Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Recent Posts
    • Attending Computers and Writing 2025? Be a Session Reviewer! 
    • Charisse Iglesias: Community Engagement Beyond Academia
    • Addison Kliewer – Bridging Academia and Industry with Technical Writing Mastery
    • Philosophy of Technology in Rhetoric and Writing Studies
    • Call for Blog Carnival 23: Digital Circulation in Rhetoric and Writing Studies
    • Introduction to Robert Beck
    • Introduction to Alex Mashny
    • Introduction to Marie Pruitt
    RSS Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative
    • Home
    • Conversations
      • Blog Carnivals
      • DRC Talk Series
      • Hack & Yack
      • DRC Wiki
    • Reviews
      • CCCC Reviews
        • 2023 CCCC Reviews
        • 2022 CCCC Reviews
        • 2021 CCCC Reviews
        • 2019 CCCC Reviews
      • C&W Reviews
        • 2022 C&W Reviews
        • 2019 C&W Reviews
        • 2018 C&W Reviews
        • 2017 C&W Reviews
        • 2016 C&W Reviews
        • 2015 C&W Reviews
        • 2014 C&W Reviews
        • 2013 C&W Reviews
        • 2012 C&W Reviews
      • MLA Reviews
        • 2019 MLA Reviews
        • 2014 MLA Reviews
        • 2013 MLA Reviews
      • Other Reviews
        • 2018 Watson Reviews
        • 2017 Feminisms & Rhetorics
        • 2017 GPACW
        • 2016 Watson Reviews
        • 2015 IDRS Reviews
      • Webtext of the Month
    • Teaching Materials
      • Syllabus Repository
      • Teaching & Learning Materials (TLM) Collection
    • Books
      • Memetic Rhetorics
      • Beyond the Makerspace
      • Video Scholarship and Screen Composing
      • 100 Years of New Media Pedagogy
      • Writing Workflows
      • Rhetorical Code Studies
      • Developing Writers in Higher Education
      • Sites of Translation
      • Rhizcomics
      • Making Space
      • Digital Samaritans
      • DRC Book Prize
      • Submit a Book Proposal
    • DRC Fellow Projects
    • About
      • Advisory Board
      • Graduate Fellows
    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative

    ENGL 2850: Writing For Social Media (Messina, C.M.)

    0
    By Sarah Hughes on July 6, 2021

    Name: Cara Marta Messina

    Download syllabus

    Date published: 2021

    Course level: Upper-Level

    Course title: English 526/726: Writing in Electronic Environments

    Course description: Social media writing, like all writing, entangles political, ethical, social, and cultural values. Writing and participating in any genre requires an awareness of discourse communities, your target audience, your motivation/purpose, and writing conventions that you may include or challenge. In this course, you will explore how these values play out in social media writing, community engagement, and research. You will engage with social media communities of your choosing, reflect on your engagements, conduct your own (ethical) social media writing research, and read scholars’ social media research. We will discuss the interwoven, complex worlds of social media. Social media writing is more than posting and engaging with others on digital platforms. Writing for social media comes with understanding the intersections of: breaking down the virtual/in-real-life binary; data surveillance, big data, and advertising; platform analysis; ethics; content moderation; community-building through textual creations, platform choices, and moderation policies; audience awareness and reach; discoverability; and the spread of information/misinformation.

    Course philosophy/motivation: “For this course, I wanted students to recognize themselves as writers, composers, and engaging with important content, so I had them focus on the communities within which they were a part. With this came several forms of doing community-driven research and digital activism, including creating digital activist artifacts to inform/persuade their networks. We always interwove conversations of how we engage with and compose in communities, platforms, and content with conversations about feminism, disability/accessibility, and antiracism, and several the issues surrounding justice in social media.”

    “Because this was also early in the pandemic and we were asynchronous online learning, I wanted to make the course fun and grade in ways that did not put extra pressure on the students. For instance, I use spec, or micro-grading, so students had the ability to choose what kinds of work they wanted to put effort into and not feel particularly stressed about one assignment. For instance, one major assignment was broken down into four grades: first drafts, peer review responses, and final drafts. If they missed one part of the assignment, it would not heavily affect their grade (plus, I offered flexible deadlines if needed).”

    “In the future, I want to a) make my syllabus more design-friendly and b) include the book Hashtag Activism by Sarah Jackson, Moya Bailey, and Brooke Foucault Welles.“

    “Students are composing and engaging with compositions everyday through social media platforms. My goal is to get them to a) see themselves as everyday writers, b) see the value in the communities within which they participate, and c) push their networks and communities towards justice.”

    Cite as: Messina, C.M., ENGL 2850: Writing For Social Media, July, 2021,  Gayle Morris Sweetland Digital Rhetoric Collaborative.

    Author

    • Sarah Hughes
      Sarah Hughes

      Sarah Hughes is a PhD candidate in the Joint Program in English & Education at the University of Michigan, where she also teaches in the English Department Writing Program. Her research interests include digital rhetoric, gender and discourse, and gaming studies. Her dissertation project explores how women use multimodal discourse—grammatically, narratively, and visually—to navigate online gaming ecologies.

      View all posts
    Syllabus Repository
    • Artificial Intelligence (6)
    • Research Methods (1)
    • Digital rhetoric (9)
    • Anti-racist pedagogy (3)
    • Feminist rhetoric (1)
    • Technical communication (5)
    • Composition studies (6)
    • First-year writing (8)
    • Gaming (1)
    • Writing for social media (2)
    • User experience (2)
    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative | Gayle Morris Sweetland Center for Writing | University of Michigan

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.