| last updated 
      12/2/2014 
		FINAL
		EXAM STUDY GUIDE 
		   The 
		final exam will be 
		composed of TWO parts:  A take-home essay based on the prompt 
		listed below and an in-class exam of questions and topics taken from the 
		material described below.  
		The take-home essay is due at the start of the exam period.   
		TAKE-HOME ESSAY PROMPT:  Present and justify your 
		definition of a "good citizen."  Then go on to explain what 
		elements of a Monmouth College, liberal arts education contribute to 
		good citizenship and why.(Maximum length:  
		3 double-spaced pages, 12 point font (print on both sides) 
		The in-class exam will be open-book, open notes. 
		You may take the exam on your tablet/laptop or on a computer in the COMM 
		lab as at the mid-term exam.  Nothing will 
		appear on the in-class test that is not mentioned on the study guide. 
		 There will be some terms to define 
		(1. and 2.) and two or three essay questions. The essay 
		questions (all questions below except # 1 and # 2) will appear on the exam in 
		the exact form they are shown here.  Because 
		of the fact you will have resources available, I will expect your 
		answers will be well-organized, original and thoughtful - not 
		mere regurgitation - and I will grade accordingly.  If you just 
		repeat information that is on the web or in the texts you will not do 
		very well. 
		In-class Exam- 
		Potential Questons. 
		  
		  Terms to 
		define (in one to three sentences).  Be able to give an example 
		  of each:  deliberation, information aggregation, information/news 
		  literacy, social networking, "satisficing," cascades, hidden profiles, common 
		  (shared) knowledge effect, amplifying errors, heuristics, framing, 
		  polarization/risky shift.
		  Be able to explain each of the following 
		  types of information biases (heuristics) and give an example of each:  
		  availability bias, representativeness bias, confirmation bias, recency 
		  bias, backfire effect, excalation of commitment, illusion of control.
		   Explain what Goupthink is.  Describe some of 
		its causes and symptoms and discuss how and when this can effect 
		  political decision-making.  Suggest some possible preventative measures.
		   Explain how the Condorcet Jury Theorem can account for both the fact 
		that groups sometimes are more accurate than the average of the 
		individual members of a group and the fact that groups are sometimes 
		less accurate.  Use a concrete example to illustrate your 
		explanation. Does this theorem undermine the effectiveness of 
		decision-making in a democracy by voters who discuss issues with others?  
		  How so?
		  Discuss how correct use of the "standard 
		  agenda" could 
		compensate for the problems Sunstein and McGaan have identified when 
		  groups attempt to deliberate on serious problems. (Look at the major 
		  problems identified on the web page,   
		  
		  Problems of Deliberating Groups).  
		  Can you find steps and actions recommended in the Standard Sgenda 
		  (esp. in the highlighted sections ) that might reduce the negative 
		  effects of the problems on that page?), Halo effect, risky perception 
		  bias, 
		  
		  Discuss and explain the key skills that make up
		  
		  News/Information/Media Literacy.  Conclude with an 
		  explanation of why those skills are important to effective 
		  citizenship.
		  Reflect on  your team's Information Evaluation 
		presentation (on the assigned article).  What did your team do well and how could that 
		project have been done better?
		  Reflect on your team's Media/News Literacy Program.  What did your team do well and how could that 
		project have been done better?   Be sure to base your answer 
		  on how well the program would serve the needs of your target audience 
		  (e.g. HS Seniors/College Freshmen). 
		  
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