Digital Presence and Online Identity among Digital Scholars: A Thematic Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Digital Presence, Social Presence, and Online Identity
1.2. Online Communication and Impression Management
1.3. Context Collapsing
1.4. Conceptions about Identity
2. Methodology
2.1. Research Questions
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme A—Digital-Presence Awareness
3.1.1. Subtheme A1: Digital-Footprint Awareness
“I think that the question of online identity is a question that is being raised (…) but it is only now that I am starting to become aware of it, isn’t it? This is to say that I never thought about what I was doing with my online identity, I just went along with the boat following what interested me, what I like, what I don’t like. So I never thought about it as an online identity, as a digital footprint, or whatever you want to call it. But now I admit that at this moment it is important, it is important to think about it and it is important perhaps from a very early stage to start thinking about these aspects…”.(S6 Clara)
“I realised I had an online identity a few years ago when I happened to do a search on a search engine, (…) and I realised that in fact, my own name had a few pages, I realised that even things that I thought had no value at all, were written there. And so I realised that for better or for worse there is an online identity”.(S13 Francisco)
“The blog was a personal blog, that is, I talked a lot about things that… It was not so much confessional as about things that meant something to me, it had some of my poems,… it had what I did with the students… I found out about two years later that this blog had been the subject of a course in a Psychology degree course in Brazil. Imagine how I felt when I read someone’s work talking about what was “my self” in the blog. Really, at that time it was already as if it was another person for me… But feeling that dissected and analysed, really!!!… these tools really have a terrible potential!”.(S9 Telma)
“There are already stories that we hear that, in I don’t know in how many years you’ll be applying for I don’t know what, and the first thing they do is go to the Net to find out about everything you’ve done in your life and, of course, if we’ve put photographs on FB or I don’t know where, then this will appear and may or may not condition you, (…). In fact, we now have a record of ourselves on the net and I think it’s really something you have to think about and it. Until very recently I didn’t think about it, now I think about it in terms of my identity construction online…”.(S6 Clara)
3.1.2. A Strategic, Deliberate, and Intentional Online Presence
“we leave an online footprint and that reminded me exactly, it made me realise, made me try to realise, that on the one hand I had to be careful and on the other hand since that was the case I could also create a thoughtful identity and therefore instead of being very casual or very thoughtless it could be more reflective”.(S13 Francisco)
“for those who work in the online context it is important to develop an online presence haa… in a more, more planned way or with a strategy. I am a researcher nowadays, I am a teacher… it is clear that nowadays haa… if people want to keep up with the times and keep up with the way people are communicating and reading information it is very important to have an online presence”.(S4 Gil)
3.2. Theme B: The Public and Private Spheres
3.2.1. Subtheme B1: Privacy and Intimacy
“in the relational field I just got a message now from a brother of mine, with his daughter in his lap and he giving his daughter a very tight hug saying “I love you very much”, then I thought it’s beautiful, isn’t it? a father can express his intimacy with his daughter, this affection, this caress, it made me want to do the same thing with my daughter. I do it publicly, right? (…) inequivocally that I think it is a message of humanity for whoever wants to read it in my networks”.(Gabriel S1)
“things with my family, I don’t share, I don’t do that…, I don’t do that for several reasons, and so activities that I consider to be of my personal concern, right?”.(S12 Joana)
“I avoid, on Facebook, I avoid putting very personal things, but that’s because I don’t like that thing of putting the photograph of…, it doesn’t mean that if I put one or another, or if someone puts one or another photograph that it upsets me, but I don’t like… well, Facebook is used a lot for this thing that is almost a diary of life, isn’t it? I don’t feel like doing that kind of exposure, so I avoid that kind of thing, of being there showing very personal things and so on, but otherwise, in the professional sphere, I don’t avoid it”.(S6 Clara)
3.2.2. Subtheme B2: The Personal and the Professional
“It is very important that people find you, that people can have ways to perceive that you live in that context, that you share information in that context, that they can communicate with you. From this point of view I think it is fundamental. For those who are not,… who are not researchers, teachers or don’nt work in an area that is closely connected to or dependent on technologies, I don’t know…, but for those who work in these areas it is very important”.(S4 Gil)
“I think it is evident that I consider this intentional presence important as a teacher, isn’t it? As a teacher, I have always been concerned with this theme and with defining this presence. As I was saying initially, one of the questions I personally faced was a certain dilemma in which this presence would be a distinct presence between what I am personally, as a person, my habits, my habitats, etc., and on the other hand what I’m in the Web, isn’t it? Therefore, I had this dilemma and what I do privilege is the professional part, therefore, my presence is very much on that side”.(S12 Joana)
“I use it a lot from the professional, relational point of view, but the public part, so to speak, is a relational part which is not a very, very private relational, isn’t it? From the point of view of my professional activity, it is important to disseminate what I write, what I do, it is good when someone finds interest in what we do, isn’t it? And now, more and more (…) and especially in the area I am in, it is important to be on the networks, isn’t it? It is also important in terms of recognition by others, of people knowing what we do”.(S6 Clara)
“there is no longer a separation between this professional identity on and off, because with hybridism, cyberspace is no longer a space separated from the town. The mobility, the 3 g connections, WI-F,I plus the access to the net in the palm of your hand…. We no longer separate this thing of Cesária in the University and of Cesária on Facebook or in Instagram. I am in the hybrid of these spaces. So, deep down, the networked digital technologies are in us and mediate our daily construction”.(S3 Cesária)
3.3. Theme C: Hybrid Identities and Context Collapsing
3.4. Subtheme C1: Offline Identity, Online Identity, and Hybrid Identities
“I think in the future, I think we will inevitably end up living in a world where the physical world and the virtual world will be very intertwined”.(S4 Gil)
