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Pages:
6 pages/β‰ˆ1650 words
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Check Instructions
Style:
MLA
Subject:
Communications & Media
Type:
Essay
Language:
English (U.S.)
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Date:
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Topic:

Definitional Argument : Social media

Essay Instructions:

This essay is in two parts. (See the attached guide for more information)
Writing Studio Draft: 500+ words
Length: Final Copy: 1000+ words, double-spaced, 12-point standard font.
Format: Final copy should adhere to MLA documentation style
You must use at least two of the articles in the Social Media / Technology section for sources in your argument.
Here are two articles I choose from the list provided: (I attached a pdf copy of the article for the first link in case it doesn't open)
https://link(dot)gale(dot)com/apps/doc/A386464433/UHIC?u=txshracd2512&sid=UHIC&xid=d54f74c7
http://bigthink(dot)com/videos/tristan-harris-social-medias-dark-side-how-connectivity-uprooted-our-self-worth
Citations: All sources used in your paper should be documented correctly according to your specific documentation style. In-text parenthetical citations for any material directly quoted, paraphrased, or summarized should correspond to citations on the Works Cited page.
Illustrations: Feel free to include images, graphs, tables, or other visual elements in your essay if they seem appropriate. You can experiment here with using visual as well as verbal rhetoric in the essay. Note: Visual elements should be cited on the Works Cited page.

Essay Sample Content Preview:

Student Last Name 1
Student Name
Professor Name
Class
Date
Social Media: Definitional Argument
1. Part One: Writing Studio Draft
Technology has always been around. For millennia, humans have learned to develop and master using different innovations for numerous purposes including, of course, for survival. In ancient ages, innovations were more or less easy to use and, perhaps more interestingly, easier to predict. The use of sticks, for example, to produce fire was understandable given how simple making a fire was millennia ago. The progress of human civilization – and, for that matter, inventions – has made innovations more complex, more widely adopted and, for one, increasingly, harder to predict long-run outcomes of. Today, innovations are not only harder to predict yet, more importantly if not dangerously, more manipulative and elusive. Take online platforms and websites.
In early Internet days, online chat and discussion boards were so popular yet also so simple and easily predictable. In essence, users simply wrote something in a way similar someone writes on a notebook and press “Send.” The answers were just as straightforward and predictable from registered users. The focus in online chat and discussion boards was, indeed, on conversations per se. That is, given how simple design of chat and discussion boards was, users, not distracted by so many features or notifications, were almost exclusively focused on ongoing conversations, i.e. substance, not form. The case for a conversation-only chat is no, or at least largely, not applicable to more sophisticated online social interaction applications and platforms including, most notably, social media.
Today, social media has come to dominate everyday life for millions. If anything, millions of all ages, backgrounds and education are now literally hooked to social media platforms, particularly n
Student Last Name 2
cell phones. The volume of interactions on any given day and for any given country is, indeed, beyond
imagination. In contrast to earlier (and much simpler in design) chat and discussion boards, social
media – including, most notably, wildly popular services such as Facebook, Twitter and SnapChat – do
not only far surpass earlier social boards in content but in design sophistication and, more interestingly,
user manipulation. Specifically, social media – and, for that matter, similar user engagement
innovations including AI-enabled devices – now increasingly include design features and user
experience attention grabbers making conversations a matter of secondary importance and laying more
emphasis, intentionally or not, on user's attention and, for commercial purposes, pocket. In so doing,
social media have come to shape, directly or not, user experiences, if not behaviors, instead of being
enablers for user interaction and empowerment.
The current state of social media affairs raises a very legitimate question about what social media are all about. Or, in a more contemplative manner, what social media are. That is, if in early Internet days a much more simpler and “innocent” goal of developing chat and discussion boards was to enhance user interaction ...
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