you can work 5 hours on the USF Seed Library or New Lib Garden. Or you can work 2 hours on Recyclemania and 3 hours on “Worlds in the Making.” You can also use some of your hours to attend a film screening, lecture series, or workshop related to your project or interest. On Friday, you are required to submit a two-page reflection of your work, due at the beginning of class. Be ready to share your reflection.
o Class Project: Each student will choose to participate in one or more of the following projects: 1) New Liberation Garden; 2) Recyclemania; 3) The USF Seed Library; and 4) “Worlds in the Making: New Ecological Rituals.”
o After a period of project briefs and observations, each student submits a proposal for the project(s) they wish to participate in. The proposal is due in class on Friday, March 11. For the remainder of the semester each student works on the project, participates collaboratively, and at the end of the semester presents a final presentation of the project.
o CARD Presentation/Participation: In addition to class projects, each student is responsible for submitting a proposal to USF’s Creative Arts and Research Day taking place on Friday, April 22. Proposal due date March 4. All students are required to attend CARD.
Grading:
50% - Weekly Reflections (due Friday in class)
30% - Participation/contributions to Class Projects
10% - Class participation
10% - Participation in Creative Activity and Research Day
Part ONE: OBSERVATION
Week One: Friday, January 29
Introductions, distribute syllabi, and discussion of four community sites and projects. Discuss how the course works. Prepare for next week’s overnight field trip to Regenerative Design Institute.
Week Two: Friday, February 5
Project Brief # 1 (with Cornerstone): RecycleMania with Richard Hsu, USF's Sustainability Coordinator. In preparation for our visit with Richard Hsu, please read and be ready to discuss case studies from 2015 and 2014 RecycleMania.
OVERNIGHT field trip (with Cornerstone) to Regenerative Design Institute, in Bolinas. We will return to USF on Saturday, February 6, by 6 pm.
Week Three: Friday, February 12
Project Brief # 2 (with Cornerstone): USF art exhibit “Worlds in the Making: New Ecological Rituals” with artist Christina Conklin. In preparation for our meeting with Christina Conklin, please read “Rooftop Sculpture Terrace” press release and selections from Conklin's master's thesis Immanence: Reconsidering the Spiritual in Art. Beginning at 1 pm, we will attend the opening talk and tour of "Worlds in the Making," an exhibition of four site-specific, participatory installations at USF’s Rooftop Sculpture Terrace, followed by a (catered!) reception for the artist.
Week Four: Friday, February 19
Project Brief #3 (with Cornerstone): New Liberation Garden Tour and Work Day. Located at the corner of Divisadero and Eddy, New Lib Garden is a former SLUG (San Francisco League of Urban Gardeners) garden that is currently being co-managed by USF and New Liberation Church. We will spend the day touring the garden, listening and learning from its participants, and getting our hands dirty working in it.
Week Five: Friday, February 26
In-class service learning orientation with Star Moore, Director of Community-Engaged Learning, Leo T. McCarthy Center for Public Service and the Common Good, from 11:45-12:45. In preparation for Star Moore’s visit, please read Christine M. Cress, "What is Service-Learning?" in Christine M. Cress, Peter J. Collier, and Vicki L. Reitenauer's Learning through Serving: A Student Guidebook for Service-Learning Across the Disciplines (Stylus Publishing, 2005): pp. 7-16; and Rachel Naomi Remen, "In the Service of Life," Noetic Sciences Review (spring 1996): 2 pages.
Project Brief #4 (with Cornerstone): USF Seed Library with Debbie Benrubi (Gleeson), Carol Spector (Gleeson), and David Silver. Readings to be determined.
Part TWO: VISUALIZE
Week Six: Friday, March 4
Workshop (with Cornerstone) with YES MEN.
Week Seven: Friday, March 11
Project proposals due in class. Discussion of class projects and proposals. Small group work on projects.
