VSU professor untangles the World Wide Web
March 4, 1999
99-86
VSU professor untangles the World Wide Web
Dr. Barbara K. Kaye wants to make the Internet less enigmatic
for a new generation of Web crawlers.
Students interested in the Internet and its impact on traditional
mass media now have a comprehensive textbook to lead them through
the tangle of the World Wide Web. Kaye, an assistant professor in
Valdosta State University's Communication Arts Department, and
co-author Dr. Norman J. Medoff of Northern Arizona University,
recently completed The World Wide Web: A Mass Communication
Perspective.
Kaye said this Web book is meant to give students a broader
understanding of how traditional mass media are adapting to the
Internet and how the media are using the Web as a promotional
vehicle. The book is an in-depth look at Web content rather than a
"how-to" HTML text.
"There is more to putting up a Web page than just learning the
mechanics of the process," Kaye said. "Different Web pages serve
different purposes and thus should be designed to attain different
goals and objectives. It's especially important for mass
communication students to understand how to use this new medium and
to understand how it is being used by its audience."
Kaye began working on the book while teaching at Southern Illinois
University. She created and taught her first Web class at SIU in
the spring semester 1995. However, for the first two years of
teaching, she had to put together packets of collected readings
because there was not a textbook on the market covering the issues
surrounding the Internet as a mass medium. Typical Internet books
focus on HTML coding and Java-scripting or are simply guides to
using the Web, Kaye said.
While at a conference in late 1996, Kaye mentioned her Web class
and the lack of an appropriate textbook to Medoff who suggested she
write the book. Medoff has authored several television production
books, and being familiar with the process of textbook publishing
and writing, offered to be a co-author of the Web book.
"The book was a tremendous amount of work because of all the
changes and updates we needed to make," Kaye said. "Web technology,
the Web itself, and audience uses are constantly changing. We
couldn't just finish one chapter and be done with it, we had to go
back to the chapters numerous times to update and change the
information. For example, URLs change, statistics about Internet
use and shopping are always being updated, and Web sites undergo
face lifts," she added.
"We were fortunate that our publisher encouraged us to keep the
book as current as possible and they sped up the publishing process
at their end to accommodate all of the changes and updates," Kaye
said.
The end result is an Internet textbook that is written specifically
for mass communication, advertising, marketing and public relations
students. The book contains information about Internet source
credibility, online radio and television programming, cyber news
delivery, online advertising and marketing, how to use the Internet
for public relations and how to find jobs online. The book, from
Mayfield Publishing Co., also applies mass communication theory to
the Internet, examines legal issues such as copyright infringement,
and discusses social issues such as Internet addiction.
Kaye has several years of experience conducting Internet research.
Her studies have appeared in Journalism & Mass Communication
Quarterly, Social Science Computer Review and New Jersey Journal of
Communication. Additionally, she has co-authored three chapters
that have appeared in scholarly books about the Internet and
politics, and has presented Internet related papers and conducted
Web workshops at communication conferences.
In addition to her Internet research, Kaye has published several
mass communication related articles in scholarly journals, and has
presented numerous competitive papers at academic conferences such
as National Communication Association, Broadcast Education
Association and International Communication Association.
Kaye holds a Ph.D. in mass communication from Florida State
University, an M.S.B.A. from San Francisco State University, and a
B.S. in journalism from California Polytechnic State
University.
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