Social Media Storytelling: Using Blogs and Twitter to Create a Community of Practice for Writing Scholarship

By Kim M. Mitchell

This paper argues that social media can function as an informal community of practice in writing scholarship where knowledge is absorbed into a user’s identity and practice through storytelling. Social media has increasingly attracted academics and…

Listada em Article | publicação por grupo Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie

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Versão 1.0 - publicado em 10 Jul 2025 doi: 10.31468/cjsdwr.726 - Citar isto

Licenciado sob Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0

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This paper argues that social media can function as an informal community of practice in writing scholarship where knowledge is absorbed into a user’s identity and practice through storytelling. Social media has increasingly attracted academics and educators as a method of trialing new research ideas and classroom strategies, seeking early peer review, and as a knowledge translation strategy for sharing research findings. Platforms such as Twitter and blogs work in tandem to provide exposure, encourage reflection, and build community. Storytelling becomes a form ofpersuasion, through use of literary strategies, to influence change. This argument recognizes how social media writing is situated in a unique genre and requires writing strategies that may be unfamiliar to academic writers. A social media storytelling interlude demonstrates a case of social media persona development for writing scholarship and acts as an example of the voice, tone, and literary strategies of social media writing. The paper concludes with a discussion of strategies aligned with researching the impact of social media on pedagogical practices.

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Original publication: Mitchell, Kim M. "Social Media Storytelling: Using Blogs and Twitter to Create a Community of Practice for Writing Scholarship." Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie, vol. 29, 2019, pp. 1-23. DOI: 10.31468/cjsdwr.726. This material has been re-published in an unmodified form on the Canadian HSS Commons with the permission of Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie. Copyright © the author(s). Work published in DW/R is licensed under the Creative Commons CC BY-SA license

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