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Media
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Media studies sits at the intersection of communications, sociology, cultural studies, and psychology, making it a common subject across undergraduate and graduate curricula. The field examines how information is produced, distributed, and consumed — and how those processes shape public perception, behavior, and identity. Students are drawn to it because media is both a cultural mirror and an active force, influencing everything from stock markets and criminal justice narratives to how society understands race, gender, and aging. The recurring role of the internet and evolving digital platforms makes the subject especially urgent and contested in contemporary coursework.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a social-psychological angle, examining connections between media violence and aggressive behavior, or applying Social Cognitive Theory to explain how audiences learn from media content. Others focus on representation, analyzing the stereotypical portrayal of Black people and minorities, or how advertising affects girls psychologically. Still others use reaction-paper formats to engage critically with specific media pieces, while case-study and comparative approaches address news selection processes, news values, and how television determines which stories reach audiences.

A strong essay on media grounds its thesis in a specific claim about cause, effect, or representation rather than simply describing media as influential. Evidence carries the most weight when it connects a concrete media practice — a news framing choice, a recurring stereotype, a platform incentive — to a measurable or documented outcome in society or culture. The most common pitfall is scope creep: treating "the media" as a single, uniform entity rather than distinguishing between platforms, genres, and audiences, which weakens analytical precision considerably.

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Paper Undergraduate
Teaching Reading Strategies: Lessons, Projects, and Literacy
According to Rebecca L. Zullo, many of today's pre-service teachers have only taken one class on Reading in the Content Area, most often at sometime in the past and as a result have forgotten most of what they were…
Paper Undergraduate
Net neutrality: principles, policy, and impact
Net neutrality is the principle that internet users should be in control of what content they view and what applications they use on the internet. Net neutrality is also about equal access to the internet.
Paper Undergraduate
Stereotyping minorities in media
The media has an influential presence in society. The images that are seen through the media are often not an accurate reflection of the true nature of people from various ethnic and/or religious minorities.
Paper Doctorate
Celebrities as symbolic commodities in the film industry
In 2010 the biggest advertisements and movies have a celebrity face. If a celebrity endorses it, then consumers will buy it. Has society lost the scope of what the product does, what it stands for?
Paper Doctorate
Gay marriage in the United States
There are several states in the U.S. that have made same sex marriage a legal institution and yet the majority of states and political leaders in those states and at a national level remain opposed to having same sex…
Paper Doctorate
School Children Crisis Intervention School-Based Crisis Intervention
Crisis theory intervention can be traced back as far as 400 B.C. (Roberts 2005). However, more modern crisis theory came out of studies that were done on crisis and bereavement. Crisis theory came directly out of…
Case Study Masters
Business Course Retrospective: Bias, Media, and Stakeholders
Comment on how journaling activities helped you recognize the real or potential impact of stakeholder biases as well as your own biases. How do biases or differing perspectives influence the media, public opinion, and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Religion of Australian Aborigines
Religion differs from magic in that it is not concerned with control or manipulation of the powers confronted.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Media and Violence: Does Media
Ever since the rise in popularity of television in American households from the 1950's until today, the public has been complaining that there is too much violence in television programming (Potter 2006).
Paper Undergraduate
Art, media, and technology
The work was observed at the 2009 FIAC exhibition in Paris. The title is "Lines of Crimes: The Real Dope is Virtual Money" by artist Peter Weibel. It is a mixed media installation, created during 2009.