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

    Call for Blog Carnival Contributions: New/Emerging Perspectives on New Media Technologies

    0
    By Courtney A. Mauck, Laura Leigh Menard on January 24, 2022 Blog Carnival 20

    Editors: Courtney A. Mauck & Laura L. Menard

    With the continuous development of new technologies and social networking spaces, teachers/scholars in the computers and writing community may often find themselves experimenting with tools or assignments that remain relatively underexplored or undertheorized. Because of the typical publication schedules upheld by traditional academic journals, research on social network sites and new media technologies can sometimes “fall behind” and may not accurately represent the innovative things teachers/scholars are doing right now. For this reason, we’re excited to host a Blog Carnival that seeks posts reflecting on new/emerging perspectives at the intersections of new media technologies and writing studies. 

    In Mina’s (2019) Computers and Composition article, she examines writing teachers’ use of new media technologies based on teachers’ self-reports. Here, we extend that conversation in hopes that this format will allow us to showcase new/different approaches or understandings of new media technologies and it’s relationship(s) to both pedagogies and professional development.

    Thus, for Blog Carnival 20, we welcome reflections and critiques that engage with the ways in which writing teachers integrate new media technologies into their pedagogies and professional development strategies. Like Mina, we characterize new media technologies as “digital, interactive, hypertextual, virtual, networked, and simulated” (Lister, Dovey, Giddings, Grant, & Kelly, 2009) in order to invite a variety of submissions. We encourage submissions that explore both media-rich and text-rich technologies. 

    TOPICS

    We invite blog entries that consider (but are not limited to) the following questions: 

    • How are you integrating new media technologies into your pedagogies? What innovative assignments, activities, or practices have you succeeded or failed with? 
    • How have we tried (and/or failed) to move beyond the “big three” (Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube) in our critical approaches to technology? 
    • What role has professional development played in your integration of new media technologies into your pedagogy? What new/changing approaches in professional development do you see a need for? 
    • In what ways do your pedagogies address issues of access/ibility, privacy, inclusion, and/or digital ethics in relation to new media technologies? 
    • How has the COVID-19 pandemic influenced your approaches to new media technologies? In what ways has the pandemic both necessitated and prevented innovation? 
    • How might we learn from our students about the influence(s) or importance of new media technologies? 
    • How do we navigate the importance of new media technologies within systems that do not privilege them?  

    TIMELINE/SUBMISSION

    • 100-Word Proposal – Feb 1 
    • Acceptance Notices – Feb 5
    • Full Blog Entries – Feb 18
    • Final Publication – Feb 21

    We invite submissions in multimodal formats, including short text pieces (500-1000 words), audio recordings, videos, comics, interviews, and so on. If you are interested in contributing to this Blog Carnival, please submit your contact information and 100-word proposal to this Google Form by February 1, 2022. Full blog entries will be due approximately two weeks after you’ve been notified of your acceptance. 

    CONTACT

    If you have any questions or if you have a submission in mind but need more guidance, please do not hesitate to reach out to the editors, Courtney A. Mauck (courtneyannemauck@gmail.com) and Laura L. Menard (lmenard@bgsu.edu).

    Authors

    • Courtney A. Mauck
      Courtney A. Mauck

      Courtney A. Mauck is a PhD candidate in Rhetoric and Composition at Ohio University. Her research interests include digital rhetorics, social media, multimodal composition, and game studies.

      View all posts
    • Laura Leigh Menard
      Laura Leigh Menard

      I am a PhD student in the Rhetoric and Writing Studies program at Bowling Green State University.

      View all posts
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    By Alyse CampbellMay 6, 20250

    Attending Computers and Writing 2025? Be a Session Reviewer! 

    By Thais Rodrigues Cons, Toluwani OdedeyiApril 25, 20250

    Charisse Iglesias: Community Engagement Beyond Academia

    By Toluwani Odedeyi, Thais Rodrigues ConsMarch 31, 20250

    Addison Kliewer – Bridging Academia and Industry with Technical Writing Mastery

    By Mehdi MohammadiFebruary 11, 20250

    Philosophy of Technology in Rhetoric and Writing Studies

    By Marie Pruitt, Robert Beck, Alex MashnyFebruary 4, 20250

    Call for Blog Carnival 23: Digital Circulation in Rhetoric and Writing Studies

    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative | Gayle Morris Sweetland Center for Writing | University of Michigan

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