• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

@BasilPuglisi

Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI, Since 2009

  • Headlines
  • My Story
    • Engagements & Moderating
  • AI – Artificial Intelligence
    • Content Disclaimer
    • đź§­ AI for Professionals
  • Basil’s Brand Blog
  • Building Blocks by AI
  • Barstool Biz Blog

Essay

Is Tweeting the New Research Paper?

March 11, 2012 by Basil Puglisi 9 Comments

Over the years, writing has changed immensely. Not only in words, but in structure as well. When I was in school, regular 4-6 page essays and stories were common. Go back a few hundred years and plays were more in style (ex: Shakespeare). Quite a few more centuries and you see epic (read: really long) poems (ex: Odyssey). The fact is that types of writing can also go in and out of style just as clogs do.
With the emerging world of social media, a new form of writing is beginning to rise. Rather than essays, English teachers are beginning to change their chosen method of writing. Teenagers are becoming so adept at turning long stories into short stories because of character limits that writing long essays is a mystery. In order to keep students interested and the classes modern, teachers are choosing to teach with social media.
While some litterateurs will forever scoff at these changes, there are also ways in which it makes a lot more sense than traditional rules and essays. One professor points out that when students are required to meet a certain page or word length, they resort to plagiarism, text that is too large, unnecessary spaces, long, drawn-out sentences, and repetition. The result is that the students are not necessarily better writers, but they can indeed write long papers, whether most of it is empty words or not.
An assignment that does not have a set length or has a short minimum requirement helps the student to write concisely and more creatively. And the best part? Students are doing homework every day without even realizing it, when posting new information on their chosen social media platform.
I’ve read stories of classrooms using social media to answer questions instead of raising hands. Students tweet their answer. Other classes give writing assignments with a word limit of 140; abbreviations are allowed, punctuation is optional. While some of it can go a little far, set limits are looking to be a great tool in producing great writers.
One interesting plan that I have seen is for the students to choose a short status update, tweet, or ad from the paper, usually one that is 10 words or less. Then have a discussion about what they mean, maybe imagine the story behind it. In turn, their assignment is to take a popular story like Cinderella or Harry Potter and make it into a 6-10 word story:
Unappreciated, abused stepdaughter, maid finds glass slipper with Prince.

In today’s world of limited patience and fast-paced workers, no one wants to sit down and read a long paper, essay, press release, or article anymore. As these factors change, it only makes sense that writing styles change, too. While I am all for a good long book, I like articles to be short and concise. If the students of today are leaning these new styles of writing, it seems that they may be more successful in a world of 140-character limits.
Author:

Megan Campbell has a degree from Clemson University in Graphic Communications, and is currently living in Germany during a Gap Year abroad, working as an au pair and freelance writer. Her degree set her up for a great interest and knowledge of social media. You can find her on her blog, balancewithadashofcrazy, or contact her via email at meganecamp at gmail dot com.
Sources:

  • http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/28/less-is-more-using-social-media-to-inspire-concise-writing/
  • http://homeschooling.penelopetrunk.com/2012/02/10/social-media-is-the-best-school/
  • http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2011/01/twitter_talk_meets_english_at.html
  • http://spotlight.macfound.org/blog/entry/reading-writing-and-tweeting-studies-on-using-twitter-for-class

Filed Under: Basil's Blog #AIa, General Tagged With: Cinderella, Clemson University, Essay, Gap Year, Harry Potter, Short story, Social Media, Writing

Primary Sidebar

For Small Business

Facebook Groups: Build a Local Community Following Without Advertising Spend

Turn Google Reviews Smarter to Win New Customers

Save Time with AI: Let It Write Your FAQ Page Draft

Let AI Handle Your Google Profile Updates

How to Send One Customer Email That Doesn’t Get Ignored

Keep Your Google Listing Safe from Sneaky Changes

#AIgenerated

Spam Updates, SERP Volatility, and AI-Driven Search Shifts

Mapping the July Shake-Up: Core Update Fallout, AI Overviews, and Privacy Pull

Navigating SEO After Google’s June 2025 Core Update

Navigating SEO in a Localized, Zero-Click World

Communities Fragment, Platforms Adapt, and Trust Recalibrates #AIg

Yahoo Deliverability Shake-Up & Multi-Engine SEO in a Privacy-First World

Social Media: Monetization Races Ahead, Earnings Expand, and Burnout Surfaces #AIg

SEO Map: Core Updates, AI Overviews, and Bing’s New Copilot

YouTube Shorts, TikTok, Meta Reels, and X Accelerate Creation, Engagement, and Monetization #AIg

Surviving February’s Volatility: AI Overviews, Local Bugs, and Technical Benchmarks

Social Media: AI Tools Mature, Testing Expands, and Engagement Rules #AIg

Navigating Zero-Click SERPs and Local Volatility Now

More Posts from this Category

#SMAC #SocialMediaWeek

Basil Social Media Week

Digital Ethos Holiday Networking

Basil Speaking for Digital Ethos
RSS Search

@BasilPuglisi Copyright 2008, Factics™ BasilPuglisi.com, Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI,