Textbook on the information society theory
Hi~, I will open an graduate course on "Network and Society". Through this course I would like to discuss about information society from those treaditional scholars as Baniel Bell and Fritz Matchl upto the latest ones who argued for information capitalism and congnitive capitalism. I will also introduce those scholars who give us deeper understanding as Manuel Castells, Jan van Dijk, and Frank Webster. I wonder if there is some textbook which can be usesd as a reference book in this class. I am looking for the one that can serve us with more balanced guideline between critical and positive approaches. Many thanks in advance. James *Joo Seong Hwang, Ph. D., Associate Professor *Graduate School of Public Policy and Information Technology Seoul National University of Science and Technology Changjo-Hall(Bd.No. 8), 232 Gongneung-ro, Nowon-gu, 139-743, Seoul, KOREA (Office) 82-2-970-6868, (Fax) 82-2-970-6868, (MP) 82-10-3777-4450 jshwang@seoultech.ac.kr, * http://english.seoultech.ac.kr/academics/progradu/policytech/*<http://english.seoultech.ac.kr/academics/progradu/policytech/>
Hi James and Air-l, For the free, open, "Society and Information Technology" course I'm planning to teach online this autumn, - on Harvard's virtual island in SL and in Google + Hangouts vis-a-vis MIT OCW-centric World University and School, - I'm planning to use the new book by Rainie and Wellman "Networked: The New Social Operating System" (MIT 2012- http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/networked) as the main text (which is data-focused and which I also haven't used when teaching this course in the past), also with readings from Castells' "Rise of the Networked Society" trilogy (rev. eds.) +, with some great, generative talks examining the information age (Prof. Manuel Castells-informed) ... engaging the Conference Method of Teaching and Learning online - http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Conference_Method_of_Teaching_and_Lear...... possibly on Saturday's mid-day, Pacific Time (feedback about best times for you welcome). Here's a previous, course wiki - http://socinfotech.pbworks.com/w/page/17175578/FrontPage. I'll probably also explore designing the course anew in Google's course-builder https://code.google.com/p/course-builder/ (which I also haven't used before) and where I'll post the syllabus in the next few weeks. ... and I plan to design this course also vis-a-vis a) how to build to a WUaS, MIT OCW course, accreditation-worthy standard, b) coming into conversation with course-participants about this in the course, and c) prospective grad students who might like to teach next year, as well as d) hypothetical graduate student instructors hired by WUaS (planning to hire MIT, Stanford, HYP, Cambridge grad students + these universities - http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Courses#University_course_listings) - in the autumn of 2014, teaching interactively to MIT faculty in MIT OCW video course. * If you'd like to join this conversation, please Get an avatar (free) for Second Life Get a Gmail address, and set up your G+ profile for Hangouts (all free) Get the book Networked (MIT 2012) by Rainie and Wellman, and begin reading. Invite friends to participate Let me know at worlduniversityandschool@gmail.com Here's a blog entry about this - http://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/2013/07/dandelion-to-seed-free-open-societ... . Best, Scott On Sat, Jul 6, 2013 at 8:42 AM, joo-seong Hwang <jameshwang9@gmail.com>wrote:
Hi~,
I will open an graduate course on "Network and Society". Through this course I would like to discuss about information society from those treaditional scholars as Baniel Bell and Fritz Matchl upto the latest ones who argued for information capitalism and congnitive capitalism. I will also introduce those scholars who give us deeper understanding as Manuel Castells, Jan van Dijk, and Frank Webster.
I wonder if there is some textbook which can be usesd as a reference book in this class. I am looking for the one that can serve us with more balanced guideline between critical and positive approaches.
Many thanks in advance.
