User:Aaronshaw

Hello! I am an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Northwestern, a Faculty Associate of the Berkman-Klein Center at Harvard University, a Visiting Professor (AY2022-2023) in the Department of Communication at the University of Washington, and the "Scholar in Residence" (AY2022-2023) for King County, Washington. I also helped co-found the CDSC and am one of the faculty members in the group. Among various other affiliations, I am a faculty member in the Media, Technology & Society (MTS) Ph.D. Program and the Technology & Social Behavior Ph.D. Program. I have a few too many profiles in various parts of the Web, all of which I struggle to keep up to date. A good place to find current information is usually my website. If you'd like to get in touch, please [mailto:aaronshaw@northwestern.edu send me an email] (and don't be shy about re-sending if I don't reply).

Current classes hosted in this wiki
N/A (I am on leave from Northwestern during AY2022-2023).

Office hours signups
Looking to schedule a meeting with me? Please sign up for an OH appointment. If I'm your advisor, serving on your committee, or supervising a qualifying exam, I also have a page with my advising/mentoring office hours schedule.

Archived classes hosted on this wiki

 * COMMST-378/MTS 525—Online Communities & Crowds (Winter, 2022)
 * MTS 501—Introduction to Graduate Research (Fall, 2021)
 * MTS 525/COMMST 395—Statistics and Statistical Programming (Fall 2020)
 * MTS 503—The Practice of Scholarship (Spring, 2019)
 * MTS 525—Statistics and Statistical Programming (Spring 2019)

Resources

 * Asking me for a reference or letter of recommendation? Please read this first.
 * Course policies. The policies that govern my classes at Northwestern. I will try to update these and usually link to them from my course syllabus.
 * Assessment rubrics/policies. The assessment rubrics and policies I use in my classes. These are stated as generally as possible to enable me to use them across many kinds of courses and assignments.
 * Better Wikipedia citations. I teach about Wikipedia pretty often and, maybe as a result, students (correctly!) assume that I am comfortable with them citing Wikipedia as a reference. However, too many attempts to cite Wikipedia are of poor quality for various reasons. After seeing the problem and telling people about it a few times, I decided to write up a solution here so that it can be a more public resource.
 * An archive of my COVID policies that applied to several courses I taught during the pandemic. I don't expect to use these again anytime soon, but have maintained them here.

Links I liked and you might too

 * Ph.D. application tips
 * Someone else's suggestions about how to email your professor without being annoying AF.