Unit convenor and teaching staff |
Unit convenor and teaching staff
Unit Convenor
Terri Senft
Contact via Please use email
Acting Convenor for 2024
Clementine Vanderkwast
Contact via Please use email
Please see iLearn for hours
Stephen Collins
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Credit points |
Credit points
10
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Prerequisites |
Prerequisites
130cp at 1000 level or above
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Corequisites |
Corequisites
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Co-badged status |
Co-badged status
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Unit description |
Unit description
This unit will offer students an understanding of the key role social media now plays in media practice and culture. The ways in which social media impact and influence public debate will be explored. The unit will involve students in integrating existing and emerging online platforms and technologies into media practice. Students will analyse the way media organisations, corporations and individuals utilise social media to produce narratives and participate in public discourse. They will also examine the way social and online media have opened up new possibilities for building audiences and communities using a wide variety of social media platform and practices. |
Information about important academic dates including deadlines for withdrawing from units are available at https://www.mq.edu.au/study/calendar-of-dates
On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:
Unless a Special Consideration request has been submitted and approved, a 5% penalty (of the total possible mark) will be applied each day a written assessment is not submitted, up until the 7th day (including weekends). After the 7th day, a mark of ‘0’ (zero) will be awarded even if the assessment is submitted. Submission time for all written assessments is set at 11.55pm. A 1-hour grace period is provided to students who experience a technical issue. This late penalty will apply to written reports and recordings only. Late submission of time sensitive tasks (such as tests/exams, performance assessments/presentations, scheduled practical assessments/labs will be addressed by the unit convenor in a Special consideration application.
Name | Weighting | Hurdle | Due |
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Platform Walkthrough | 50% | No | 05/04/2024 by 23:55 pm |
Comparative Case Analysis | 50% | No | 31/05/2024 by 23:55 pm |
Assessment Type 1: Project
Indicative Time on Task 2: 49 hours
Due: 05/04/2024 by 23:55 pm
Weighting: 50%
For this exercise, students are required to consider the question, “How do social media platforms deploy visuality to signal their ideological biases to users?” For this exercise, you should focus on ONE social media platform of your choosing, and ONE ideological bias of interest (e.g. safety, usefulness, popularity, friendship, a ‘good’ experience, etc. As we discussed in class, platform visuality involves what (or whom) seem to receive visual emphasis, as well as what (or whom) seems hidden, obscured, or overlooked. Refer to iLearn for further information.
Assessment Type 1: Qualitative analysis task
Indicative Time on Task 2: 49 hours
Due: 31/05/2024 by 23:55 pm
Weighting: 50%
This assessment has been designed to test the “theme, question, lens, method, presentation” approach to social media studies. Using a traditional or creative format, students will be asked to compare two social media related events, phenomena, news developments, or user experiences. Refer to iLearn for further information.
1 If you need help with your assignment, please contact:
2 Indicative time-on-task is an estimate of the time required for completion of the assessment task and is subject to individual variation
This is a class devoted to social media culture: the personal, social, political and economic ramifications of living in a time dominated by social media. As you might expect from our class title, we will spend a substantial amount of time thinking about life online in terms of networked images.
This can put us in contentious territory. If it is true that the internet is a trash fire, networked images provide a fair amount of its garbage, and most of its gasoline. Be they 'stupid' reaction GIFs, 'narcissistic' selfies, 'confusing' memes, 'serious' displays of evidence (as in photographed protests) or 'horrifying' displays of depravity (as in live-streamed executions), networked images tend to figure heavily into debates about what social media 'has done' to notions of identity, community, creativity, privacy, news, ethics, and pleasure around the world.
In this class, we will consider some of these debates, but we will also consider how the hyper-visibility of digital images contrasts with the opaqueness and transparency of platforms, apps, and technologies. This matters, because at the platform level, social media includes nearly every site or app we access each day. Everyone knows social networking services like Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat "count" as social media. But we should also be thinking in terms of knowledge-building platforms like Wikipedia, shopping platforms like Amazon, travel platforms like TripAdvisor, streaming platforms like Spotify, livecasting platforms like Twitch, fitness platforms like FitBit, plagiarism detection platforms like TurnitIn, gaming platforms like Steam....the list goes on.
