Originally presented at the ACPA 2016 International Convention in Montreal, Canada. This presentation provides an overview of my research on college student development in digital/social spaces.
This document outlines several potential dangers of social media use for minors under the age of 18. It discusses risks like cyberbullying, identity theft, distraction from schoolwork, exposure to drugs and alcohol, negative impacts on mental health, and more. The document argues that social media can expose minors to inappropriate content, waste their time, invade their privacy by collecting personal data, and influence them to seek validation online rather than from real relationships. Overall, it takes the position that social media should be illegal for minors due to these various risks and dangers.
Cyber bullying involves tormenting, threatening, harassing, humiliating or embarrassing someone using the internet, mobile phones or other digital technologies. It must involve minors on both sides. There are two main types - direct attacks through messages or posting content, and cyber bullying by proxy where someone else does the bullying. Common reasons for cyber bullying include anger, revenge, entertainment or seeking attention. Cyber bullying can negatively impact children and teens through anxiety, depression, withdrawal and emotional distress. Prevention through education is key to addressing this issue. Resources are available to help victims of cyber bullying.
The document summarizes the evolution of traditional media to new media across four ages:
1) Pre-Industrial Age (before 1700s) - People communicated through cave paintings, clay tablets, papyrus, and the printing press using wood blocks.
2) Industrial Age (1700s-1930s) - Mass production of newspapers and books emerged through advances like the printing press. The telephone, motion pictures, and telegraph were invented.
3) Electronic Age (1930s-1980s) - Inventions like the transistor radio, television, mainframe computers, and personal computers facilitated long-distance communication and computing.
4) Information Age (1900s-2000s) - The
Social Media: Damaging the Mental Health of Teenagersmadymcdonald
The document discusses how excessive social media use can negatively impact the mental health of teenagers. It reports that 70% of teenagers aged 12-17 use social media, and teens who use social media for more than 2 hours per day are more likely to report poor mental health, psychological distress, and suicidal thoughts. Heavy social media use has been linked to lower self-esteem, depression, anxiety, and poor sleep quality due to increased social comparison and fear of missing out. The document provides tips for parents to help teens manage technology use and prioritize offline connections.
WTF - Why the Future Is Up to Us - pptx versionTim O'Reilly
This is the talk I gave January 12, 2017 at the G20/OECD Conference on the Digital Future in Berlin. I talk about fitness landscapes as applied to technology and business, the role of unchecked financialization in the state of our politics and economy, and why technology really wants to create jobs, not destroy them. (There is a separate PDF version, but some readers said the notes were too fuzzy to read.)
This document discusses social media and its uses for education. It defines social media as computer-mediated tools that allow people to create, share, and exchange information online. Examples of social media mentioned include Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, SlideShare, and blogging platforms. The document provides examples of how each of these social media tools can be used for educational purposes, such as connecting with experts, collaborating, sharing content and multimedia. It also lists dos and don'ts for using social media and maintaining privacy and security.
Role of Social Media in Education was made as part of UGC presentations held on our college campus. It covers the impact, both positive and negative, that social media has on students, professionals, and on- and off-campus communication.
By: Sarah Imran Ali Rizvi
Mass Media student of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan's College
A Social Media "What to do - and what not to do" for Middle School'ersGary Kayye
A Social Media "What to do - and what not to do" for Teens
This is a short social media presentation I delivered at Culbreth Middle School in Chapel Hill, NC in April 2015. They were working on a Social Media Constitution for all the students to follow to guide proper social media usage. I presented this as a "do's and don'ts" of social media.
Best Practice for Social Media in Teaching & Learning Contexts, slides accompanying a presentation by Nicola Osborne, EDINA Digital Education Manager, for Abertay University (Dundee). The hashtag for this event was #AbTLEJan2017.
Social media allows users to connect with friends and share information. Popular social networking sites include Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and blogs. Facebook allows users to create profiles and connect with friends and family. Twitter is a microblogging service that allows users to send and read short text-based messages. LinkedIn is a professional networking site used to connect with colleagues and find jobs. Blogs are websites where individuals regularly post commentary, descriptions, or multimedia.
This document provides a summary of various ICT tools and ideas for using them in education, compiled in May 2008. It outlines how blogs, wikis, VoiceThread, Flickr, Comic Life, email, games, online movies, and podcasting can be used for literacy development, collaborative projects, digital storytelling, sharing learning, and more. Specific examples are given for many tools to illustrate their educational applications. The document encourages exploring these tools and sharing more ideas.
