Process a complete drop (100% refund, no W recorded)
October 4:
Drop this course (100% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
October 4:
Process a complete drop (90% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
October 5:
Process a complete withdrawal (90% refund, W recorded)
October 5:
Withdraw from this course (100% refund, W recorded)
October 6:
Add this course
October 6:
Last day to change to or from audit
October 12:
Process a complete withdrawal (75% refund, W recorded)
October 12:
Withdraw from this course (75% refund, W recorded)
October 19:
Process a complete withdrawal (50% refund, W recorded)
October 19:
Withdraw from this course (50% refund, W recorded)
October 26:
Process a complete withdrawal (25% refund, W recorded)
October 26:
Withdraw from this course (25% refund, W recorded)
November 16:
Withdraw from this course (0% refund, W recorded)
November 16:
Change grading option for this course
You can't drop your last class using the "Add/Drop" menu in DuckWeb. Go to the “Completely Withdraw from Term/University” link to begin the complete withdrawal process. If you need assistance with a complete drop or a complete withdrawal, please contact the Office of Academic Advising, 101 Oregon Hall, 541-346-3211 (8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday). If you are attempting to completely withdraw after business hours, and have difficulty, please contact the Office of Academic Advising the next business day.
Expanded Course Description
This course reviews the historic role of communication in shaping societies and institutions in the United States. We will try to understand mass communication as it truly was, and not to imagine that it was merely a crude model of what it has become in our own time.
Our goal is to achieve an overall understanding of both the extraordinary reach and the unexpected limitations of media messages, technologies and power. These themes are addressed through a selective discussion of ideas, technologies, events, people, professional practices, economics and politics from the American Revolution until the present. Students write two papers, both of which are based on original research of historical documents.