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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

 

Blogging Genre Conventions

The students seemed to agree that while serious or personal topics are not often received well on Facebook, they are readily accepted on blogging sites such as Blogspot or Tumblr. Students saw blogs as the more appropriate genre to write about personal musings or opinions. For instance, Natalie shared a blog post with me where she describes her changing taste in music. In her blog entry, she reminisces about music she used to enjoy at a young age:

I listened to those songs because they were catchy … also because I joined the bandwagon and that’s what everybody was listening to! Now my music is changing … I personally love rock and heavy metal. The music is real and it’s not like the "bubblegum pop" … music we have today. I could go on and on about it buuuttttt that’s a different blog for a different time. But going back to the subject at hand, my music is STILL changing!

Natalie finds her blog to be the better medium for reflecting upon and exploring a topic. Because she felt limited in what she could or could not say on Facebook, Natalie began writing a blog:

I think … what’s different is that with the blogging site I feel like you can talk more openly about anything because there are always people who share the same ideas as you. But … on Facebook I very much feel confined because I don’t want to attack anybody, but not to say that on my blog I’m attacking people, but Facebook just feels more confined to say, where blogger.com you can basically talk about anything and just put your ideas down.

Because of the confined feeling Natalie has when writing on Facebook, she turns to her blog to share her opinions on world news events, local politics, relationships, and other topics that are important to her in what she calls blog “rants.” Natalie hesitates to write about these kinds of topics on Facebook, but openly discusses them on her blog.

 

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

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