Interactive Information and Media - Media and Information Literacy (MIL)Mark Jhon Oxillo
This document discusses interactivity and interactive media. It defines interactivity as the communication process between humans and computer software where the program's outputs depend on user inputs. Examples of interactive media platforms include mobile applications, 3D TV, video games, role-playing games, social media, massively multiplayer online role-playing games, and interactive websites. It also discusses nine types of interactivity like click on image, hotspots, rollovers, tabs, timelines, numbers/processes, slideshows, frequently asked questions, and flip cards.
Massive Open Online Content & Wearable TechnologyIrene Mae Datoy
1. Current trends in media and information such as social media, online video, and wearable technology provide both opportunities and challenges for businesses and individuals. They allow lower-cost marketing but can also be addictive and expose personal information.
2. Writers and bloggers can more easily connect with clients and share expertise online, growing their networks, but social media also risks exposing children to inappropriate content.
3. While new technologies remove barriers to sharing ideas, overuse can divert focus from tasks and lower motivation, especially in teenagers.
This document outlines a project on analyzing Instagram usage trends. It includes objectives to introduce Instagram and survey its advantages and disadvantages. Background information is provided on Instagram's founding, functions for photo/video sharing and social networking. A mind map and survey questions are developed to analyze Instagram's popularity by gender and age, main uses, advantages like social interaction, and limitations like photo size. The survey results find most users are female, young, use it for sharing life and viewing others, and its most popular advantages and limitations.
The Use Of Emails And Blogs In EducationRoy González
This document discusses the advantages and disadvantages of using emails and blogs in education. Some key advantages of emails include allowing teachers to send assignments when absent and students to submit homework electronically, saving paper and ink. However, some students may not have access to technology or the internet. While blogs allow open discussion and research sharing, they can also lead to arguments and require registration that some may find difficult.
The document discusses the impacts of social media on education from the past to the present and how it will change in the future. It covers topics such as the pros and cons of social media in education, online classrooms, and the importance of social media for education. Some of the key points made include that social media allows for greater student collaboration, encourages participation, and helps keep parents, teachers, and students informed. However, it can also be a distraction and enable cheating. Overall, social media is becoming more widely used in education.
Este documento trata sobre el servicio al cliente. Ofrece definiciones de conceptos clave como servicio y calidad del servicio. Incluye consejos sobre cómo mejorar la atención al cliente a través de la cortesía, empatía y cumplimiento de promesas. Resalta la importancia de conocer y satisfacer las necesidades del cliente para generar lealtad.
Laboratoris virtuals i remots per a ensenyar ciènciesjdomen44
Els laboratoris virtuals i remots permeten el desenvolupament d'investigacions a l'aula de forma ràpida, interactiva i àgil, mitjançant ordinadors connectats a internet. Es tracta d’un conjunt d’eines que permeten accedir a dades reals de la recerca, o simular un ampli ventall d’experiments i fenòmens del món físic de manera interactiva i molt realista.
Adreçada als docents de secundària, en aquesta xerrada es proposen exemples de diferents àmbits de les ciències (Matemàtiques, Biologia, Física i Química, Tecnologia,...) diversos repositoris que donen accés a centenars de laboratoris virtuals i remots d’accés lliure i gratuït.
Es discuteixen els marcs didàctics i pedagògics per aconseguir promoure la competència científica mitjançant aquestes eines en relació a la indagació, modelització i contextualització a les ciències.
La xerrada es celebra el dia 16 de novembre de 2016 al Caixa Fòrum de Girona, en el marc de les iniciatives promogudes per la Fundació Catalana per la Recerca i la Innovació per la Setmana de la Ciència 2016.
Recent presentation for Parent Community at Academia Cotopaxi, Quito Ecuador.
Interested in working with Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano? Contact Silvia via http://www.globallyconnectedlearning.com
Presentation given at the Academia Cotopaxi, Quito Ecuador.
Interested in working with Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano? Contact Silvia via http://www.globallyconnectedlearning.com
Slides for Ross Dawson's Opening Keynote at CEE 2017 - Centre for Educational Enterprise.
Note that many of the slides are videos in the actual presentation.
