I participated in a webinar this morning through NASPA. It
was about ethics and social media. It was refreshing because they talked about
students and professionals, including examples and etiquette tips. It did not
bash students, it did provide some interesting take aways.
Take Away 1
Context Collapse
“We mitigate ourselves in different ways as part of the
human condition and there are different contexts in which we act and speak.
Social media causes all of those contexts to collapse upon one another. All of
those different contexts can see each other at once. Students have a difficult
time understanding that.”
I like the way the speaker explained that we are different
parts of ourselves in different areas of our lives. The way we act in church is
different from the way we act in class, which is different from the way we act
at home, around friends, around family, and at work. He called these the
various contexts. When it comes to social media, all those different areas can
see what we post, filters withstanding. So the cultural norms and rules of
etiquette we follow in real life at all these different contexts do not exist
and are not at play when we use social media. One post might be fine for one
context and completely inappropriate for another, but all contexts see it. So
there is tension.
Take Away 2
“We are all one tweet away from being fired.”
So true. I think we
need to be careful about what we put on social media, but I also think people
should just be good people in general. If someone is scared of putting out
hateful, racist, misogynistic remarks for fear of being fired, maybe they
should really examine why they are so hate filled in the first place.
Take Away 3
“Our posts matter and we should have a social media
presence, but oversharing is a problem.”
I like that the presenters suggest as professionals we
should have a social media presence. We can be role models, we can be current,
we can add to the creative process and share resources. Multiple reasons exist
in support of us being on social media. However, I also like that the
presenters gave examples of how we ourselves overshare and can do better about
balancing our personal truths and the extent to which we share healthy behaviors.
They provided an example of a professor who tweets often about wanting to lose
weight or drop a couple of dress sizes. Instead the professor could tweet about
finding a great lo-calorie recipe or a great place for hiking or walking to get
exercise. The same sentiment of being health comes across without the tones of
body shaming.
Take Away 4
“Social media did not create bad behavior, it just amplified
it.”
So true! It also made it available for everyone to judge and
comment on.
I thought the presenters (pictured below), had great points.
Do y'all see social media as an online place we can navigate ethically? In particularly when there are times when you are forced to participate in un-ethical posts at no fault of your own because of the way social media works?
2 comments:
Great post... I feel like up until recently social media has become so big that it can even affect your workplace. When social media started (Myspace) I was a kid and didn't really think about the repercussions of what I posted. Even when Facebook came out (when I was in high school) us kids didn't think our posts would follow us into our professional careers. It is crazy to think that social media is now used as a public outlet for people's political, personal, and social agenda.. all in one space. I agree that if you post hateful remarks, you better not be surprised if you lose your job over it. I think everyone should know by now that NOTHING on the internet is private!!
You are so right. Nothing on our phones is private either. Especially since they are connected to everything! Cell phone companies can track us, we store our bank info on them, our emails can be accessed, it's kind of creepy. I remember watching Will Smith in Enemy of the State (a la 1998) and being terrified of how technology could be used against someone. I don't understand why people would make it even easier by carelessly posting every thought that comes in their head.
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