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The History of the American Media

In this course we cover the history of the American media with an emphasis on key topics in today's public conversation, from advertising, partisanship, bias, and entertainment, to free speech, journalism, fragmentation, and mass media.
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What's included

8 pre-recorded lessons
8 weeks
of teacher support
1 year access
to the content
Assignments
2-4 hours per week. Students will be assigned to read and watch our course introductions to new concepts, and they will be assigned sources and practice exercises designed to test their understanding of those concepts.
Mastery Evaluation
included
Letter Grade
Student grades will depend on participation and assignment completion and accuracy.

Class Experience

US Grade 8 - 12
Intermediate - Advanced Level
In this class we'll look at American mass media with an eye toward understanding how it developed from the broadsheet to the Internet, and what these technological, design, and delivery changes mean for the content, values, and business model of journalism. 

Should media outlets try to be non-partisan? Is there room for "opinions" in journalism? What was the country like when there were only a handful of startup newspapers? Why did we turn toward valuing news 24/7 instead of only weekly, daily, or nightly? How should we think about mainstream sources vs. independent or alternative sources? Is our media landscape "fragmented," and how did this environment develop from the Revolution through the 21st century?

Join us in this 8-week course to explore these questions and a host of others. Our goal will be to contextualize today's media environment to better understand how we got to 24/7 notifications and headlines, and to provide some perspective on the role of the media away from all of the noisiness and attention-seeking. Check out the course syllabus to see the planned course outline (though keep in mind that I reserve the right to edit this based on student needs and interests! I will inform you if any changes occur :)

All of the content students need to learn each week's new concepts is included in the course, either as pre-recorded video, assigned reading, or an assignment that will help them practice what they've read and watched.

I am available for questions via the Outschool messaging system throughout the week.
Learning Goals
Students will be able to describe the transformational periods in the development of the American media.
Students will be able to characterize the shifting values, goals, and incentives of the American media through each transformational period.
learning goal

Other Details

Pre-Requisites
None. Come one, come all :)
Language of Instruction
English (Level: B2+)
External Resources
In addition to the Outschool classroom, this class uses:
Joined May, 2024
New on Outschool
Profile
Teacher expertise and credentials
Utah Teaching Certificate in Social Studies/History
Nate Noorlander
Master's Degree in Social Work from Temple University
Sarah Jackson
Bachelor's Degree in History from Brigham Young University
Nate Noorlander
Bachelor's Degree in Human Development Family Studies from Brigham Young University
Sarah Jackson
BA in History
BA in Philosophy
Teaching certificates in history and English
A decade of teaching experience in charter schools and international schools, utilizing the A-level and IB curriculums

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Self-Paced Course
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$25

weekly or $199 for all content
8 pre-recorded lessons
8 weeks of teacher support
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1 year of access to the content

Completed by 1 learner
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Ages: 14-18

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