For more see www.rossdawson.com
This document discusses perspectives on the role of technology in developing giftedness and talent. It explores how technology can transform education from a focus on hunting and gathering information to curating content. Examples are given of technological tools and platforms that can serve as playgrounds for creativity, exploration and discovery. The importance of cultivating curiosity, courage and constancy is emphasized. Overall, the document advocates embracing technology to fuel curiosity and prepare students for an unknown future.
Keynote address (Feb, 2016) to the educators in the Fort Nelson school district. We all know that we cannot teach a child without a concection... without a relationship. In the hustle and bustle of our jobs as educators, we often forget our why, the reason we got into education, of trying to make a difference with kids. In this talk, 6 Keys to Connecting are shared and discussed with the challenge of creating a more positive climate and better connections with kids in our classrooms, schools, and organizations.
Development and Engagement in the Age of Social Media Paul Brown
Originally presented to the professional staff at the University of Dayton in January of 2016. Reviews aspects of college student development online and how to engage college students.
Coaching Digital Leaders Starts With Your SelfiePaul Brown
This document discusses effective digital leadership and coaching of college student leaders regarding their social media use. It begins by outlining 5 points to understand how students view their online lives and the role of social media. It then discusses concepts like digital identity, digital reputation, self-presentation online, and how social media can impact self-esteem. The document draws from theories like Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory and Baxter Magolda's theory of self-authorship to analyze student development in a digitally immersed world. It emphasizes the importance of teaching students to own rather than be owned by social media through limiting use, understanding perfectionism online, and embracing vulnerability.
Using Social Smarts to Engage Students on Social MediaPaul Brown
Originally presented at the University of Delaware in October 2015. This presentation discusses the developmental dimensions of college student engagement with social media and how to engage them online.
Online Development and the College StudentPaul Brown
Originally presented at the 2016 Western Illinois Student Service Summer Institute in Macomb, IL. Reviews my research related to college student learning, behavior, and social media use.
Who is your Social Media Self? College Student Motivation and Vulnerability O...Paul Brown
Originally presented at Boston University in December of 2016 as a part of a digital technology and higher education speaker series. Presents my original research on social and digital technology and college students.
Developing Digital Student Leaders: A Mixed Methods Study of Student Leadership, Identity and Decision Making on Social Media
Social media tools permeate the college student experience (Junco, 2014), including for those students who hold leadership positions on campus. The purpose of this study was to document the experiences and online behaviors of 40 junior and senior student leaders on digital communication tools. The study was conducted at two institutions in the western United States. Three research questions guided the sequential exploratory mixed methods study connecting student leadership, the presentation of identity, and decision-making with social media use. The study involved a three phase mixed methods analysis of focus group interviews and 2,220 social media posts.
Five major findings surfaced, including (a) social media impact starting in K-12 (b) college student leaders’ navigation of social media (c) presentation of digital identity (d) the beginning of leadership presence and possibilities and (e) significance of social media guidance in college. These findings suggest college student educators should implement holistic digital leadership education. Initiatives should begin early, prior to student enrollment in higher education, focusing on identity expression, positive possibilities-based perspectives, with a focus on social media’s potential impact on student groups, social communities, and social change. Findings from this study can mobilize higher education professionals, student peers, and parents to become digital educators, providing tools for students to implement in their digital practices.
This document summarizes a study on how social media influences the gender identity and performance of male college students. It examines how first-year and senior male students describe their social media behavior and how it intersects with their gender identity. Key findings include that masculinity is just one part of a student's identity, pre-college concepts influence college views, and navigating multiple identities is difficult. The study develops a four-stage theory of how students' understanding and use of social media evolves from gathering social capital as freshmen to understanding broader contexts as seniors. It recommends extending digital citizenship education and better integrating physical and digital communities.
Walking the tightrope between online and offline life what adolescents learn...Nadia Naffi, Ph.D.
Naffi, N., Davidson, A.-L. (2015). Walking the Tightrope Between Online and Offline Life: What Adolescents Learn about CMC through Interactions in Social Media. In S. Carliner, C. Fulford & N. Ostashewski (Eds.), Proceedings of EdMedia: World Conference on Educational Media and Technology 2015 (pp. 627-632). Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE).
The document provides an overview of a three-dimensional leadership model for digital leadership. It discusses three dimensions: 1) face-to-face non-digital leadership, 2) digital leadership existing purely online, and 3) integrated digital leadership that combines the first two dimensions. For each dimension, it outlines "7 C's" of values and competencies, such as developing an online identity, engaging in online collaboration, and demonstrating commitment to both virtual and real-world presences. The document also provides reflection questions and activities to help leaders assess and improve their skills in each of the three dimensions.