Week Eight: Friday, March 18
SPRING BREAK
Week Nine: Friday, March 25
Easter: No class
Part THREE: DESIGN/PLANNING
Week Ten: Friday, April 1
Project check-in. Social media and LinkedIn workshop.
Week Eleven: Friday, April 8
Field trip to and work day at Alemany Farm (with Cornerstone). Farm tour led by Antonio Roman-Alcalá, a longtime urban agriculture teacher, organizer, scholar, and writer.
Week Twelve: Friday, April 15
Project check-in. Small group work on projects.
Part FOUR: DEVELOPMENT/IMPLEMENTATION
Week Thirteen: Friday, April 22
This day will be spent attending and participating in the College of Arts and Sciences 6th annual Creative Activity and Research Day (CARD) in Fromm Hall. CARD is a celebration of the research and creative activity accomplishments of undergraduate and graduate students in the College and students have the option of creating a poster or giving a talk at the event. Please note: participating students are required to stand by their poster from 11am to 1pm which slightly conflicts with our class times; we’ll figure it out as it approaches.
Week Fourteen: Friday, April 29
Work day at New Lib Garden (with Cornerstone)
Week Fifteen: Friday, May 6
Final Presentations
This is no final exam for this class.
On Friday, May 13, there will be an Urban Ag end-of-the-year / graduation party in the USF Garden. Please join us.
Sunday, January 24, 2016
introduction to media studies syllabus (spring 2016)
MS 100: Introduction
to Media Studies

Upon completion of this course, students will:
Section 1: MWF 9:15-10:20 am
Section 2: MWF 10:30-11:35 am
Lone Mountain 244B
Professor David Silver
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, Mondays & Wednesdays,
12-1 & by appointment
Contact: dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu
This course introduces students to the field of media
studies. Beginning with the printing press and ending with social media,
students will examine various media developments and eras and begin to
appreciate the complex interactions between media and larger cultural,
economic, political, and social conditions. Along the way, students will be
introduced to USF media studies professors and various media-making
opportunities on campus.

Upon completion of this course, students will:
o Be
able to “read” various media texts critically and creatively;
o Be
able to explain the key developments and social actors of media history;
o Be
able to explain how these developments were and continue to be embedded within
cultural, economic, political, and social conditions.
Course Costs
o All
readings will be provided to you as PDFs or are available online for free.
o Documentaries
like Stop the Presses and Women in Comedy are available for free
on Films on Demand via Gleeson Library’s web site.
o For
class on February 5, you are required to purchase one print version of the San Francisco Chronicle. It will cost
between $1 and $1.50.
o Finally,
you are required, by April 6, to watch a film at a “movie palace” like San
Francisco’s Castro Theater or Oakland’s Grand Lake Theater. General admission
is $11. (Castro matinees are $8.50; Grand Lake’s cost $6.)
Grading
Midterms (10% x 3) 30%
Exhibits (15% x 2) 30%
Final Project 10%
Homework 20%
Demo Days and in class assignments 10%
Attendance Policy
Missing class, or attending class unprepared, will
significantly affect your final grade. If you do miss class, contact a
classmate to find out what we discussed in class and ask to borrow her or his
notes. Then, do the same with a second classmate. After doing this, if you
still have questions about missed material, visit me during office hours or
email me.
WEEK 1
Mon, 1/25:
Introduction, distribute syllabi
Wed, 1/27: Read
Ken Auletta, “Outside the Box: Netflixand the Future of Television,” The New
Yorker, February 3, 2014.
Fri, 1/29: Read Maura
Judkis, “The Renwick is suddenly Instagram famous. But what about the art?” Washington Post, January 7, 2016; and
Shan Wang, “A 91-year-old literary magazine is hosting a yearlong experiment instorytelling on Instagram,” NiemanLab,
January 8, 2016.
Unit One: Words
WEEK 2
Mon, 2/1: Read Michael
Schudson, “The Revolution of the Penny Press,” in Discovering the News: A Social History of American Newspapers
(1978): pp. 14-31, 196-7.
