2022 Summer May-June

Month: June 2022

Week 7 – A Reflective PLN

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As one’s PLN is situated among the broader PLE, one has to realize that our PLE in today’s context carries and covers more than it used to be while “our experience is formed in part by the virtual reality brought to life through digital networks” (Del Giudice, 2014, p. 78). Realizing that there are more opportunities and as well as challenges that may be brought by engaging in online communities is the premise for one to utilize a functional PLN for both personal and professional life. Previously I held a strong sense of insecurity towards my online presence, as it could lead to unpleasant experiences. Now I think I have to commit that that sense of insecurity always exists in both virtual and real-life experiences, and realizing its existence is rather the appropriate starting point for facilitating a functional PLN.
My previous experience with social media leans toward personal use, and my purposely limited presence leads to a no-community online status and further keeps me restained. I was always annoyed by “unprocessed” opinions showing up in front of me. Now that I know I can intentionally treat my PLN as a learning tool, not only limited to watching actual lectures online but also building connections with others. Just as Hermida (2014) says, people pay attention to other human beings rather than social media platforms. The line between interactions online and offline is, in a sense, blurred as social media becomes the normal part of our lives, as to how the concept of the digital divide develops toward e-inclusion (Del Giudice, 2014).
In my reflection on this course, I can see that my PLN has the capability for professional use, and to look from the bright side, I am now aware of it.

References

Del Giudice, M. (2014). From Information Society to Network Society: The Challenge. In: Social Media and Emerging Economies. SpringerBriefs in Business. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-02490-5_5

Hermida, A. (2014). Telleveryone: Why we share & why it matters. Doubleday Canada.

Week 6 – PLN & Education

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  • Explore the video provided and reflect on the themes of a PLN in a professional capacity.
  • Which social media platforms are beneficial in education?
  • When working with the vulnerable sector, how does social media fit into professionalism and regulations?

I think a PLN is helpful as it brings more opportunities for understanding and positive interactions within one’s professional community. As Baker mentioned, one’s professional learning community is also a support system, as it allows healthy challenges and understanding among the members based on respect. People bring their own stories and are able to hear from others, and understand others on the basis of authentic experiences – from the source of information to the PLN that allows them to see and absorb the information, PLN is surely functional and effective in expanding the one’s professional capacity.

I think popular social media platforms can all be beneficial in education if used with care, as utilizing PLE to build connections can be more important than the learning content (Wheeler, 2010, as cited in Martindale and Dowdy, 2016, p. 129). I would consider YouTube and Twitter to be the most up-to-date ones.

Social media platforms after all do provide chances for voices that used to be ignored/unheard to be present in front of the public, and it also provides opportunities for professionals to get to know authentic, first-hand stories before reacting to or mitigating problems. As PLN expands the capacity for professionalism, it also provides alternative spaces to better understand and maybe relook at the regulations. As discussed during the lecture, it is about being aware of information that keeps updating/changing in an online environment, and PLN acts as a space for people to communicate and update ideas/information.

References

Martindale, T. & Dowdy, M. (2016). Emergence and Innovation in Digital Learning: Foundations and Applications. In Veletsianos, G. (Ed.), Emergence and innovation in digital learning: Foundations and applications (pp. 119-141). Athabasca University Press.

Week 5 – Media Literacy

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  • Identify the risks and benefits of engaging with a public audience in a media space Consider what the risks for a public figure or person in a position of trust (educator, lawyer, government official) may be?
  • Include in your blog, how to best address negative replies and critiques reflective of your personal values and employer’s social media policy?
  • Consider in your writing how open dialogues about media literacy and factual information can create conflict, why does this happen?
  • And please include thoughts on the benefits of having a PLN that values media literacy?

I think the primary benefit for someone in a position of trust to meet the public audience is that their voices and ideas will be more accessible. Not only do the netizens want to join the online world simply because of the technological advances nowadays, but they may also want to reach out to reliable sources. The ones in positions of trust will be more likely chosen if one is looking for what they see as trustworthy, the sources of “fact-finding”.

