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Online Communities (UW COM481 Winter 2022)
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=== Project 2: Critical Analysis of an Online Community === For the final assignment, I want you to take what you've learned in the class and apply it to a community you have observed or participated in. This project will involve two written assignments and a presentation. ==== Community Identification==== ;Maximum Length: 300 words (~1 page double spaced) ;Deliverables: Turn in [https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1545809/assignments/6879162 through Canvas] ;Due Date: Friday February 18 In this assignment, you should identify a community you are interested in β and that you hope to analyze critically in your final project. In this assignment, I am asking you to write 1-2 paragraphs explaining what community you want to study, why you care about it, and why you think it would be a rich site for reflection. If relevant or possible, it might be useful to also provide a link. I am hoping that each of you will pick a community that you are intellectually committed to and invested in your personal or work life. You should also keep in mind that you will be presenting this publicly to the class. You will be successful in this assignment if you identify a community and clearly explain why you think it would be a useful community to study using the concepts we have covered in the class. I will give you feedback on these write-ups and will let you each know if I think you have identified a project that might be too ambitious, too trivial, too broad, too narrow, etc. ==== Final Projects: Critical Analysis of Online Community ==== ;Final Presentation Date: March 7 and 9 ;Paper Due Date: March 16 @ 11:59pm ;Maximum paper length: 2,000 words (~8 pages double spaced) ;Deliverables: :*Details on final presentations including due dates, instructions, and dropboxes are on [[/Final presentations]] :*Turn in copy of paper [https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1545809/assignments/6879163 in Canvas] For your final project, I expect students to build on the community identification assignment to describe what they have done and what they have found. I'll expect every student to give both: * A final presentation (see instructions on [[/Final presentations]]) * A final report that is not more than 2,000 words (~8 pages double spaced) Each project should include: (a) the description of the community you have identified (you are welcome to borrow from your Community Identification assignment), (b) a description of how you would use the course concepts to change and improve the community. You will be evaluated on the degree to which you have demonstrated that you understand and have engaged with the course material and not on specifics of your community. I want you to reflect on what parts of theory we covered apply or do not. What does the community do right according to what you've learned? What might it do differently in the future based on what you've read? What did the course and readings not teach that they should have? A successful project will tell a compelling story and will engage with, and improve upon, the course material to teach an audience that includes me, your classmates, and students taking this class in future years, how to take advantage of online communities more effectively. The very best papers will give us all a new understanding of some aspect of course material and change the way I teach some portion of this course in the future.
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