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Community Networking: the Electronic Hometown

Course Syllabus, Spring 1998

A course in the Grinnell Experimental College


Please feel free to contact me! Ben Stallings, 214 E. 19th St., Apt. 304, Minneapolis, MN 55403, USA, (612) 870-4584, ben@ofcn.org

A community network is an electronic community center. It's America Online, only local, free of charge, and with public access points. It's public broadcasting where anybody can host a show at any time. It's a medium in which normally shy people can make friends, new residents can meet neighbors with common interests, and technophobes can lose their fear. It's a way to organize all the valuable information that communities generate but rarely communicate and to share the resources that never seem to be properly distributed.

This class will attempt to convey the excitement -- and the reality -- of the community networking movement through a minimum of lectures, a healthy dose of hands-on experience, and a semester-long, realistic simulation. All students will be supplied with electronic mail addresses if they do not already have them, and optional workshops will provide background technical knowledge.

Disclaimer: This course cannot hope to address the entire scope of the community networking movement. I will be relying to a large extent on my own experience, which means the class will focus primarily on the NPTN/Free-Net model of community networking, even though this is only one of the movement's many visions.

Class sessions will be held on Tuesdays from 7-8 PM, plus optional 8-9 PM workshops, in ARH 120 unless otherwise noted. If a class session ends early, we may move on to the next week's material, so keep that in mind if you're thinking of skipping class!

For each date on the syllabus below, there is a page of lecture notes covering both the 7:00 lecture and the 8:00 workshop. Suggested readings link either to the Web pages themselves or, in the case of reserve books, to the library catalog so you can see whether they're currently checked out.

Feb. 3: What is community networking?
Suggested readings: AFCN (1997) CN pages, Beamish (1995) background (skim), Graham (1996) (skim), Avis (1995) ch. 2 (skim!)
Optional workshop: intro to Dreams e-mail
Feb. 10: history of community networking, in ARH 131
Suggested readings: Schuler (1995), Beamish (1995) ch 2.1, Lemos (1996) (reserve), C|net (1997)
Optional workshop: operating systems and the Internet
Feb. 17: Hardware and Software Issues
Suggested readings: Guy (1996) ch. 4, Stallings (1996) software pages, SoftArc (1997), Chebucto (1997), Falk (1994) (reserve), Wooley (1996)
Optional workshop: the World Wide Web
Feb. 24: Case study: NPTN's Rural Information Network program
Suggested readings: Stallings (1996) purpose & methods, Dyrkton (1996) (reserve)
Optional workshop: writing in HTML for the Web
March 3: organizational/institutional issues; case studies: Cleveland Free-Net, Great Lakes Free-Net, Worth County - Sylvester, GA Free-Net in ARH 224
Suggested readings: U of M (1997) partners page, Figallo (1995) (reserve), Stallings (1996), Hall & Long (1997a), Schuler (1996a), UC Davis (1996) sec2rec page (skim)
Mar. 10: discussion: the future of the community networking movement
Suggested readings: Bowen (1996), Guy (1996) ch. 8 & 9,UC Davis (1996) sec1eval page (skim)
Mar. 31: individual research presentations
Suggested readings: Virnoche (1995), Avis (1995) ch. 4,Gregson (1996), Doctor & Ankem (1996), Guy (1996) ch. 6
early May, date TBA: group simulation presentation
Suggested readings: Schuler (1996b) ch.10 (skim)

A bibliography of relevant books and Web sites may be found at http://www.ofcn.org/whois/ben/CNclass/CNsites.html.