SKDK4001 Understanding Digital Media in the Age of AI, Codes, Networks, and New Communities

    • Number of credits
      10
    • Teaching semester
      2024 Autumn
    • Language of instruction
      Norwegian/English
    • Campus
      Hamar
    • Required prerequisite knowledge

      None

Course content

During the last two decades, several studies have argued with increased intensity for how digital media technology predict and control our behavior. In How We Think (2010), N. Kathrine Hayles establishes a framework for understanding the contemporary reciprocal relationship between technology and humans and argues that technology, even before AI, always have had an impact on the way humans think, read, write, and behave. Mark B. Hansen, in Feed-forward: On the Future of Twenty-First-Century Media (2014) follows in the same threads by arguing how the media technology of the 21st century feeds us information even before we search, demand or even know that we might want it. More recently, Shoshana Zuboff has provided insights into digital technology as a global network of computational behavior modificators in The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power (2019).

These significant studies emphasize the need for questioning the role and function of personal computers, smartphones and -watches and reading tablets in our everyday life and culture, and for understanding the new (felt) communities that digital media facilitates.

In the course “Understanding Digital Media in the Age of AI, Codes, Networks, and New Communities”, we read and discuss a series of key texts that define pathways for thinking about media in the 21st century. Overall, the course will provide insights into how digital media function, and the impact they have on how we think, read, write, and behave. Throughout the course, the students will also identify and select their own material on which theoretical models might be used. Therefore, the seminar will be partly case-studies, based on cases chosen by student, and partly based on theoretical works. Central contemporary works will be discussed, applied to examples, and also discussed in relation to methodological approaches in the research and study of digital communication and culture.

Learning Outcome

Upon passing the course, students have achieved the following learning outcomes:

Knowledge

Students

  • have an overview of relevant theories in and perspectives on the field
  • have a solid understanding of the most important questions relevant for understanding contemporary digital media and its development in society
Skills

Students

  • can reflect on and take part in scientific and non-scientific discussions about digital media in society
  • can apply relevant theories on questions regarding digital communication in order to bring new and nuanced knowledge to the field
  • have the ability to reflect and think critically about the impact of digital media on how humans think, write, read, and engage in digital and non-digital communities
General competence

Students

  • have insight into academic issues relevant to digital media in the age of AI, codes, networks, and communities
  • can plan and carry out smaller research project related to digital communication
  • can communicate about digital media in the age of AI, codes, networks, and communities in non-academic communities
Teaching and working methods

Working methods will include lectures, seminars, group work, student presentations, self-study, and written and oral assignments. The institution's learning platform will be used in teaching, as well as a range of digital platforms and programs.

All courses are subject to evaluation. The time, date and method of this evaluation is decided by the course coordinator in consultation with student representatives. The course coordinator is responsible for ensuring that the evaluation is carried out.

Required coursework

Attendance of minimum 75% and participation in class is mandatory. In order to take the exam, one obligatory assignment must be approved:

  • An individual oral presentation in English or Norwegian on a given subject. The oral presentation should be 15 minutes long. The mandatory assignment will be made available at least 14 calendar days prior to the deadline.
Form of assessment

The examination will be a written student paper/essay 1600-2000 words in English or Norwegian. The subject for the exam will be made available three calendar days prior to the deadline. Performance is assessed using a grading scale from A-F, where E is the lowest passing grade.

Permitted examination support material

  • Syllabus literature
  • All printed and written resources
  • Generated text and content is to be clearly marked and academically justified 
Assessments
Form of assessmentGrading scaleGroupingDuration of assessmentSupport materialsProportionComment
Written assignment
ECTS - A-F
100
Faculty
Faculty of Education