#storyf17 social media assignment

About the Social Media Assignments

The Social Media Engagement Tweeting and Blogging Assignments have three primary goals:

  1. to provide you with the opportunity to build on your tweeting experience by thinking about how to use it with new purposes and audiences in mind;
  2. to help generate a #storyf17 community of learning in an online space that is informed by and impacts what happens in our classroom space;
  3. to help you gain access to the individuals who are tweeting about topics similar to the one you are investigating.

The assignment is informed by three Course Learning Objectives:

Objective 2: Research
Students will understand the critical role of research in storytelling, including but not limited to texts and techniques associated with interviewing, observing, and photographing.

Objective 3: Communication Design
Students will be able to identify and employ a range of effective communication strategies to navigate audience, purpose, and context and will understand and apply human centered design approaches to communicating through digital media.

Objective 4: Risk-taking
Students will know what it feels like to step out of their comfort zones and take risks with their approaches to and understanding of investigation, design, and digital storytelling.

Objective 5: Reflection
Students will develop their understanding of the important role of reflection during the investigation, design, and communication process.

Tweeting using #storyf17 Assignment Specifics

There are two parts to this assignment, each of which will be completed throughout the semester:

So, to get this project under way, however, we are going to complete the following:

  • create a Twitter account that is not anonymous and has as short a username as possible (short usernames save precious characters; Twitter values authenticity; you will not gain followers and people will not let you follow them without authenticity; if you already have a Twitter account with an pseudonym for your username be sure your real name is associated with the account)
  • create a professional bio that locates you as a writer researching your subject
  • make your account open for anyone to follow; having a locked account is essentially giving potential followers the finger. That might seem harsh, but that’s what it feels like when confronted with the little padlock icon. (If you are concerned about spam–and you should be–and/or who is following, in the Settings enable the option to get an email whenever you have a new follower; this will allow you to see when someone follows and to Block them if necessary. I use this quite often.)
  • add a link to your web site when it is created
  • add a photo of yourself or something that you feel represents you in some way
  • follow @billwolffsju and everyone in #storyf17:
  • use the #storyf17 hashtag for all tweets that are about or informed by class
  • explore and consider Twitter desktop and mobile clients, Tweetbot or Tweetdeck, or the Twitter mobile app

1. Engaging with the #storyf17 Community of Learning

(This portion of the assignment is stolen and modified from Mark Sample at George Mason University, who stole it from Zach Whalen at the University of Mary Washington.)

Course work is often perceived as a solitary experience but as with most things in our networked society it need not be. In order to help us all engage with the texts and our work outside of class, and create a collective experience of the work we’re doing, I would like you to “live tweet” as you complete course-related work outside of class, posting to Twitter whatever comes to your mind as you complete the work. By “whatever comes to your mind” I mean things that are about the text itself. Try to limit tweets like, “This article is boring. #yawn,” as such tweets will make to look foolish and show little thought about the text itself. You should @reply to other class members frequently so that we can begin discussions about the work outside of the classroom and then continue those discussions when we meet in the classroom. Add the #storyf17 hashtag to all “live tweets.”

There is no required number of tweets to tweet as your readings, work, or in-class discussions, but it is expected that each should garner many tweets. In the beginning of the semester @billwolffsju will give you prompts for your live-tweets. The more you tweet the more engaged the class can and will become in and outside of class. Do, however, be sure to make it clear what you’re reading, working on, or discussing by @mentioning (and following) the authors in your tweets. For example, David duChemin (@david_duchemin) and Alexandra Horowitz (@DogUmwelt) are on Twitter, as are many others. All you need to do is search the author’s name + Twitter and verify the results. Mentioning authors could result in a response, as many students have been fortunate to receive in the past—often leading to discussions, such as:

Begin live-tweeting readings and work starting with readings for week 3 and continuing throughout the semester. A note on tweeting in class: I am a proponent of students tweeting during class about class, but only if the tweets are not taking away from what is being discussed in class. 

Engaging with the Individuals and Organizations Related your Topic.

To be added.

 

Comments are closed.