This document outlines a three-dimensional model of digital leadership. The first dimension is face-to-face non-digital leadership. The second dimension is virtual or digital leadership that exists online. The third dimension aims to integrate the first two by developing leaders' competencies in both real world and digital spaces. It provides examples of how key leadership concepts like collaboration and citizenship can apply across the three dimensions. The document encourages assessing where students engage online and training staff on social media best practices.
PhD researchers are using social media in various ways to support their academic identities and activities. They engage in practices like updating their profiles, searching for relevant materials, networking to build collaborations, and disseminating their work. Their digital engagement can be conceptualized not through rigid typologies but rather as variations in orientations shaped by individual agency and contexts. Regarding digital identity, PhD researchers navigate disclosing or not disclosing information, weaving or splitting personal and professional identities, and emulating or distancing themselves from successful examples. They search for space in digital engagement by converging or choosing a drop-in approach, and manage their time through tinkering with strategies or fragmenting their engagement for individual or collective benefits.
The document discusses identity in social media versus real life. It notes that social networking sites allow teenagers to express different personas than in real life. While social media gives users tools to create and share their identity, it can also lead to confusion between one's online and real-life identity. The research aims to understand why people present different identities online versus offline and the impact of having split identities across social and real worlds. The methodology will include interviews, surveys, and research on social media use and identity representation to analyze the differences between online and real-life identities.
Setting Students Up For Digital Success: Engagement, Development, and LearningPaul Brown
The document discusses digitized development and digital identity. It includes interviews with students who discuss curating perfect images on social media, selective views of reality, pursuing likes, and wearing different "masks" for different social platforms. Students feel pressure to keep up appearances and compare themselves to others. The document advocates for authenticity and owning technology rather than being owned by it. It promotes using social media for more, being good digital partners, and outlines ISTE student standards around digital reputation, literacy, citizenship, communication and collaboration.
The Digital Development of College StudentsPaul Brown
Originally presented in July 2015 to the staff at Indiana University Southeast. An overview of how social and digital technology may be impacting student development.
http://www.paulhordonbrown.com
What's Going On Behind The Screen With College Students - OLC InnovatePaul Brown
Originally presented at the Online Learning Consortium's (OLC) Innovate conference in New Orleans in April of 2016. Provides an overview of research on college students developmental and educational experiences online.
This document discusses how college students develop digital identities and the implications of those identities. It outlines seven vectors of identity development including competence, managing emotions, relationships, and integrity. A digital identity is defined as an extension of one's personal identity online through social media and other digital profiles. Both positive and negative impacts are possible, such as colleges and employers reviewing digital profiles. While digital identities allow self-expression, they also raise privacy and anonymity issues for students. Developing a digital identity is an important part of students' overall identity development in college.
How Social Media Affects Our Self-PerceptionBy Kelsey Sunstrum.docxadampcarr67227
How Social Media Affects Our Self-Perception
By Kelsey Sunstrum
Not long ago, a friend of mine deleted her Instagram account. I couldn’t understand why one would ever do such a thing, so I asked and her response caught me off-guard.
She deleted her Instagram because she felt herself becoming depressed by it. The pressure of taking the right picture, with the right filter, wearing the right outfit, at the right place, with the right people was too much pressure.
We are conditioned to project only our best, albeit unrealistic, selves on our social media profiles as a modern way of virtually keeping up with the Joneses.
Regardless of whether you realize it, you’re spending a great deal of time and effort on the creation of your digital identity. The molding of this alternate self depends heavily on how others are projecting themselves in these arenas as well. What happens to your ‘real’ self, then?
Enter ‘smiling depression.’
Smiling depression is a term used to describe people who are depressed but do not appear so. In America today, 6.7 percent of the population over the age of 18 suffers from major depression, and it is the leading cause of disability in the 15-44 age range.
If you were to meet me for the first time, you would be very surprised to learn I have major depression. It is second nature to me to put on a mask of a happy person. Not only do I talk with people, I’m often the loudest person at a gathering and can always find something to joke or laugh about. This is smiling depression.
