(More info here: http://wp.me/pTIwx-1w0) Originally presented as:
Brown, P.G. (2014, November). Understanding the Digital Identity Development of Our Students. Presentation at the Annual Conference of Region I of the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators, Newport, RI.
2. (Turkle, 2004, para 6)
“I want to study
not only what the
computer is doing
for us, but what it
is doing to us.”
- Turkle
3. 89%
of adults 18-29 years old use social media
67%
access it on mobile
98%
of adults ages 18-29 are on the internet
70
70
70
43%
60%
89%
65+
50-64
30-49
70
78% 18-29
social media use
by age
(Brenner, 2013; Brenner & Smith, 2013; Pew Internet Project, n.d.)
younger generations
are using the internet,
social media, and mobile
technologies at a high rate
4. é Engagement
é Persistence
é Social Capital
é Relationships
é Narcissism
ê Task-Switching
Whattheresearchtellsus…
Collegestudentsocialmedia
useandoutcomes…
7. “Many student affairs
professionals use the term
digital identity
development to refer to
online professional self-
presentation; however, it
is important to tease apart
the differences between
using social media as part
of the exploration and
development of identity
and using social media to
present oneself in a
certain way.”
(Junco, 2014, p. 257)
8. “Labeling the latter digital
identity development
confounds a developmental
process with a professional
communication strategy.
Furthermore, labeling online
professional self-presentation
digital identity development
may keep the field of student
affairs from more critically
and deeply examining how
the emerging adult identity
development process is
affected by online
interactions.”
(Junco, 2014, p. 257)
16. (Evans, Forney, Guido, Patton, & Renn, 2010, p. 5;
Woodard, Love, & Komives, 2000)
“Rapidly changing
conditions within
society have created
dramatically different
circumstances for
students across time
and location…
student
development
must be
considered in light
of these changing
scenarios.”
develop new
theories
17. “human development
‘remain[s] much the same
from age to age and must
so remain as long as
human nature and
physical environment
existing theories
modify/apply
(Evans, Forney, Guido, Patton, & Renn, 2010, p. 93;
Haskins, 1957)
continue what they
have been. In his
relations to life and
learning the medieval
student resembled his
modern successor far
more than is often
supposed’ (p. 93).”
18. Applying current
theories to online/
social media contexts.
• Chickering
• Baxter Magolda/Kegan
• Bronfenbrenner
22. • Time management
• Facility in using online tools to complete
tasks
• Communication and interaction skills
• Relationship skills
• Not exhibiting humblebrag behavior
Developing Competence
DIGITAL
24. • Anger management - Thinking before
posting
• Dealing with depression - Self confidence
recognizing that social media posts often
only show the positive
• Expanding and expressing range of positive
emotions
• Not posting for sympathy or to elicit
response form others
Managing Emotions
DIGITAL
26. • Ownership over one’s online life
• Able to use social media as a tool for
action
• Finding information and resources
• Resisting peer pressure
• Consciously choosing peers and
relationships
• Basing relationships on equality and
reciprocity
Autonomy & Interdependence
DIGITAL
27. “And I like honesty in a relationship…
I’m not into playing games.”
Mature Interpersonal Relationships
28. • Able to engage in civil discourse through
comments and chats
• Understanding what online versus offline
relationship maintenance should look like
- acts appropriately
• Thinks about one’s posts and its impact
on others
Mature Interpersonal Relationships
DIGITAL
30. • Identity exploration online — taking on
personas, finding like communities
• Acting consistently across contexts (?)
Online/Offline, Across different sites
• Developing comfort with body and
appearance - Selfies? Narcissim?
• Establishing and taking an active role in
curating self-presentation with purpose
Establishing Identity
DIGITAL
32. • Utilizing online tools to network
• Engaging in career interests and
groups online
• Able to articulate how/why they use
social media
Developing Purpose
DIGITAL
34. • Clarify values through online interaction
• Able to understand and contextualize
others’ post/beleifs
• Are you a authentic self online and off
(does it matter?)
• Ability to use social media for social
good
Developing Integrity
DIGITAL
36. Stage
We are:
Subject
(structure of knowing)
We Have:
Object
(content of knowing)
Underlying
Structure
1
Perceptions
SOCIAL
PERCEPTIONS
Impulses
Movement
Sensation
SinglePoint/
Immediate/
Atomistic
2
Concrete
POINT OF VIEW
Impulses
Perceptions
SOCIAL
PERCEPTIONS
Impulses
Durable Category
Kegan Subject/Object Schema of Cognitive Development
37. Stage
We are:
Subject
(structure of knowing)
We Have:
Object
(content of knowing)
Underlying
Structure
3
Traditio-
nalism
Abstractions
MUTUALITY/
INTERPERSONALISM
Relationship
Inner States
Concrete
POINT OF VIEW
Enduring Dispositions,
Needs, Prefs.
Cross Categorical
4
Modernism
Abstract Systems
INSTITUTION
Relationship-Regulating Forms
Self-authorship
Abstractions
MUTUALITY
Relationships
Inner states, Subjectivity,
Self-consciousness
System/Complex
38. Stage
We are:
Subject
(structure of knowing)
We Have:
Object
(content of knowing)
Underlying
Structure
5
Post-Modernism
Dialectical
INTER-INSTITUTIONAL
Self-transformation
Abstract Systems
Ideology
INSTITUTION
Relationship-Regulating
Forms
Self-authorship
Trans-System
Trans-Complex
40. What is Self-Authorship?
A particular and relatively enduring way of
understanding and orienting oneself to
provocative situations in a way that:
1) Recognizes the contextual nature of
knowledge; and
2) Balances and guides this understanding
with the development of internally defined
goals and sense of self
41.
42. Self-authored individuals:
• Look at all aspects of a situation or issue
• All perspectives no longer equal
• Learning involves thinking through
problems and integrating knowledge in
context
• Points of view are supported by evidence
51. Microsystem
Mesosystem
Exosystem Macrosystem
“Although Bronfenbrenner did not include computer-mediated
contexts in which college students now
experience ‘activities, roles, and interpersonal
relations’ (p. 16), in the twenty-first century it
seems reasonable to include these contexts,
which are not face-to-face settings, in the
definition of microsystems since they are sites
where social, physical, and symbolic features
may provoke or retard engagement with the
environment, as described by Bronfenbrenner
(1993).” p.163
52. The student is at an intersection
point of a number of networks.
53. Microsystem
Mesosystem
Exosystem Macrosystem
is in network with others…
is immersed in social media
site culture…
and is subject to rules and
decisions made by social
media designers…
…and broader beliefs
about how the site
functions and is used.
54. Engage with students on social media because
we need to understand them in all of their
contexts.
Understand how each social media site and
tool may impact the developmental process
differently by the way they are structured and
used.
Realize development may happen differently
and at different paces in different contexts.
Understand that development may be more like
a theory of relativity than concrete.