James
*Joo Seong Hwang, Ph. D., Associate Professor *Graduate School of Public Policy and Information Technology Seoul National University of Science and Technology Changjo-Hall(Bd.No. 8), 232 Gongneung-ro, Nowon-gu, 139-743, Seoul, KOREA (Office) 82-2-970-6868, (Fax) 82-2-970-6868, (MP) 82-10-3777-4450 jshwang@seoultech.ac.kr, * http://english.seoultech.ac.kr/academics/progradu/policytech/*< http://english.seoultech.ac.kr/academics/progradu/policytech/> _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
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Hi Joo-Seong and friends interested in our upcoming "Information Technology and the Network Society" course, As MIT OCW-centric World University and School's first online, free course, I'm planning to teach "Information Technology and the Network Society" (newly named) - see http://worlduniversityandschool.blogspot.com/2013/09/information-technology-... - on Thursdays from 5pm - 7pm Pacific Time (where I live in the SF Bay Area) which is 8pm - 10pm time Eastern Time, and which is 7am-9am on Friday mornings, in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, where Jessika (from the University of Toronto) is doing fieldwork for the next year. Please let me know how these times work for you, if you're thinking of taking the class We'll begin Thursday, September 19th at 5pm (1700) PT and end the course on Thursday December 12th. Description of the Course: What is information technology, broadly conceived? How did it develop? Who did it? What has been the process of diffusion into the economy and society? How and why did the Network Society take shape? What of the implications of networks in the Information Age? In this course, we’ll analyze the interaction between society and contemporary information technologies, in a multicultural and comparative perspective. In doing so, we’ll examine what data and evidence are in the social sciences, how it is used, and how it is interpreted. We'll meet on Harvard's virtual island in Second Life - http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Berkman/146/229/25 - for the first hour, and in a Google + Hangout for the second hour, accessible here - https://plus.google.com/u/0/115890623333932577910/posts. We'll use the new book by Rainie and Wellman "Networked: The New Social Operating System" (MIT 2012 - http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/networked) as the main text (which is data-focused and which I also haven't used when teaching this course in the past), also with readings from Castells' "Rise of the Networked Society" trilogy (rev. eds.) +, with some great, generative talks examining the information age (Professor Manuel Castells-informed), engaging the Conference Method of Teaching and Learning online - http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Conference_Method_of_Teaching_and_Lear... . While I have much to say about fascinating "Information Technology and the Network Society," the Conference Method involves talking to each other, as a start, and Second Life accommodates up to 40 people in voice and text chat (and is build-able, and thus stimulating imagination-wise), whereas Google + group video Hangouts accommodate up to 10 people in video and group text chat for free. Both are interesting for learning and teaching, as forums, in different ways, which we'll also explore. Here's a previous, course wiki - http://socinfotech.pbworks.com/w/page/17175578/FrontPage. I've decided not to explore designing the course anew in Google's course-builder https://code.google.com/p/course-builder/ since it appears to offer more resources than the course would benefit from. I've can send you the syllabus (without the resources for a required course) if you email me below. In planning to design this course vis-a-vis how to build to a WUaS, MIT OCW course, accreditation-worthy standard, I'm synthesizing resources from C.C. MIT OCW courses (http://ocw.mit.edu) in a variety of ways. Information Technology and the Network Society seeks to come into conversation with course participants about MIT OCW-centric course building during the semester. This open course is for at-large participants interested in Information Technology and the Network Society, for students and information technology researchers, for prospective graduate students who might like to teach next year, as well as for hypothetical graduate student instructors hired by WUaS (WUaS is planning to hire MIT, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cambridge graduate students + these universities - http://worlduniversity.wikia.com/wiki/Courses#University_course_listings) - in the autumn of 2014, teaching interactively to MIT faculty in MIT OCW video courses - http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/audio-video-courses/ - for free C.C. MIT OCW-centric, university degrees. * If you'd like to join this open conversation (and you haven't done this already), please Get an avatar (free) for Second Life Get a Gmail address, and set up your G+ profile for Hangouts (all free) Get the book "Networked" (MIT 2012) by Rainie and Wellman, and begin reading Invite friends to participate Let me know at worlduniversityandschool@gmail.com Best, Scott ... On Sat, Jul 6, 2013 at 8:42 AM, joo-seong Hwang <jameshwang9@gmail.com>wrote:
Hi~,
I will open an graduate course on "Network and Society". Through this course I would like to discuss about information society from those treaditional scholars as Baniel Bell and Fritz Matchl upto the latest ones who argued for information capitalism and congnitive capitalism. I will also introduce those scholars who give us deeper understanding as Manuel Castells, Jan van Dijk, and Frank Webster.
I wonder if there is some textbook which can be usesd as a reference book in this class. I am looking for the one that can serve us with more balanced guideline between critical and positive approaches.
Many thanks in advance.
James
*Joo Seong Hwang, Ph. D., Associate Professor *Graduate School of Public Policy and Information Technology Seoul National University of Science and Technology Changjo-Hall(Bd.No. 8), 232 Gongneung-ro, Nowon-gu, 139-743, Seoul, KOREA (Office) 82-2-970-6868, (Fax) 82-2-970-6868, (MP) 82-10-3777-4450 jshwang@seoultech.ac.kr, * http://english.seoultech.ac.kr/academics/progradu/policytech/*< http://english.seoultech.ac.kr/academics/progradu/policytech/> _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/
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participants (2)
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joo-seong Hwang -
Scott MacLeod