Social media puts an interesting lens on the creation of the self, and how this construction affects our mental well-being. The ideal self is the self we aspire to be. My ideal self would be a 25-year-old successful freelance writer who lives in a perpetually clean house and who always takes the time to put on makeup before she leaves the house.
One’s self-image is the person we actually are based on the actions, behaviors, and habits currently possessed. My self-image would be of a 25-year-old freelance writer just starting her business in a house that’s mostly clean most of the time and who forces herself not to wear pajamas everywhere.
According to Carl Rogers’s theory of personality, every human has the basic instinct to improve herself and realize her full potential. Like Abraham Maslow, he called this achievement self-actualization. He believed this state was attained when the ideal self and the person’s self-image were in line with each other. This person would be deemed a fully functioning person.
Each of us carries what Robert Firestone termed the critical inner voice. It is a dynamic that exists within every individual that offers a negative filter through which to view our life. It is theorized that the voice is created at an early age during times of stress or trauma.
Social media is not only extremely pervasive, it is an activity in which you are expected to participate. Not all social media is Facebook and Instagram. Think LinkedIn, the.
The document discusses the importance of teachers' digital identities and provides strategies for managing digital footprints. It notes that teachers are held to a higher standard than other citizens and explores complex issues around social media use. The document outlines both appropriate and inappropriate social media activities for teachers and discusses how digital content can have unintended consequences due to issues like anonymity, persistence, replicability and searchability online. It emphasizes the need for teachers to make thoughtful decisions regarding sharing content and interacting with students online. Finally, the document provides tips for curating digital identities and online relationships with employers in mind.
[r]evolution: Educating Social Media - Workshop SlidesNathanielCarlson2
This document discusses considerations for teaching social media use. It begins by noting that while digital literacy focuses on skills, most people use social media for social reasons. It then provides statistics on widespread social media use. The document discusses how social media has become integral to daily life and both positive and negative impacts. It emphasizes the importance of understanding why we engage with social media and consequences of choices. The document then summarizes research on why older adults both do and do not use Facebook, focusing on themes like privacy concerns, quality of interaction, and exclusion. It introduces the concept of "value alignment" to help negotiate rules of engagement. Finally, it discusses teaching social media norms to reduce uncertainty for students.
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The document discusses implementing intentional conversations as an educational strategy for residence life and curriculum work. It describes intentional conversations as structured discussions between student staff and residents that focus on specific topics or themes. The document provides guidance on the goals, format, and best practices for conducting intentional conversations, including using active listening skills, addressing learning outcomes, documenting the discussions, and assessing the program's effectiveness through coding of themes and rubrics. The overall purpose is to have meaningful discussions that help residents develop skills and progress in their learning and transition to college life.
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Developing a residential education curriculum requires not just a change in process and procedure, but also a cultural and philosophical change in the way our approach to our work. To that end, the presenters will share a Residential Curriculum assessment guides they and others developed to aid departments in continuous improvement. This session will introduce the curriculum and guides, allow participants to practice applying the tools, and discuss methods for implementing it in practice.
Originally presented at the 2018 NASPA-Student Affairs Professionals in Higher Education Conference in Philadelphia, PA.
Educating Students for Digital Leadership and CitizenshipPaul Brown
Originally presented in May of 2017 at the Memphis in May Student Affairs Conference at the University of Memphis. This presentation discusses digital reputation and digital learning outcomes for college students.
The Social Media Lives of Students: The Promise and the RealityPaul Brown
Originally presented in May of 2017 at the Memphis in May Student Affairs Conference at the University of Memphis. This presentation provides an overview of the developmental experience of college students online.
Understanding College Student Life Online and What it Means for Social Media ...Paul Brown
This document discusses social media engagement and digital identity for college students. It addresses how students develop digital identities and how their behavior online can impact their digital reputation. Key topics covered include curating one's online image to craft a desired digital reputation, practicing digital literacy to evaluate online information, demonstrating good digital citizenship, effective online communication and collaboration skills, and educating students on managing their digital identities. The document provides learning outcomes related to digital reputation, literacy, citizenship, communication and collaboration to guide education on these topics for college students.
The Savvy Online Student Affairs ProfessionalPaul Brown
Originally presented at University of Binghamton to graduate students in the higher education program in February of 2017. This presentation provides basics and suggestions on safeguarding and building a digital reputation and engaging online.
