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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Advisory: English Writing 61 and 62. Two hours lecture-laboratory for each unit of credit, one additional hour to be arranged working in Cross Cultural Partners and/or use of the English Writing Laboratory and/or working in the Writing and Reading Center and/or civic engagement and/or community service. (Any combination of English Writing 66W, X, Y, and Z may be taken for a maximum of eight units as long as the topic is different each time.) Intensive study and analysis of a special topic in Technical Communications. Subjects vary.
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3.00 Credits
Advisory: English Writing 1A or English as a Second Language 5. (Also listed as Learning Assistance 97. Student may enroll in either department, but not both, for credit.) Three hours lecture. Required training for De Anza writing tutors. Introduction to the theory and practice of tutoring writing, including strategies and approaches to help students from diverse linguistic backgrounds at various stages of the writing process. Students read about, observe, discuss, write about and practice the craft of tutoring writing. After an initial orientation, students in the class begin tutoring, and reflect on their tutoring experiences as part of the class.
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4.00 Credits
(See general education pages for the requirement this course meets.) Advisory: English Writing 1A or English as a Second Language 5. (Also listed as English Literature 1. Student may enroll in either department, but not both, for credit.) Four hours lecture. An introduction to the international art of cinema through the techniques and procedures of filmmaking, including screenwriting, cinematography, directing, editing, and sound; through the formal properties of film, such as mise-en-scene, structure, and style; through the relationships between film and society, and through the critical analysis of works of film art.
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4.00 Credits
(See general education pages for the requirement this course meets.) Advisory: English Writing 1A or English as a Second Language 5. (Also listed as Humanities 17. Student may enroll in either department, but not both, for credit.) Four hours lecture, one additional hour to be arranged. A survey course of the history, aesthetics, technology and social impacts of electronic media, including film, broadcasting and the Internet. Explores the role of government, advertising, audiences, and emerging technologies, their futures and impacts on global societies.
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4.00 Credits
Corequisite: Film/Television 20 students must also enroll in Film/Television 54, 54X, 54Y, or 54Z. Advisory: English Writing 211 and Reading 211 (or Language Arts 211), or English as a Second Language 272 and 273. Three hours lecture, three hours laboratory. Digital video production, film-style production techniques including mini-DV and HDV formats: camera operation and procedures, basic principles and techniques of sound and scriptwriting; and film and nonlinear editing.
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Film/Television 20. Corequisite: Film/Television 22 students must also enroll in Film/Television 54, 54X, 54Y, or 54Z. Three hours lecture, three hours laboratory. Logistics, scriptwriting, sound recording, film and sound editing. Methods by which visual and aural elements of a motion picture may be organized. The study and analysis of exemplary motion pictures as well as of the student's own work.
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4.00 Credits
History of Cinema
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2.00 Credits
(See general education pages for the requirement this course meets.) Advisory: English Writing 1A or English as a Second Language 5. (Student may enroll in either Film/Television 2A or Film/Television 2AW, but not both, for credit.) Four hours lecture and one-half hour additional lecture for each one-half unit, as an additional one-half hour lecture per week or as two additional three hour lecture meetings per quarter. A survey of the international development of the motion picture to 1950 as a distinct form of artistic expression, through classic films, notable artists, and key events; an investigation of the aesthetic, technological, economic, and social factors that contributed to the evolution of film; an examination of the value systems reflected in and shaped by these works from diverse cultures. Film/Television 2AW will cover expanded topics in historiography, such as problems and approaches to historical film research and analysis.
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4.00 Credits
History of Cinema
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2.00 Credits
(See general education pages for the requirement this course meets.) Advisory: English Writing 1A or English as a Second Language 5. (Student may enroll in either Film/Television 2B or Film/Television 2BW, but not both, for credit.) Four hours lecture and one-half hour of additional lecture for each one-half unit, as an additional one-half hour lecture per week or as two additional three hour lecture meetings per quarter. A survey of the international development of the motion picture since 1950 as a distinct form of artistic expression, through classic films, notable artists, and key events; an investigation of the aesthetic, technological, economic, and social factors that contributed to the evolution of film; an examination of the value systems reflected in and shaped by these works from diverse cultures. Film/Television 2BW will cover expanded topics in historiography, such as problems and approaches to historical film research and analysis.
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