General feedback on topic 2
Please check your own googledoc for your individual feedback (itâs the same one as for topic 1!)
Thanks to all of you for some excellent discussions about online identity. Yes it is a huge area and impossible for one person to cover everything, but I hope you agree that collectively the group has produced a variety of interesting perspectives and resources on the topic. You are allowed to be decisive though! You donât have to agree with everything â you are very welcome to be âconstructively criticalâ. If youâve said you like the positive view taken in post A, and you also like the negative view taken in post B â which actually resonates most with you and why?
A few of you are taking a while to moderate and publish comments other students are leaving on your blog. This means opportunities for discussion are missed and also makes it tricky for us to find the comments when giving feedback.
If someone has asked you a question in their comment on your blog, please take the trouble to answer it and help the conversations along. You are not assessed on âcomments on commentsâ but it is simple politeness to respond.
Several of your explorations during this topic missed the fine distinction between using different accounts to register for services and portraying yourself as a different person altogether. Once this distinction is made, the argument for having multiple identities is an entirely different ball game from just managing different accounts and passwords. Weâll get into this more in the next topic.
Here are some general thoughts on âraising the barâ for topic 3 with regard to your blogs and your overall approach to the module, now that we are half way through the course:
- Be creative â rely less on text. For example, use pictures/diagrams/videos/embedded tweets to illustrate a point rather than a long verbal description. There is no âone best wayâ, but learn from what you like about how other students have approached the task (donât forget to credit them!)
- Make sure you put a link to an article/video/site that you are referencing at the *exact place* within the text of your blogpost (either with a number, or author/date) and then list the full references at the bottom of your post.
- Make links where relevant between the various topics we are covering, to demonstrate how your understanding is developing through the module. For example, an individual’s attitude towards their online identity is likely to be very different depending on where they sit on the visitor/resident spectrum.
- Some of you are making good use of twitter in terms of highlighting your posts and encouraging others to comment on them to further the debates. But you can take this further â make more strategic use of twitter by sharing resources that will be of use of others in the group and that they might not normally have access to.
- Iâd also like to see more engagement with people beyond the module â if you have drawn upon someoneâs work in your post â tweet them a link to it and thank them. You canât guarantee a response of course but you never know! Often these things work indirectly â you might not get the immediate benefit you were hoping for, but it all helps to boost your visibility and other connections may develop.
Onwards and upwards to topic 3!