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Journal Article
Pedagogy (2009) 9 (1): 152–157.
Published: 01 January 2009
...Daniel R. Mangiavellano This article makes a case for using MySpace as a pedagogical tool in the survey course. MySpace can draw attention to the kinds of restrictions the collaboration between “literary” and “history” places on how the survey course interprets the past. The article gives detailed...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2009) 9 (1): 121–133.
Published: 01 January 2009
...
New York Times. 2007. “Bad Report Card,” 27 February. www.nytimes.com/2007/02/27/
opinion/27tue3.html.
“New Jersey City University Mission Statement.” www.njcu.edu/aboutnjcu/mission_
statement.asp.
doi 10.1215/15314200-2008-022
“Reach for Me Again”
MySpace and the Brit Lit II...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2009) 9 (1): 134–141.
Published: 01 January 2009
...
New York Times. 2007. “Bad Report Card,” 27 February. www.nytimes.com/2007/02/27/
opinion/27tue3.html.
“New Jersey City University Mission Statement.” www.njcu.edu/aboutnjcu/mission_
statement.asp.
doi 10.1215/15314200-2008-022
“Reach for Me Again”
MySpace and the Brit Lit II...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2009) 9 (1): 142–152.
Published: 01 January 2009
...
New York Times. 2007. “Bad Report Card,” 27 February. www.nytimes.com/2007/02/27/
opinion/27tue3.html.
“New Jersey City University Mission Statement.” www.njcu.edu/aboutnjcu/mission_
statement.asp.
doi 10.1215/15314200-2008-022
“Reach for Me Again”
MySpace and the Brit Lit II...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2010) 10 (1): 241–256.
Published: 01 January 2010
...': MySpace and the Brit Lit II Survey.” Pedagogy 9 : 152 –57. Menikoff, Kirk, and Jennifer Munroe. 2007 . “Seasoning the Sonnet, Playing Poets: The Sonnet Slam as Extrapedagogical Event.” Pedagogy 7 : 251 –57. Miller, Scott L. 2005 . “Tutor Taxonomy.” Pedagogy 5 : 103 –4. Mills, Dan...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2009) 9 (1): 1–2.
Published: 01 January 2009
... with on the syllabus, and by extension,
whom we are asking our students to come to know in the course of the term.
Where we keep that company is equally important — from Thomas Hothem’s
suburban ecocomposition to Tara Williams’s multimedia medievalism to
Daniel Mangiavellano’s MySpace British literature...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2015) 15 (2): 331–351.
Published: 01 April 2015
... Lille III . Mangiavellano Daniel R. 2009 . “ ‘Reach for Me Again’: Myspace and the Brit Lit II Survey .” Pedagogy 9.1 : 152 – 57 . Mangum Teresa . 2012 . “ Going Public: From the Perspective of the Classroom .” Pedagogy 12.1 : 5 – 18 . Marsh Joss . 2011...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2008) 8 (1): 75–90.
Published: 01 January 2008
... and Knobel 2003)
engage in regularly, from MySpace or Facebook to blogs to IM and video
games. However, the public and open nature of wikis, such as Wikitravel,
also problematizes these insiders’ views of collaboration and publication. In
what follows, I outline this digital writing project...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2011) 11 (1): 135–152.
Published: 01 January 2011
... may sound outlandish, but the
study I reference here accounts for the total by pointing out that teenagers
often use three different media simultaneously: they will be on their MySpace
page and cell phone and have the television going all at the same time. There
is a growing body of research...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2010) 10 (1): 167–174.
Published: 01 January 2010
...-expressive
to the argumentative.
This old step and old problem seems more pressing now than ever
given the popularity of social networking sites (Facebook, MySpace) that
invite members to post or twitter status reports that participants can simply
like (with a thumbs-up icon) and that provide...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2014) 14 (2): 199–223.
Published: 01 April 2014
... Bulletin 99 : 29 – 33 . Laist Randy . 2009 . “ The Self-Deconstructing Canon: Teaching the Survey Course without Perpetuating Hegemony .” Currents in Teaching and Learning 1 : 50 – 57 . Mangiavellano Daniel R. 2009 . “‘ Reach for Me Again’: MySpace and the Brit Lit II Survey...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2010) 10 (1): 55–68.
Published: 01 January 2010
...
games and MySpace distracted young people from interactions with family
or friends: the “real things” in life. “What’s the point of meeting someone out
there who is also sitting in front of his computer?” she asked. “I don’t think
you can build some great friendships by sitting in front of your...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2011) 11 (1): 63–79.
Published: 01 January 2011
... to inhabit a Second Life island, or posting a YouTube video of
otters holding hands, or updating Facebook or MySpace pages, or posting a
new album of photos to a Flickr site. The potential for new media scholar-
ship in these Web 2.0 arenas remains, and Wikipedia is a fine example of this
potential...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2010) 10 (3): 555–562.
Published: 01 October 2010
... among
students that cultural critique is a privileged, elitist mode of inquiry, one that
is largely indifferent to, if not contemptuous of, those it presumably seeks to
enlighten or liberate.” Since sites like Facebook and MySpace are frequently
cast as dangerous technologies in the media...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2010) 10 (3): 562–567.
Published: 01 October 2010
... noted “the perception among
students that cultural critique is a privileged, elitist mode of inquiry, one that
is largely indifferent to, if not contemptuous of, those it presumably seeks to
enlighten or liberate.” Since sites like Facebook and MySpace are frequently
cast as dangerous...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2010) 10 (3): 568–573.
Published: 01 October 2010
... among
students that cultural critique is a privileged, elitist mode of inquiry, one that
is largely indifferent to, if not contemptuous of, those it presumably seeks to
enlighten or liberate.” Since sites like Facebook and MySpace are frequently
cast as dangerous technologies in the media...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2013) 13 (3): 537–544.
Published: 01 October 2013
... to analyze their online personae.
Evaluate your blog, Twitter account, and any social networking services that you
visit daily (Facebook, MySpace, etc
• What kind of personae do your online activities have? What made you choose
your profile picture?
• What made you select to include...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2013) 13 (3): 544–548.
Published: 01 October 2013
... your blog, Twitter account, and any social networking services that you
visit daily (Facebook, MySpace, etc
• What kind of personae do your online activities have? What made you choose
your profile picture?
• What made you select to include and exclude certain pieces of information...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2013) 13 (3): 549–553.
Published: 01 October 2013
... and ethos we had completed. The assignment
asked the students to analyze their online personae.
Evaluate your blog, Twitter account, and any social networking services that you
visit daily (Facebook, MySpace, etc
• What kind of personae do your online activities have? What made you choose...
Journal Article
Pedagogy (2013) 13 (3): 554–561.
Published: 01 October 2013
... your blog, Twitter account, and any social networking services that you
visit daily (Facebook, MySpace, etc
• What kind of personae do your online activities have? What made you choose
your profile picture?
• What made you select to include and exclude certain pieces of information...
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