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Social networking: Is it another sta...
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Robinson, Sandy L.
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Social networking: Is it another stage in the evolution of communication and does it affect the way we think about problem solving and communicating?
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Social networking: Is it another stage in the evolution of communication and does it affect the way we think about problem solving and communicating?/
Author:
Robinson, Sandy L.
Description:
56 p.
Notes:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 48-05, page: 2586.
Contained By:
Masters Abstracts International48-05.
Subject:
Sociology, Theory and Methods. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1474954
ISBN:
9781109714593
Social networking: Is it another stage in the evolution of communication and does it affect the way we think about problem solving and communicating?
Robinson, Sandy L.
Social networking: Is it another stage in the evolution of communication and does it affect the way we think about problem solving and communicating?
- 56 p.
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 48-05, page: 2586.
Thesis (M.A.)--Gonzaga University, 2009.
This thesis explores whether participants in online social networking sites differ from non-participants in their approach to problem solving or in their attitudes about their interactions with their own social networks. Walter Ong (1982) determined that people's thinking changed with different media usage, particularly from oral to script, script to print, and print to electronic. This research examines problem solving and attitudes about interactions with social networks as two criteria for exploring how people think. In a review of the literature, the thesis explores the theory of media ecology, which expands on the work of McLuhan (1967) and Ong (1982), regarding how people are affected by the media they use as well as whether it is possible to form community online. Through a survey questionnaire, the research explores whether participants in online communities differ in their thinking regarding problem solving and their attitudes about their interactions with their cohort. The principle questions of this research are whether those who participate in online communities differ in their approach and interaction with their social network from people who do not participate in online socialization and whether those who participate in online communities differ in their approach to problem solving and negotiating their daily lives from people who do not participate in online socialization.
ISBN: 9781109714593Subjects--Topical Terms:
626625
Sociology, Theory and Methods.
Social networking: Is it another stage in the evolution of communication and does it affect the way we think about problem solving and communicating?
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Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 48-05, page: 2586.
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Advisers: Michael Hazel; Paul Mark Wadleigh.
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Thesis (M.A.)--Gonzaga University, 2009.
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This thesis explores whether participants in online social networking sites differ from non-participants in their approach to problem solving or in their attitudes about their interactions with their own social networks. Walter Ong (1982) determined that people's thinking changed with different media usage, particularly from oral to script, script to print, and print to electronic. This research examines problem solving and attitudes about interactions with social networks as two criteria for exploring how people think. In a review of the literature, the thesis explores the theory of media ecology, which expands on the work of McLuhan (1967) and Ong (1982), regarding how people are affected by the media they use as well as whether it is possible to form community online. Through a survey questionnaire, the research explores whether participants in online communities differ in their thinking regarding problem solving and their attitudes about their interactions with their cohort. The principle questions of this research are whether those who participate in online communities differ in their approach and interaction with their social network from people who do not participate in online socialization and whether those who participate in online communities differ in their approach to problem solving and negotiating their daily lives from people who do not participate in online socialization.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1474954
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