We should also be aware that even platforms that aren't explicitly social can be driven by technologies that create socially networked effects. We've probably all heard of algorithmic manipulation on social networking sites like Facebook with "personally designed news feeds," but the most notorious company deploying algorithmic "recipes" to sort, rank and target its users is actually Google. Companies like Uber that gather our geographical data are also key players in the tracing and tracking game. Even if you never go online at all, your phone is already designed to work like a drone, collecting and reporting your movement patterns back to the companies that built them (and sometimes to the governments where they are located.)
The class will take up these issues, framing them in terms of what can be seen, known, enforced, and resisted in social media culture. Throughout, we'll continue to return to the question: What are the best ways to learn, advocate, create, love and protect ourselves in social media culture, when both visibility and invisibility offer promise and threat?
Full Schedule of lectures, tutorials and assessments can be seen here:
Your attendance at tutorials is EXPECTED, but NOT GRADED. Additional IMPORTANT NOTE: If you miss a tutorial: Instructors cannot "catch you up" for this unit--you must do that on your own! To do that: watch that week's tutorial video (will be posted each week to Echo360) and complete that week's tutorial worksheet (also available on Echo 360) to stay current with the unit. Please bring your questions to your next tutorial session, or if you need faster answers, attend Terri's weekly Zoom office hour sessions.
This class is exceptionally large for a Level 3 unit, and the only personal meetings we can have with students are those relating to personal issues: illness, disability accomodations, domestic hardship issues, foreign student difficulty accessing materials, etc. Students desiring to "have a quick personal chat" about their assessment ideas will be directed to raise their issues during tutorial time (that is why it exists) or to bring them to Terri's group office hour session. Please note that office hours for this unit are held once weekly in group format over Zoom, where we will work on issues as a cohort. This is because there really are no assessment-related questions that so unique and personal that the everyone wouldn't benefit from working through them as a group.
Full Schedule of lectures, tutorials and assessments can be seen here:
Macquarie University policies and procedures are accessible from Policy Central (https://policies.mq.edu.au). Students should be aware of the following policies in particular with regard to Learning and Teaching:
Students seeking more policy resources can visit Student Policies (https://students.mq.edu.au/support/study/policies). It is your one-stop-shop for the key policies you need to know about throughout your undergraduate student journey.
To find other policies relating to Teaching and Learning, visit Policy Central (https://policies.mq.edu.au) and use the search tool.
Macquarie University students have a responsibility to be familiar with the Student Code of Conduct: https://students.mq.edu.au/admin/other-resources/student-conduct
Results published on platform other than eStudent, (eg. iLearn, Coursera etc.) or released directly by your Unit Convenor, are not confirmed as they are subject to final approval by the University. Once approved, final results will be sent to your student email address and will be made available in eStudent. For more information visit connect.mq.edu.au or if you are a Global MBA student contact globalmba.support@mq.edu.au
At Macquarie, we believe academic integrity – honesty, respect, trust, responsibility, fairness and courage – is at the core of learning, teaching and research. We recognise that meeting the expectations required to complete your assessments can be challenging. So, we offer you a range of resources and services to help you reach your potential, including free online writing and maths support, academic skills development and wellbeing consultations.
Macquarie University provides a range of support services for students. For details, visit http://students.mq.edu.au/support/
The Writing Centre provides resources to develop your English language proficiency, academic writing, and communication skills.
The Library provides online and face to face support to help you find and use relevant information resources.
Macquarie University offers a range of Student Support Services including:
Got a question? Ask us via the Service Connect Portal, or contact Service Connect.
For help with University computer systems and technology, visit http://www.mq.edu.au/about_us/offices_and_units/information_technology/help/.
When using the University's IT, you must adhere to the Acceptable Use of IT Resources Policy. The policy applies to all who connect to the MQ network including students.
Unit information based on version 2024.02 of the Handbook