Still, the provost says that even if only a slim percentage of students actually renounce Facebook and Twitter for the week, the project will have been a success, if only because of the conversations it has started. The university never expected full abstinence from students, Darr says, nor was it trying to conduct a scientific experiment. “This extreme media coverage in and of itself is forcing more focus on social media,” he says, noting that he had just gotten off an interview with a radio talk show based in Seattle. “That was the whole point of this in the first place,” he says. —USA Today
And by “fails,” USA Today apparently means “earns national news coverage, in such venues as USA Today.”
Similar:
On the Importance of Nonverbal Feedback in the Classroom [an Anecdote]
I don't generally like teaching with sli...
Academia
Facebook Finally Rolls Out 'Disputed News' Tag Everyone Will Dispute
Anybody seen a post tagged this way? If ...
Current_Events
We'll Always Have Paris (TNG Rewatch: Season 1, Episode 24)
Rewatching Star Trek: The Next Generatio...
Media
Devil's Due (#StarTrek #TNG Rewatch, Season Four, Episode 13) Picard vs. sexy devil Ardra
Rewatching ST:TNG after a 20-year break....
Amusing
Another NewsBreak.com Exclusive Exposes a Royal Family Lie #FakeNews
You sheep who trust the lamestream fake ...
Amusing
Fraternity Announces "Legal Action" Against Rolling Stone
"The Rolling Stone article viewed by mil...
Academia


