Teaching the New Paradigm

Social Media Inside and Outside the Classroom

Authors

  • William Magrino Rutgers University Author
  • Peter Sorrell Rutgers University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/wap.v5i2.357

Keywords:

education, busness writing, technical writing, social media, digital humanities, distance learning, pedagogy, collaboration

Abstract

This article is addressed to those interested in integrating social media, as a collaborative component, into Business and Technical Writing courses. Educators find themselves under the false impression that digital natives’ familiarity with these tools will result in their embracing them as part and parcel of coursework. The reality is that today’s students need help in moving beyond the familiar applications of these virtual spaces in their personal lives and toward their uses as dynamic components of the educational experience. Relearning Facebook to do more than “friending” people, “liking” activities, and announcing one’s status involves an emphasis on the professional role of this developing medium of communication. These professional applications, therefore, must be fully integrated into the academic experience. Most Business and Technical Writing courses at Rutgers University culminate with each student submitting a research proposal, developed throughout the course of a 15-week semester. The justification for the plan of action in each proposal is based upon scholarly research. In our Collaborative Writing Practices course, the students develop their proposals in teams and are instructed to use various social networking platforms to communicate with each other, as well as with their instructor, as a supplement to the face-to-face classroom environment. In addition, each researched plan is required to advance a solution that utilizes social media. Our “triangulated” approach to instruction immerses students into social networking and helps them understand that, to be successful, collaborative writing must occur on a variety of levels. We also integrate social media into several of our online classes, where it is used to replace key elements of face-to-face courses, such as formal presentations. We have found that implementing a social media project instead of the traditional PowerPoint presentation encourages a greater level of interaction and participation among students.

Author Biographies

  • William Magrino, Rutgers University

    William Magrino has served as Director of Business & Technical Writing at Rutgers University since 2007. He holds a Ph.D. in English from Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Magrino frequently presents at international conferences on topics concerning literature, pedagogy, and administration. He is the co-author of two professional writing textbooks, now in their second editions, and is a contributor to New Paths to Raymond Carver, published by the University of South Carolina Press. His current research is concerned with representations of youth culture in the fiction of Bret Easton Ellis.

  • Peter Sorrell, Rutgers University

    Peter Sorrell has been an Assistant Director in the Rutgers University Writing Program since 2009. Dr. Sorrell coordinates the Livingston Writing Center, where he runs tutoring internships involving social media and ESL. He holds a Ph.D. in French Literature from Rutgers and has published on the representation of the cinema in Raymond Queneau. He has developed and taught courses on writing and photography for both university and high school students, and is a frequent participant at conferences involving teaching with social media.

References

Ellison, K., and Matthews, C. (2010) Virtual history: A socially networked pedagogy of enlightenment. Educational Research 52(3): 297–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00131881.2010.504065.

Experian Marketing Services (2013) The 2013 Digital Marketing Report. Retrieved on 26 July 2013 from http://press.experian.com/United-States/Press-Release/experian-marketing-services-reveals-27-percent-of-time-spent-online-is-on-social-networking.aspx.

Greysen, S. R., Kind, T. and Chretien, K. C. (2010) Online professionalism and the mirror of social media. Journal of General Internal Medicine 25(11): 1227–1229. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-010-1447-1.

Revere, L., and Kovach, J. V. (2011) Online technologies for engaged learners: A meaningful synthesis for educators. The Quarterly Review of Distance Education 12(2): 113–124. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-010-1447-1.

Tseng, H., and Ku, H.-Y. (2011) The relationships between trust, performance, satisfaction, and development progressions among virtual teams. The Quarterly Review of Distance Education 12(2): 81–94. Retrieved from http://www.infoagepub.com/quarterly-review-of-distance-education.html.

Published

2014-02-04

Issue

Section

From the e-Sphere

How to Cite

Magrino, W., & Sorrell, P. (2014). Teaching the New Paradigm: Social Media Inside and Outside the Classroom. Writing and Pedagogy, 5(2), 357–373. https://doi.org/10.1558/wap.v5i2.357

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