Using Tumblr to Share Online Models

traci_gardner
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Author
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Workshop on Tumblr in the classroom by tengrrl on Flickr I have never felt adept at Tumblr. I just don’t get it. Enough people like it for me to believe that there must be something there; but whatever it is, I don’t quite connect with it. To look for answers, I attended that Computers and Writing workshop, “When You Find a Great Meme to Post for Your Assignment: Tumblr as a Multimodal Writing and Community....” I gained some pointers, but honestly, I still couldn’t understand what Tumblr offers that wasn’t already available with tools I already used.

 

As I was preparing for my presentation on social media for the Council of Writing Program Administrators Conference (#CWPA2017) earlier this month, I was looking for a way to share example sites that met several goals:

 

  • Hosted on a trustworthy site (and not one I owned)
  • Has no cost
  • Incorporates screenshot images easily
  • Publishes entries easily (since I would have many)
  • Allows a system of tagging or similar option to sort entries on various criteria

 

I was essentially thinking of a simple database, but I didn’t want to program or host it. I went through a number of tools, but everything had some problem—until I came to Tumblr.

 

Tumblr met all my goals. I remembered, as I was testing it, that the workshop leaders, Meg McGuire and Jen England, had mentioned that one of the things people liked most about Tumblr was its rich tagging system. I quickly began gathering examples of the online presence of writing programs and writing centers for my #CWPA2017 presentation in my own Tumblr blog, Social Media for WPAs.

 

The homepage of Social Media for WPAs felt a little busy to me, with its Pinterest-style grid layout. To provide a simpler organization, I created a Categories page, which lists my folksonomic tags under a few headers. Clicking on any of the tags on the Categories page takes you to a page that shows only the entries that demonstrate that particular tag. For example, if you click the Instagram tag, you get a page showing examples of writing programs or centers that use Instagram.

 

As I worked on my Social Media for WPAs site, I realized how valuable Tumblr would be in the writing classroom. I could use a similar system of tagging to organize online examples or readings for students. If I was teaching students about blogging, for instance, I could gather examples of different kinds of entries and collect them on a Tumblr blog. Likewise, students doing online research could do the same thing, tracking what they find in a Tumblr blog.

 

Using Tumblr, it turned out, was easy, and it provided exactly what I needed. Perhaps I finally get Tumblr. Do you? If you have ideas to share for using Tumblr, I would love to hear from you in the comments.

 

 

Photo Credit: Workshop on Tumblr in the classroom by tengrrl

4 Comments
karita_dossanto
Macmillan Employee
Macmillan Employee

This is a very useful post, Traci!

traci_gardner
Author
Author

Thanks, Karita! I'm glad that you found it helpful Smiley Happy

On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 10:10 AM, karita.dossantos <

theenglishist
Migrated Account

I still don't get Tumblr. I find that Pinterest works better as an organizing tool for me. (They seem to be very similar in structure, though, so I guess it's really a matter of personal preference.) I also hate that the only way to have a discussion on Tumblr is to reblog someone's post and write a new post for it. I have just accepted that it's not for me.

traci_gardner
Author
Author

Yes, Akilah, I can see that is an annoying constraint. For my part, I

wasn't trying to engage folks in discussion. The goal was more to

categorize kinds of social media.

I like Pinterest, and I "get" it, but I find it harder to navigate for

examples.

Traci