After the App: The Social Media Lives of College StudentsPaul Brown
This document summarizes interviews conducted with college students about their social media use and digital identity development. Some key points:
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Be A Digital Leader! Managing and Leveraging Social Media for College StudentsPaul Brown
Originally presented at Western Washington University on February 7, 2017. This presentation discusses the opportunities and pitfalls of engaging online as a college student. It also provides tips and suggestions about how to leverage social media for academic, career, and personal success.
Writing Outcomes for Digital Student DevelopmentPaul Brown
Originally presented in Cincinnati, Ohio, at the annual conference of the Great Lakes Association of College and University Housing Officers in November of 2016. This session provides a overview of college student learning in digital contexts as well as suggested draft learning outcomes to guide in education around digital issues.
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This document provides tips for using social media to highlight your strengths as a professional. It outlines five building blocks for developing an online personal brand: having a clear focus expressed in under 140 characters; a five sentence bio; a good headshot; determining your online persona; and choosing which platforms to use. The document encourages consistency, dedicating time, following industry leaders, and letting your personality shine through online.
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Keynote address originally presented at the 2016 Association of College Unions International (ACUI) Region IV Conference in Boulder, Colorado. Discusses student civic engagement online, activism, and issues of identity and reputation.
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Originally presented at The Association of College and University Housing Officers International’s (ACUHO-I) Business Operations Conference in Scottsdale, AZ, in October 2016.
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Digitized Student Development, Social Media, and Identity
1. NEW RESEARCHAND NEW IMPLICATIONS
DigitizedStudentDevelopment,
SocialMedia,
andIdentity
by@PaulGordonBrown,PhD
2. This Program counts towards APA Continuing Education credits.
The following program is based in research I did in partial
fulfillment of the requirements of my PhD Program. All of the
data collected, analyzed, and presented here were collected
in accordance with guidelines ensuring ethical research
involving human subjects. All study procedures were
approved by the Institutional Review Board at Boston College.
There is minimal risk associated with the application of the
research presented here. It should be noted that given the
relative homogeneity of the sample used, care should be
taken in applying these concepts to differently situated
groups with different demographics.
There is no conflict of interest related to my presenting this
material as a part of APA Continuing Education.
4. 1.Describe how college students view
their online life and the role social
media plays in it.
2.Explain the complex nature of
identity, self-concept and selfhood in
virtual and technology-mediated
environments.
3.Apply concepts of digital identity and
digitized development in educational
interventions for students.
5. (Turkle, 2004, para 6)
“I want to study
not only what the
computer is doing
for us, but what it
is doing to us.”
- Turkle
8. 89%
of adults 18-29 years old use social media
67%
access it on mobile
98%
of adults ages 18-29 are on the internet
70
70
70
43%
60%
89%
65+
50-64
30-49
70
78% 18-29
social media use
by age
Sources:
younger generations
are using the internet,
social media, and mobile
technologies at a high rate
14. “Identity” is what one is and
carries with it a series of
properties. Although “identity”
and “self” have been conflated
in discourse, they are
understood here to be separate
but related. “Self” is subject
to “identity” as object. From
one’s sense of self flows one’s
identity (and potentially
identities).
15. Question
Research
How do college students conceptualize who they
are and how they present themselves when they
are engaged in digital and social media?
@paulgordonbrown
16. Roger’s Diffusion of Innovation
(Rogers, 2003)
sample
16 student
College students 18-24 years old
‣ Completing/completed coursework in social media (half)
‣ Identified by college staff has heavy/sophisticated users (half)
Student Profile
‣ From a highly selective research university on a residential
campus near a major metropolitan area in the Northeast
17. Weekly
6%
Daily
6%
Multiple x Per Day
88%
FACEBOOK
Weekly
13%
Daily
19%
Multiple x Per Day
69%
INSTAGRAM
Infrequently
13%
Daily
19%
Multiple x Per Day
69%
SNAPCHAT
20. Pre-interview Questionnaire
‣ Establish usage patterns of participant
Semistructured Interview (First Session, 1 hour)
‣ Probe how students understand self
‣ Examine how sense is made of online/offline life
Synchronous Ethnographic Tour * (Second Session, 1 hour)
‣ Observe how students interact online
‣ How is identity constructed/understood
Semistructured Interview (First Session, 1 hour)
‣ Probe how students understand self
‣ Examine how sense is made of online/offline life
data
collection
*
(Martínez Alemán & Lynk Wartman, 2009, p. 23)
37. Student explores and experiments
openly with social media. This is
strongly influenced by authorities
(parents/guardians) through access
and peers through peer culture.
