- Social Media (SM) is defined as external Web 2.0 tools specifically including Twitter, Google+, Facebook, Quora and FourSquare
- SM does not include blogging, personal websites, knowledge bases (eg. Wikipedia), research, books, etc.
- SM is an effort rooted in topical flow. That is, through the specific SM tools mentioned above, George suggests SM is for connecting and sharing previously established discourse and knowledge. It is not the place, vehicle or tool where knowledge (ie. body of knowledge) is enhanced.
- SM is a common interest or common activity connector. That is, through whatever strong or weak tie network one has, SM can connect like-minded interests and activities to further the flow of conversation not necessarily the body of knowledge. Examples such as the Olympics, world events (positive, neutral or tragic), vacation spots, etc. may be shared through activity flows utilizing SM but it doesn't improve the knowledge base of the Olympics, world events or vacation spots itself.
- SM is a secondary vehicle in the media hierarchy. That is, the specific tools mentioned above are vessels that propagate primary media outlets (television, newspaper, magazine, books, theses, research, etc.) and its original works.
- SM is equivocal to emotion. That is, we connect through social media (again the specific tools defined by George) to enhance and portray our emotions. Whether through venting, or meandering muses, or cries for help, or gasps of joy, SM permits users to publicly and digitally emote. (whether its purpose is to actually connect with others or simply to asynchronously opine seeking nothing in return)
"What has social media actually done? Very, very little. The reason? Social media is about flow, not substance."Although somewhat paradoxically, I agree that SM is about social flow, but it's also about the social flow of personal and/or professional networks and knowledge. It's about connecting people to people and people to opinion, ideas and content. Social Media is a fast moving river helping us dock at the substance pier. Without SM, contact and network doors would not open as easily as they do with it. Those contacts and networks bring the original substance and body of knowledge to light where, without SM, the knowledge, contact or network may have lied dormant for years. It might not have surfaced at all. For many, SM provides the flow toward the knowledge itself. Without SM, many non-academics wouldn't have the foggiest idea that the substance existed in the first place. This is analogous to writing a 'letter to the editor', but having nowhere to deliver it to. If there are no outlets, or I'm unaware that they exist in the first place, how can I write my letter? Clint Lalonde's Master's thesis (The Twitter experience: the role of Twitter in the formation and maintenence of personal learning networks) articulates this point. (Clint's Master's blog site is here) Clint writes:
He opines further:<Twitter> allows for a greater diversity of voices to emerge within the conversation on the network; conversations which are valued as important learning tools for the participants of this study. Additionally, the open nature of Twitter means these learning networks are now no longer confined to closed and private spaces, but are able to be open and public which increases the opportunities for collaboration, connections and learning opportunities.
ย ... educators strive to build professional networks that includes both supportive peers and dissenting voices, whom they use to push their thinking. Using Twitter, these educators can access the collective knowledge of their peers, engage in discussions, debates, conversations, and participate in collaborative projects whenever and wherever they like.
To cement my position, I found out about Clint's thesis through Social Media.
I've never met Clint in my life, but social flow brought me to his thesis. His substance.
In the end, I agree with George's point of view in so much that Social Mediaย (as defined by George) itself does not create the substance. I have extended his argument, however, to pinpoint my belief that SM greatly enhances our chances of finding the substance, and those that contributed to it in the first place through social flow. Therefore, Social Media has done a lot in its brief existence on Earth.
McLuhan said, "We shape our tools and afterwards our tools shape us." Let us not fall into the trap that social media is a replacement for content depth, research rigor, or cognitive dissonance.
SM is a connector of ideas. SM is a connector of people. SM is a connector of content. SM is a river towards substance. SM is a personal learning missile that can help expedite one's own level of competence far better (and perhaps quicker)ย than any previous method. SM is a wonderful thing, but we cannot let it shape us to become the primary (and only?) way we enhance society's body of knowledge.ย It is not the beginning of substance.
We need to see both the vase and two faces.





