CCST9022 Science, Technology and Big Data
How the Mass Media Depicts Science, Technology and the Natural World

This course is under the thematic cluster(s) of:

  • Sustaining Cities, Cultures, and the Earth (SCCE)

Course Description

Public understanding and perception of science and technology issues are heavily shaped by their depictions in the mass media. This course aims at helping students to understand what is science from the point of view of scientists, to become discerning and critical consumers of science and technology as depicted in the mass media, and to be able to critically understand how science and technology influence our daily life from multiple perspectives. In this course, we first introduce the scientific method (i.e. observations, hypothesis, prediction, experiment, and theory) and how it is applied in the real world through issues such as public/private funding sources, control samples, statistics, and press-release versus peer-reviewed publications. We then introduce elements of media criticism and how the media shape our view of the world.

Course Learning Outcomes

On completing the course, students will be able to:

  1. Define the scientific method and recognize how it is applied in the real world.
  2. Describe how the mass media shape our view of the modern world.
  3. Explain how the public understanding and perception of science and technology issues are shaped by the mass media.
  4. Critically appraise the depiction of science in the media and in popular culture: formulating opinions on facts depicted, seeing how it shapes our society.

Offer Semester and Day of Teaching

Second semester (Wed)


Study Load

Activities Number of hours
Lectures 22
Tutorials 10
Reading / Self-study 60
Assessment: Presentation (incl preparation) 15
Assessment: Case study 12
Assessment: Mini project 15
Assessment: In-class quiz (incl revision) 10
Total: 144

Assessment: 100% coursework

Assessment Tasks Weighting
In-class quizzes 30
Individual mini project 30
Group presentation 20
Case study 20

Required Reading

Selections from:

  • Erickson, M. (2005). Science, culture and society: Understanding science in the twenty-first century. Cambridge, UK: Polity.
  • Flexner, A., & Dijkgraaf, R. (2017). The usefulness of useless knowledge. Princeton, Princeton University Press.
  • Goldacre, B. (2009). Bad science. London: Fourth Estate.
  • McIntyre, L. (2015). Respecting truth: Willful ignorance in the Internet age. Oxfordshire, Routledge.
  • Russell, N. (2010). Communicating science: Professional, popular, literary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Silverstone, R. (1985). Framing science: The making of a BBC documentary. London: British Film Institute Publishing.
  • Staddon, J. (2017) Scientific method: How science works, fails to work and pretends to work. London, New York: Routledge.
  • Weitekamp, M. A. (2015). ‘We’re physicists’: Gender, genre and the image of scientists in the Big Bang Theory. Journal of popular television3(1), 75-92.
  • Zimring, J. C. (2019). What science is and how it really works. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Course Co-ordinator and Teacher(s)

Course Co-ordinator Contact
Professor H.F. Chau
Department of Physics, Faculty of Science
Tel: 2859 1925
Email: hfchau@hku.hk
Teacher(s) Contact
Professor H.F. Chau
Department of Physics, Faculty of Science
Tel: 2859 1925
Email: hfchau@hku.hk
Dr J.S.C. Pun
Department of Physics, Faculty of Science
Tel: 2859 1962
Email: jcspun@hku.hk