Successes and Setbacks of Social Media. Группа авторов

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      Drew T. Ashby-King

      Drew T. Ashby-King, MS (University of Tennessee, Knoxville) is a doctoral student and graduate teaching assistant in the Department of Communication at the University of Maryland. Drew’s scholarship focuses on the intersection of instructional, organizational, and intercultural communication. He is interested in understanding student-institutional relationships and how institutional contexts influence classroom communication and student learning and development.

      As an undergraduate student, I thought of social media as a place to share funny videos, connect with family members who lived overseas, and where some posted hurtful messages. During sophomore year, my perspective began to change when I enrolled in a communication course focused on persuasion. This class took a service-learning approach by having students apply theories of persuasion to an anti-hate social media activism campaign. My experience in Dr. Lisa Hanasono’s persuasion class taught me how social media can be used as a tool for civic engagement and activism in the classroom and beyond.

      Social Media in a Persuasive Communication Course

      At the beginning of the semester, the professor announced that we would be actively using social media in class and collectively launching a campaign focused on anti-hate social media activism. As a student, I was excited. I was rarely, if ever, told it was okay to use social sites in class. Hanasono (2017) explains the approach to this course in “Making a difference: A community-based campaign that promotes diversity and inclusion.” Throughout the semester, we used social media during in-class activities, as part of out-of-class assignments, and in our semester-long group project.

      Social media was also central to the activities and assignments outside of the classroom. In small groups, we took what we learned through in-class activities and applied it to our larger assignments. Throughout the semester, we had to persuade our friends and family to engage with our campaign’s social media platforms and ask them to create anti-hate messages that supported the mission of the campaign. Toward the end of the semester, as a summative assignment, each group took charge of posting on one of the campaign’s social media platforms by applying what we learned throughout the semester in a setting that would be viewed by everyone we persuaded to engage with the campaign.

      Reflecting on This Course’s Role in My Academic Success

      Looking back on this experience, I can see the role it played in my learning and development as an undergraduate student. This class connected my interest in how individuals used social media with my academic coursework. It highlighted the issues of diversity, inclusion, and social justice that I was learning about in class and through my co-curricular activities. It provided an example of how social media could be used for civic engagement and was the foundation for my undergraduate thesis project, which allowed me to explore these ideas further. The experience of incorporating social media throughout the course kept me engaged in class, shifted my perspective on how social media was related to civic engagement, and shone a light on how other coursework connected to my experiences.

      The

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