Wed, 2/3: Watch Stop the Presses (2008; 48 mins). Video available
on Films on Demand via Gleeson Library.
Fri, 2/5: Read,
front to back, a 2/3 or 2/4 print edition of the San Francisco Chronicle. Observe everything. Bring entire paper to
class and be prepared to discuss. Demo Day: Newspapers.
WEEK 3
Mon, 2/8: Read
Nancy A. Walker, “Introduction: Women’s Magazines and Women’s Roles,” in Women’s Magazines 1940-1960: Gender Roles
and the Popular Press (1998), pp: 1-11.
Wed, 2/10: Read
Ellen Gruber Garvey, “Reframing the Bicycle: Magazines and Scorching Women,” in
The Adman in the Parlor: Magazines and
the Gendering of Consumer Culture, 1880s to 1910s (1996), pp: 106-134.
(* Extra credit
opportunity: On Thursday, February 11, from 11:40 am - 12:40 pm, in the Getty
Lounge, David Silver will give a talk titled “The Farm at Black Mountain
College.” To collect extra credit, attend the talk, write a one-page reflection
about the talk, and turn it in to class on Friday, February 12.)
Fri, 2/12:
Magazine workshop with Gleeson librarian Debbie Benrubi. Midterm 1 review sheet
distributed in class.
WEEK 4
Mon, 2/15: No
Class: Presidents’ Day Holiday
Wed, 2/17: Guest
lecture: Lucas Waldron, USF graduate and current student at UC
Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. Readings to be determined.
Fri, 2/19:
MIDTERM 1
Unit Two: Sounds
WEEK 5
Mon, 2/22: Robert
Campbell, “Radio,” in The Golden Years of
Broadcasting: A Celebration of the First 50 Years of Radio and TV on NBC (Rutledge
Books, 1976): pp. 17-47.
Wed, 2/24:
Reading selections from Michele Hilmes, Radio
Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922-1952 (1997); and Susan Smulyan, Selling Radio: The Commercialization of
American Broadcasting, 1920-1934 (1994).
Fri, 2/26: Demo
Day: Radio
WEEK 6
Mon, 2/29: Read Susan J. Douglas, “Amateur Operators and American Broadcasting: Shaping the Future of Radio,” in Joseph J. Corn, editor, Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology, and the American Future (1986): pp. 35-55.
Wed, 3/2: Susan Smulyan, “Toward National Radio,” in Selling Radio: The Commercialization of American Broadcasting, 1920-1934 (1994): pp. 11-36.
(* Extra credit
opportunity: On Wednesday, March 2, there will be a film screening of “The Yes
Men are Revolting” (5:30 pm, Fromm Hall). To collect extra credit,
attend the film screening, write a one-page reflection about it, and turn it in
to class on Friday, March 4.)
Fri, 3/4: Hua
Hsu, “How Video Games Changed Popular Music,” The New Yorker, June 30, 2015.
WEEK 7
Mon, 3/7: Midterm
2 review sheet distributed in class.
(* Extra credit
opportunity: On Tuesday, March 8, 2016, from 12:45-2:30 pm in McLaren Complex,
speakers Claudia Magallanes Blanco (Coordinator, M.A. in Communication and
Social Change, Universidad Iberoamericana Puebla), Elisabeth Jay Friedman
(Professor, Politics @ USF), and Dorothy Kidd (Professor, Media Studies @ USF)
will speak on “Women's Movement Mobilizations in and through Media” as part of
the 15th annual USF Global Women’s Rights Program. To collect extra credit,
attend the panel, write a one-page reflection about it, and turn it in to class
on Wednesday, March 9.)
Wed, 3/9: Guest
lecture: Miranda Morris, KUSF General Manager. In preparation for Miranda’s
visit, take some time to list to www.kusf.org. Also, read Jennifer Waits,
“College Radio’s Fight for FM,” Radio
Survivor, October 18, 2011, and watch Kim Kinkaid’s “How to become a KUSF DJ” (2:06 minutes), USFtv, May 6,
2014, and Cristina Pachano-Lauderdale’s “KUSF Rock-n-Swap” (3:59 minutes), USFtv, September 30, 2013.
