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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/drcprod/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114I came to be interested in digital rhetoric almost by accident. During my MA, it was a requirement to incorporate at least one multimodal project into our curriculum. To be clear, multimodality and digital rhetoric should not be conflated, but for me, they have always gone hand-in-hand. For whatever reason, completely uninformed by any research, I decided to leave the multimodal project completely open-ended instead of taking the route most of my colleagues had taken, which was just to have students create Prezi presentations based on their research papers. I was blown away by the projects my students proposed and created that were both material and digital. Through this experience, I came to understand the ways in which digital rhetoric and multimodality created space for student difference and multiplicity.
For me, digital rhetoric opened a world of endless possibilities with new ways of understanding what it means to be a \u201cwriter,\u201d especially within the context of FYW pedagogy. While many students have ample experience composing in at least one digital environment, most students would not describe what they do as \u201cwriting\u201d or see those digital spaces as connected in any way to the rhetorical concepts they are learning in the classroom (DePalma & Alexander<\/a>; Shepherd<\/a>). This realization is what sparked my continuing interests in social media research and the intersections between digital rhetoric, FYW pedagogy, and learning transfer.
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