Student does not understand how
online and offline interactions can
impact each other or possess a
sophisticated understanding of
context.
Student makes conscious choices
about social media usage and how it
fits into life desires, outlook, and goals.
Student realizes that one’s online life
requires constant renegotiation as
one’s goals, needs, contexts, and
circumstances change.
38. DigitalIdentity/
Reputation vs
Digitized
Development
What We Produce vs What We Are
What Other People See vs How We See Ourselves
Can Be Taught
Through Rules
vs
Must Be Learned
Dynamically
A By-Product Of
Development
vs
The Developmental
Process Itself
39. Digital Identites
Digitized DevelopmentOne’s level of sophistication in
navigating digitized development
impacts how one chooses to present
one’s digital identities and how one
understands these digital identities in
relation to their sense of self.
One’s digital identities and the exploration
of and action through these identities
influences one’s level of sophistication in
navigating digitized development (and
potentially how one conceptualizes one’s
selfhood as digitized).
Digital identities are the different representations and
personas students take on through different social media
platforms and in presentation to different audiences.
Digitized development is what occurs when developmental
processes, behaviors, and life experiences play out
differently as a result of the influence of social and digital
technology, their affordances, and the virtual spaces these
technologies create.
ReciprocalRelationship
42. Addie discussing the pursuit of Likes:
“‘How many Likes did your post get?
What does that mean?’
…That number in itself doesn’t mean anything
unless you compare it to other posts. Then
you get in that whole thing where people start
comparing themselves to other people. That
really isn’t the best route to go down.
Is that what you should be doing whenever you
have a piece of content and it doesn’t do as
well as someone else’s?
What does that say about you?
43. I personally don’t think that that should be
something you take personally.
‘Wow everyone on the Internet hates me.’
I don’t think that should be the reaction but I
don’t know that everyone else feels the same
way. I know people that have deleted posts
because they don’t get enough Likes. I know
people who Unlike a photo on Instagram
because it suddenly now has a hundred Likes
and they’re mad about. That doesn’t make
sense to me. You’re thinking about it too
much.”
50. Hallie discussing how social media creates a
perfected image…
“I think it was cool that [my professor] asked
us think about the highlight reel. Do we use
social media as a highlight reel of our lives and
how many times out of ten would you say that
you wouldn't post something because it's not a
highlight.
And all of us were like, “Oh, all the time.”
He was like, “Go through your day. How many
things would you post, and how many wouldn't
you?”
51. …I would just encourage [educators] to ask
their students about recognizing—not
necessarily changing it—but recognizing that
what they post, and what other people post,
isn't 100 percent their lives. Because there's a
lot of times when you think that people have
the best life ever because of what they're
posting. When in reality they're going through
a lot, and probably many similar things that you
are, but because they're posting all this fun
stuff, you think that their lives are perfect.”
71. Use of Technology
Heavy UsersLight Users
Digitized Development
High Level SophisticationLow Level Sophistication
Digitized Selfhood
mulitplistic/relativistic/relationalsingular/unitary
Heavy technology usage is necessary but not
sufficient for digitized development to emerge.
One could be a heavy user of technology and yet
not use it in a way that leads towards greater
digitization of development.
Similar to physical world development, individuals reach
towards higher level sophistication in navigating
digitized development over time.
Digitized selfhood is the extent to which one
views digital/virtual spaces as an integral part of
one’s being and therefore constructs concepts of
self that are more multiplistic, relativistic, and
relational as opposed to singular and unitary.
Technology Usage, Digitized Development, and Digitized Selfhood
?
??
Digitized selfhood was
hypothesized, but only weakly
found in this study.
Digitized development is what occurs when developmental processes, behaviors, and life experiences play out differently as
a result of the influence of social and digital technology, their affordances, and the virtual spaces these technologies create.
76. Engage with students on
social media because we
need to understand them in
all of their contexts. Be open
to a different (not necessarily
better or worse) way.
80. Learn from and with students
how to navigate the online
environment. Help them
avoid mistakes. Help them
understand their self-
presentation and reputation
online. Be a role model.
85. Understand how social
media may impact the
developmental process-both
in light of current theory and
in ways we do not yet
understand. Be able to help
students understand,
navigate and leverage it.