Fri, 3/11: MIDTERM
2
WEEK 8
Spring Break
WEEK 9
Mon, 3/21:
Popular music exhibit workshop
Wed, 2/23: POPULAR
MUSIC EXHIBIT
Fri, 3/25: No
class: Easter Holiday
Unit Three: Images
WEEK 10
Mon, 3/28: Read Steven
Lubar, “Pictures,” in InfoCulture: The
Smithsonian Book of Information Age Inventions (1993), pp. 51-64.
Wed, 3/30: Andrew
Chan, “‘La grande bouffe’: Cooking Shows as Pornography,” Gastronomica (Fall 2003): pp. 47-53.
(* Extra credit
opportunity: The 14h Annual USF Human Rights Film Festival runs from Thursday,
March 31 to Saturday, April 2 at Presentation Theater. To collect extra credit,
attend a film screening (or two), write a one-page reflection about the film,
and turn it in to class on Monday, April 4.)
Fri, 4/1: Demo
Day: Photography
WEEK 11
Mon, 4/4: Guest
lecture (for morning section only): Danny Plotnick, director of Film Studies
minor. Read Laurel Hennen Vigil, "Why the Curtain Fell: During the GoldenAge of cinema, Oakland and Berkeley boasted dozens of grand, historic moviepalaces," East Bay Express,
December 16, 2015.
Wed, 4/6: Read Jonah
Weiner, "The Man Who Makes the World's Funniest People Even Funnier,"
New York Times, April 15, 2015. By
April 6, you are required to have to watched a film at a “movie palace” like
San Francisco’s Castro Theater or Oakland’s Grand Lake Theater.
Fri, 4/8: Guest
lecture: Melinda Stone, associate professor, Media Studies, Environmental
Studies, and Urban Agriculture. Readings to be determined.
WEEK 12
Mon, 4/11: Watch Women in Comedy (PBS, 2014: 54 mins).
Video available on Films on Demand via Gleeson Library. Midterm 3 review sheet
distributed in class.
Wed, 4/13: Read Andrew
Marantz, “Ready for Prime Time: After twenty-five years as a road comic, Leslie Jones becomes a star,” The New Yorker,
January 4, 2016, pp. 22-29.
Fri, 4/15:
MIDTERM 3
WEEK 13
Mon, 4/18: Popular film reading to be determined.
Wed, 4/20: Guest
lecture: Dorothy Kidd, professor and chair, Media Studies. Read Dorothy Kidd, “Occupy
and Social Movement Communication,” in Chris Atton, ed, Routledge Companion to Alternative and Community Media (2015), pp:
457-468.
Fri, 4/22: FAVE
FILM EXHIBIT
Unit Four: Social Media
WEEK 14
Mon, 4/25: No
class. Watch The Social Network
(2010).
Wed, 4/27: FAVE
FILM EXHIBIT
Fri, 4/29: Read
Zadie Smith, “Generation Why?” New York
Review of Books, November 25, 2010.
WEEK 15
Mon, 5/2: Read Dave
Eggers, “We like you so much and want to know you better,” excerpt from the
novel The Circle (2013).
Wed, 5/4: To be determined
Fri, 5/6: Media
Fast
WEEK 16
Mon, 5/9: Guest
lecture: Sam Wilder, USF graduate and Community Development and Gardening
Associate with Bon Appetit Management Company, AT&T Park Farm. Readings to
be determined.
Wed, 5/11: FINAL
PROJECT due in class
There is no final in this class.
Course Rules
1.
No late work accepted.
2.
No drinking out of non-reusable containers
during class.
3.
I am nearly certain that at some point in the
semester I will establish a rule about phone use in class – barring it,
limiting it, mocking it. Using your devices in non-creative ways during class
is distracting. It’s also obnoxious. Set it down. Set it away.
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