1 / 20

THE FACEBOOK PROJECT REVISITING SOCIAL CAPITAL & THE CHIEF

THE FACEBOOK PROJECT REVISITING SOCIAL CAPITAL & THE CHIEF. JEFF GINGER | PECHA-KUCHA| 10.21.2011 GRADUATE SCHOOL OF LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN. WHAT IS THE FACEBOOK PROJECT?. 2005-2009 Before the rage? Methods Long internet-based surveys

tucker
Download Presentation

THE FACEBOOK PROJECT REVISITING SOCIAL CAPITAL & THE CHIEF

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE FACEBOOK PROJECTREVISITING SOCIAL CAPITAL & THE CHIEF JEFF GINGER | PECHA-KUCHA| 10.21.2011 GRADUATE SCHOOL OF LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN

  2. WHAT IS THE FACEBOOK PROJECT? • 2005-2009 • Before the rage? • Methods • Long internet-based surveys • Discourse analysis / participant observation • Moderate length interview series • Sociological perspectives • Science and Technology Studies • Symbolic interactionism • Critical Race theory, Feminism • Expanded to include other grads

  3. WHY STUDY FACEBOOK? • I used to have to explain • Identity and affiliation • Communication • Multimedia sharing • Applications • Why is it a big deal? • Fundamentally shapes the college experience for many; now international and all ages • Might influence accumulation, production and expenditure of social capital • Interactive media and power

  4. FACEBOOK, SOCIAL CAPITAL, AND THE CHEIF • Ethnography of the University Initiative • Diversity Research Project, Center for Democracy in a Multiracial Society (CDMS) • A response to • Racial stereotype theme parties (Tacos & Tequilla) • Affirmative action protests • N*W*C* • The removal of Chief Illiniwek • Facebook framed as a space of student discourse that reflected campus-wide tensions related to Chief Illiniwek and issues of racism

  5. THE CHIEF ON FACEBOOK • NCAA’s influence on the decision to retire the Chief • If They Get Rid of the Chief, I’m Becoming a Racist • “What they don’t realize is that there never was a racist problem before … but now I hate redskins and hope all those drunk casino owning bums die.” • Another student directed a post towards a particularly vocal Native American graduate student, threatening, “I say we throw a tomahawk into her face.”

  6. RESEARCH QUESTIONS • What do people think about the campus climate in regards to race?  What actions have they purposefully taken on Facebook related to their feelings on the Chief? • What is the character of groups surrounding the topic?  What do we notice about group purpose, composition, and the activity going on within? • What does this suggest about social capital on Facebook?

  7. DATA COLLECTION METHODS: SURVEY • The Facebook Project multi-year survey • 75 responses (2 not active) • Random sample from DMI • Undergraduate, full-time, degree-seeking, 18+ • Big honking long survey with architecture problems • Not specific to this project • Poor response rate, > convenience sample, not generalizable

  8. METHODS CONTINUED: CONTENT ANALYSIS • Basic conceptual content analysis (17 Facebook groups) • Basic profile (name, URL, date, group category, etc…) • Written purpose (description) • Composition (number and racial identity of members, officers info, and admins, related groups) • Text content analysis • Sociological ethnography-style coding • Topic, tone, issues of identity, and explored possible connection to social capital • Important: students only

  9. Racial Identity of Members?? • Hard to tell • Other studies • No self-representation • No categories (MySpace) • Mayer and Puller (2008) • The Missing Box • It still matters

  10. A SUMMARY OF A FEW FINDINGS • Survey: Feelings on the campus climate • People felt both the Facebook and campus environment were pretty friendly for both minorities and Native Americans • People of color felt it was less safe, but only a little bit • This sample did not reflect a high number of racial minority respondents (and no NA participants) • I didn’t buy this survey told the real story – safety and comfort are hard to get at with a survey

