Write a 1500 word Field Report based on your journal entries over the course of the semester. The goal of a field report is to bridge the theory you’ve learned in class to the media you’ve been observing and documenting all semester.

<aside> 🤔 This is a simplified version of a true field report. We are not using many of the more advanced techniques that you will typically find in anthropology classes.

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Digital Ethnography is a research method that involves the study of online communities, cultures, and practices through immersive observation and interaction within digital environments. Unlike traditional ethnography, which typically focuses on physical spaces and face-to-face interactions, digital ethnography explores how people create, communicate, and maintain cultural practices in virtual spaces such as social media platforms, online forums, and virtual worlds. This approach not only considers the content shared within these spaces but also the technological frameworks that shape how interactions occur, such as algorithms, platform design, and digital affordances.

Two major works that exemplify digital ethnography are Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out: Kids Living and Learning with New Media by Mizuko Ito et al., which investigates how young people engage with digital media in their everyday lives, and Coming of Age in Second Life: An Anthropologist Explores the Virtually Human by Tom Boellstorff, which offers an in-depth study of the virtual world of Second Life, exploring how identity, culture, and community are constructed in a purely digital environment. These works have laid significant groundwork for understanding how digital spaces influence and reflect broader social and cultural phenomena.

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Format & Structure for your Field Report

Objective:

The goal of this assignment is to conduct an in-depth digital ethnography of an online community or media object. You will explore the cultural practices, interactions, and technological influences that shape this community. Through this project, you’ll apply theoretical concepts from the course and develop critical insights into the relationship between technology and culture.

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Use at least three sources from class and be sure to critically engage with those sources. You’ll likely need other sources as well, but having at least three from class is critical to the success of your paper.

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Assignment Guidelines:

  1. Topic Selection:

  2. Theoretical Background

    Ground your observations in the theoretical frameworks and concepts we have discussed throughout the course. Whether you choose a traditional written report or a creative format for your final submission, the following guidelines must be adhered to:

    Early Integration of Theory:

    Application and Critical Engagement:

    Theory in Dialogue with Observations:

  3. Research Focus:

  4. Methodology:

  5. Creative Expression:

Final Report or Creative Project:

Your final submission should contain the following sections:

  1. Introduction: A brief overview of your topic, the community or media object you studied, and the key research questions or themes you explored. The theory you’ve read in class should be laid out in your introduction and woven throughout the paper.
  2. Methods: A description of the methods you used to gather data and engage with the community. (Where, how, and when did you access your community? How did you take notes or record conversations?).
  3. Object Description: Your readers only knowledge and understanding of what happened will come from the description section of your report because they have not been witness to the situation, people, or events that you are writing about. Given this, it is crucial that you provide sufficient details to place the analysis that will follow into proper context; don't make the mistake of providing a description without context. The description section of a field report is similar to a well written piece of journalism. Therefore, a helpful approach to systematically describing the varying aspects of an observed situation is to answer the "Five W’s of Investigative Reporting." These are:
  4. Analysis: A detailed analysis of your findings, connecting them to the theories and concepts covered in the course. This section should reflect your critical thinking and ability to apply academic concepts to real-world digital phenomena. The analysis goes beyond reportage of what you’ve found to uphold, expand, or reject the theory’s we’ve been working on in class. (It’s completely acceptable to note that one of your observations is explained by an existing theory).
  5. Reflection: Include a reflective piece (~300 words) that explains the rationale behind your creative choices and how they help convey your ethnographic insights.
  6. Conclusion: Summarize your key findings and reflect on what you’ve learned about the intersection of technology and culture through this project.