Currently taught by Dr. Catalina de Onís, this course examines how journalists, government officials, corporate and environmental advocacy group representatives, small business owners, and concerned community members, among other actors, make and respond to different “media” about “the environment.” However, what “the environment” signifies and the stakes for engaging in sustainable practices often are ambiguous, contested, and uneven. CCM 260W invites class members to study, document, and intervene in various environment-related discourses in class discussions, readings, written assignments, community activities, and podcasts to apply course concepts and enact the university’s commitment to equity and ethical communication practices. Our project-based service learning will help to illuminate the co-constitutive nature of “media” and “the environment,” or, in other words, how both terms symbolically and materially shape and are shaped by each other.
Student Reports
Hikers That Look Like Me: An Analysis of Mainstream Environmental Organizations' Latinx Youth Engagement
Author:- Olivia Orosco
Major:
- Environmental 快活视频
Hispanic and Latino Communities in Salem Oregon: Outdoor Recreational Program and Childhood Obesity
Author:- Karen Espinoza
Major:
- Biology
Farm Workers in Salem: The Importance of Considering their Children’s Experiences in Outdoor Programs
Author:- Diana Marquez Guerrero
Major:
- Sociology
The Influence of Latinx Cultural Values on Outdoor Recreation Practices
Author:- Lizzi Silva Mendez
Major:
- Mathematics
Communicating Unseen Processes: Psychology and Risk Communication in the Naturaleza Ahora! Campaign
Author:- Tyler Zehrung
Major:
- Civic Communications and Media