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"Embracing Digital Literacies: A Study of First-Year Students’ Digital Compositions"

 


About the Author

Bay VanWagenen graduated from California State University, Sacramento in 2013 with a Master's degree in English Composition. She currently teaches in the Merritt Writing Program at the University of California, Merced. Her research interests include genre studies, digital literacies, and first-year composition.

Contents

Introduction

Methodology Part 1

Students' Knowledge of Audience

Picturing an Audience

Managing an Audience

Managing an Audience (cont.)

Students' Knowledge of Genre

Facebook Genre Content

Blogging Genre Conventions

Blogging Genre Conventions (cont.)

Students' Knowledge of Purpose

Students' Knowlegde of Purpose (cont.)

Conclusion: Embracing Digital Literacies

Works Cited

 

Students’ Knowledge of Audience

Beaufort (2007) discusses audience under two different sections of her five-part knowledge schema: discourse community knowledge and rhetorical knowledge. According to Beaufort, discourse community knowledge entails awareness of the surrounding values and goals of the discourse community that the writing addresses. Rhetorical knowledge, on the other hand, requires knowledge of the rhetorical situation or context of a text, including understanding the text’s audience and purpose. In Beaufort’s words, “writers must address the specific, immediate rhetorical situation of individual communicative acts. This includes considering the specific audience and purpose for a particular text and how best to communicate rhetorically in that instance” (p. 20).

In digital literacies practices, participatory media such as Twitter, Tumblr, and Facebook are a constant give-and-take between writer and reader. Oftentimes readers post words of another writer and vice versa – the lines are blurred between audience and author. These unique rhetorical situations require careful decision making to know what words are best. The following is what I looked for in student writers’ digital writing: to what extent are they able to pay close attention to the rhetorical context they are writing within? What is their understanding of the audience their text addresses, as well as the larger discourse community audience? And what rhetorical moves do they make to cue or connect to their audience? Students in this study demonstrated knowledge of both domains – discourse community and rhetorical – by their understanding of audience.

 

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Posted by xcheditor on May 20, 2021 in article, Issue 10.2/11.1

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