  11. A SUMMARY OF A FEW FINDINGS CONTINUED • Survey: Pro and Anti Chief Activity • Active picture-changing protest was lower than expected (17.8%) • These findings suggest that the environment on Facebook was dominated primarily by pro-Chief users

  12. A SUMMARY OF A FEW FINDINGS CONTINUED • Content Analysis: Sheer Numbers • Of the 17 groups examined only 4 were anti-Chief • In general the overwhelming majority of groups were pro-Chief • Many with members in the hundreds or even thousands • A few 300-800 person pro-Chief groups were left out • The two biggest anti-Chief groups (Anti-Chief and F*** the Chief) had only about 250 members each • Whereas the top three biggest pro-Chief groups had: • 7,900+ (Chief Illiniwek Forever.) • 5,300+ (Save the Chief) • 4,300+ (We’ll Never Forget Chief Illiniwek)

  13. A SUMMARY OF A FEW FINDINGS CONTINUED • Content Analysis: Composition • More White students in pro-Chief groups • More people of color in anti-Chief groups • Methods for collection of this data were unreliable and potentially unethical • There was a great deal of cross-over between: • Ethnic/racial cultural groups and causes and anti-Chief groups • Sporting, MI, and school pride groups and Pro-Chief groups • Both sides seem to like Stephen Colbert • Who was not present? Who had the power?

  14. EXAMPLE GROUPS • Pro-Chief People Wouldn't Know Racism if it Bit Them on the A$$! (anti) • I’M anti anti-Chief People (pro) • If you hate the Chief then I hate you (pro) • F*** the Chief (anti) • Do “It” For the Chief (pro) • RIP Chief Illiniwek, Forever in Our Hearts (pro) • The Native Americans Almost Had Their ENTIRE RACE Taken From Them. (anti) • Chief Illiniwek Forever. (pro) • Signatures for the Chief (pro) • When I went to U of I we had a Chief (pro) • Bring Back the Chief (pro) • You took our Chief but you will never take our money (again)! (pro) • Anti-Chief (anti) • Don’t Like the Chief? Go Somewhere Else… fuckin Idiots! (pro) • Chief Illiniwek, We Will Never Forget (pro) • Save the Chief (pro) • We’ll Never Forget Chief Illiniwek (pro)

  15. A SUMMARY OF A FEW FINDINGS CONTINUED • Content Analysis: Architecture of the Interface • Connecting and sharing (language, generally open, share functions – outgoing and incoming, common interests, sharing multimedia, feedback mechanisms everywhere!) • Activity and involvement (recent activities, memberships and affiliations, tagging within multimedia and notes) • Content vs. form (character limits, western style, given navigation options and colors, refresh rates on walls, EULA)

  16. A SUMMARY OF A FEW FINDINGS CONTINUED • Content Analysis: Discourse • Topics included issues of race/ethnicity, racism/discrimination/prejudice, presentation and ownership of image/identity, mascots vs. symbols, school pride and tradition, reliability/validity/relevance of facts and information, and more. • Tone ranged considerably: anger, condescension, criticism, sadness, thoughtfulness, and more. • Ultimately I found that the groups had emotionally-charged discussion, were grounds for performance of identities, and provided evidence of accumulation of social capital…

  17. DEFINING SOCIAL CAPITAL • “Social capital refers to network ties of goodwill, mutual support, shared language, shared norms, social trust, and a sense of mutual obligation that people can derive value from. It is understood as the glue that holds together social aggregates such as networks of personal relationships, communities, regions or even whole nations.” (Huysman and Wulf 2004)

  18. SOCIAL CAPITAL ONLINE • Network capital • Participatory capital • Community commitment • In this study…

  19. IN CONCLUSION • This project was just a start • Intense topic and strong reflection of campus climate • Facebook is a rich social science research environment where we can: • Study perspectives on race and campus climate • See how “virtual” interactions supplement or impact social capital on and offline

  20. Thanks! www.thefacebookproject.com

More Related