Welcome back to Wiki Wednesday! As part of the Digital Rhetoric Collaborative’s current focus on activism in online spaces, we’re dedicating a series of Wiki Wednesday posts to interrogating Wikipedia as a site for making, sharing, and circulating meaning. We’ve already shared a few posts that work toward this focus. Heather Lang’s reflection on some of the obstacles she faced as a female graduate student trying to adapt to the culture of Wikipedia kicked off our series. I followed up a few weeks ago with a post about how Wikipedia’s adherence to print culture limits the types of knowledge it can represent. More…
Author: Matthew Vetter
Welcome back to Wiki Wednesday! As part of the Digital Rhetoric Collaborative’s current focus on activism in online spaces, we’re dedicating a series of Wiki Wednesday posts to interrogating Wikipedia as a site for making, sharing, and circulating meaning. We’ve already shared a few posts that work toward this focus. Heather Lang’s reflection on some of the obstacles she faced as a female graduate student trying to adapt to the culture of Wikipedia kicked off our series. I followed up a few weeks ago with a post about how Wikipedia’s adherence to print culture limits the types of knowledge it can represent. More…
The DRC’s Hack & Yack series is excited to welcome guest contributors Justin Hodgson and Scot Barnett, co-coordinators of the Indiana Digital Rhetoric Symposium. In anticipation of the inaugural symposium, which takes place this week, Hodgson and Barnett share some thoughts on the conference’s beginnings as well what they hope it might accomplish. This is the first of a series of Hack & Yack posts dedicated to the symposium. Stay tuned for session reviews and a follow-up post from Hodgson and Barnett next week. Introducing the Indiana Digital Rhetoric Symposium This week (4/9-4/11), Indiana University Bloomington will host the first ever Indiana Digital Rhetoric Symposium. As…
(As of 2/2/2018 this post has been archived from Storify and shared below) Last Friday's Twitter #DRCchat to celebrate Digital Learning Day (#DLday) was terrific.These chats continue to impress us all, especially in terms of how they allow for multiple viewpoints and voices. There's something about the constraint of 140 characters that really gets a discussion going. Our Storify Round-up, below, shows just how varied and rich the discussion was, providing practical ideas for using digital tools in the classroom, and raising important issues of access across different cultural contexts. Thanks to @Jenae_Cohn and @PaulaMMiller for moderating and everyone who…