General information on the course

This online tutorial will accompany the seminar “Studying Online News via Computational Methods”. It is part of the undergraduate course “Communication Studies” (LMU, Department of Media and Communication) and takes place Friday 10 am to 2pm in the CIP pool, Akademiestr. 7.

You will find all necessary information on the seminar’s structure, important dates and assessments/evaluations via Moodle. Please carefully consider the syllabus when deciding whether to participate in this seminar.

What do I need this tutorial for?

This tutorial will introduce you to two main aspects:

  1. how to use R and R studio to import, edit, and analyze data more generally
  2. how to use R and R studio to collect, edit, and analyze textual data

You are expected to work through the content of these tutorials before each of our regular sessions so we can use in-person meetings to discuss questions/test your new knowledge via exercises. Please have a look at the syllabus to see when you should work on which tutorial.

Each tutorial includes

  • introduction to new functions/analysis methods in R, including corresponding R code
  • main take-aways
  • information on other tutorials/sources on how to learn these methods
  • exercises which will help you understand and apply your new knowledge

Errrm - what if I have questions about all of this?

First of all: great! Questions will be one of the most important element of this seminar. Since you’ll be learning a lot of new things, it’s perfectly normal to have a lot of questions most of the time.

If you did not understand something in a tutorial, have a question about the syllabus, or just want me to repeat something: Please do ask! The most important thing when learning R is to understand that it is completely normal to feel lost sometimes. Don’t worry - it’s highly likely that everyone else feels the same.

Therefore, it’s key that you ask questions. There are three channels through which you may pose question you have (preferably in this order):

  1. In-person meetings: Fridays, 10 am to 2pm
  2. The Moodle forum: Outside of those sessions, please use the Moodle forum to ask any questions pertaining the seminar. This way, every participant will be able to see my answers and be provided with the same information. Notifications about new entries in the forum are already turned on for you to be informed about ongoing discussions (you can manually unsubscribe if needed).

Image: Moodle Forum

  1. Email: If you have specific questions about your own project etc. (or things you may not want to discuss with everyone in class), write me an email.

That’s it - we’ll start right away with the first tutorial: Tutorial 1: Install R/R Studio