In addition, I think the broader audiences could, at the same time, be the primary risk for them. As far as I know, not everyone cares about how they may present themselves online. That means critiques may either be cogent and reasonable or simply negative words floating around the online environment. I think the first thing to do addressing negative replies is to measure their content and (to a degree) selectively respond with respect and stay honest. Wider audiences will come with numerous ideas, and interacting with them could be time-consuming – another reason for responding to the negative ones selectively.

I would say that there are many ways of creating the conflict between media literacy and factual information, among which the “structure and economics of social platforms” (Hirst, 2018, p. 84) is a major one. The commodified “clicks, views, likes and shares” push the mass production and attention gained of low-quality content over high-quality ones, blocking people’s fact-finding journies online (Hirst, 2018, p. 82-84). Factual information, as a result, is undervalued for its neglect of profits. I have followed a zoologist whose series of short videos (as he fits in the realm of social media) are all about widespread false/fake knowledge about animals. I doubt if the correcting videos gained more views than the original ones that earned a lot yet delivered nonsense to their mass audience. As he gained more viewers, a lot of his audiences began to be the ones correcting false/fake information since they learned and remembered from watching his videos. I think that is a way to enhance and facilitate the existence of factual sources online while building a community.

Having a PLN that values media literacy is benefiting both the individual and the audience since valuable content will be delivered more effectively, as a result, the interactions within the community will be more efficient – and it will be more accessible to a potential broader range of audiences.

References

Hirst, M. (2018). Navigating Social Journalism: A Handbook for Media Literacy and Citizen Journalism (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315401263

Week 4 – PLN, Inclusion, Community

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John Schaidler on Unsplash

I think my PLN is still at its early forming and developing stage. I would say that diversity is partially shown from my PLN – I am usually the viewer and receiver of different ideas but there are no obvious “reciprocal” learning activities going on, and my contacts and followers often overlap each other from different platforms that I use. I expanded my followings usually during the course of my sociology (and other) classes where I can often get the rigorous and popular ideas from solid sources on social media. I am aware that I should include and accept multiple ideas from different people, but I am still finding my communities. I get pieces of knowledge and ideas from my friends and their topics of interests as they are all over the world, but I did not share much online – which, after reflecting about the concept of community contribution, I think I should make some change. My (previously) unexpected learning outcomes involve different ideas relating to policy reformations, climate activism, labour justice, practical gender studies, etc.

After listing them out I realized how much I have learned so far simply as a silent viewer. I would say that the main thing about my infant PLN is that I do not try much to find things that I am not interest in, either with people that I know or from public media platforms, since I did not treat them as serious learning pathways – unless I am watching a lecture on YouTube or listening an activists’ interview. I recognize fully that the power of public media in its function in the “formation of publics” (Clark & Aufderheide, 2011, p. 55), and now I think I will start to to relook the potential of my PLN.

One thing that I resonate with Moore is that I have never thought that I can be someone that others can learn from. It is about the ability to “other” myself in the context of learning and educating. In addition, I think how the word “inclusion” is being contaminated by rigid and limited pedagogy and public interpretations, as Moore and Schnellert point out (2016), could be one of the reason that why my awareness of a reciprocal PLN is behind. I remembered that from one of my classes when the professor asked about what students can think of the word “diversity”, and the first answer out from the class was “tokenism”. I think that is a sign of the need of change in understanding inclusion and diversity as from within rather than the other way round, like one being an other in an others’, inclusive world.

References

Clark, J., Aufderheide, P. (2011). A New Vision for Public Media. In: Jansen, S.C., Pooley, J., Taub-Pervizpour, L. (eds) Media and Social Justice. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230119796_5

Moore, S., & Schnellert, L. (2016). One without the other: Stories of unity through diversity and inclusion. Portage & Main Press.

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