“Initially, before Web 2.0, being online meant publicising and giving visibility to what we did in a face-to-face setting. Today, with mobility, with a more consolidated digital culture in the palm of people’s hands, there is no longer a separation between this on and off professional identity, because with hybridism, cyberspace is no longer a space separated from the town”.(S3 Cesária)
“I think that in our days the identity of each one of us cannot fail to be present online. I don’t advocate the artificial construction of an identity for online consumption but rather that the reflection that each person conducts on a daily basis, when building him/herself as a citizen, should take into account both the face-to-face and online dimensions. I understand that, by definition of identity, these two dimensions merge into one”.(S5 Damasio)
“the technologies as they become more… more widespread people stop having the notion of technology I mean…as things became more widespread and became natural, especially with social networks and the many means of communicating via online, people are already starting to stop seeing the technology in that, right? It’s starting to become something that’s very transparent, isn’t it? And it’s true that people end up getting along, above all, with people they know from the physical world or, for professional reasons they often end up getting to know several people well that they met online in meetings, conferences… congresses and so on…, so I think that this is starting to be more and more… more fluid you jump from one dimension to another, it’s all part of your sociability, isn’t it?”.(S4 Gil)
“in personal terms, it has been a curious learning because it has allowed me to discover perspectives that I had no access to in any other way and that allow me to reflect on that space. I think it’s interesting because maybe in an environment between friends, even acquaintances and friends, we don’t expose ourselves to certain roles or certain conversations (…), but as it is not exactly an extension of ourselves, sometimes we discover characteristics of the person on the Web that we hadn’t discovered in person and which then end up triggering a conversation in person, derived from that social conversation that we had online (…) I think that it is a very great potential, the extension of the self and the discovery of the other, to have an online space where we can project ourselves and where others can project themselves. I think it’s important”.(S8 Carlos)
3.5. Subtheme C2: Differentiation between Contexts and Context Collapsing
“I don’t share a lot of things about my personal life… there’s a little photo there or there’s a little comment there, but I mean… most of my online activity, and my online identity is very connected to my professional activity, but in this role connected to the professional activity I am very much the person I am, I mean… no… I don’t have a… a… a character, I don’t have a mask, right?… it doesn’t mean that a person cannot have these two sides, right? Haam… now I think that in the world, in the physical world we also don’t have these two sides at the same time right? So in the physical world we are also expressing the various facets of our personality in different contexts aren’t we? And so I think it’s strange that people do this in the same context and there are people who do this online isn’t it?”(S4 Gil)
“I think that people have to separate the waters and either create another profile or post in another network or use different networks for different purposes right? but… but… because then people confuse a little bit… people don’t realize this sometimes, which is, we in life… in the physical world we are also very multifaceted people haa….we are people who have different groups with whom we get along and we never mix them many times, right? I don’t invite to my house for lunch or dinner my high school students, my university colleagues and Siemens and Stephen Downes [Gil is referring here to two very well-known researchers in the field of digital education] I mean, I’m not going to put all these people at my table because they’re not related aren’t they? And people sometimes on the internet do this don’t they?”.(S4 Gil)
“For example yesterday I saw 2 art exhibitions, I shared and I have already triggered my students, see this, go there! it is a way of encouraging a cultural life beyond having a beer with the husband at the weekend. How are you going to educate if you don’t use the cultural repertoire? Are you going to be a teacher of school content only? I discuss this exhaustively in my research group so it is fundamental to go to the cinema, it is fundamental to go to the museum, it is fundamental to walk in the garden… you can take this into the classroom and discuss it with your students, for me it is fundamental, I do a lot of this work with my students”.(S3 Cesária)
3.6. Subtheme C3: Authenticity, Identity Projection, and Reputation
“I think that what I am is what I end up projecting, what I am in the overall sense is what I project on the social network, and what I am and do individually, with each person, I also do individually with that person online. In other words, there is always an extension of our I, and I try to be what I am, I don’t try to be what I would like to be, or dream of being, or try to take on a very big role to test myself. No, it’s not that way, it’s really an extension of what I am in my everyday life”.(S8 Carlos)
“First, I think it is coherence. We have to have coherence between what we do in the professional and in the personal sphere. So, I think, there is no point in being concerned with academic seriousness, building myself as a teacher in the space where I work, if I then go to a social network like FB and I am contradictory in terms of what I post there, of my political thoughts, I don’t know, economic thoughts, my ideals, right? There’s no point in going there and, for example, posting a comment on YouTube if you’re inconsistent with what you were discussing conceptually with your students in class. I think that this conceptual, professional and personal coherence we have to have, I worry a lot about this… this coherence, it worries me a lot, in the sense of building a profile, an identity, right?”.(S11 Elisa)
“My main motivation is to expand the networks (…)The visibility of what one does is fundamental to have and to expand the networks (…) Therefore, fundamentally, my main motivation is to give visibility to what we do, even because I think that what we do is important and the more we share and give visibility to our things and the things of our friends or intellectual partners, the more powerful is the network we form”.(S3 Cesaria)
“I see sharing as generosity but many people perceive sharing as exhibitionism, even this appears in the speech of some colleagues or in the literature in some way, so I think that the person who is connected, shares, right?, I think she is much more generous, once she shares, she triggers, invites, I really like it when people remember that I am interested in a theme they call me there and show me…”.(S3 Cesária)
“I share what I do but I do so with coyness, for the risk of being confused with the narcissism that characterizes social media”.(S5 Damásio)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participants | Years of Professional Activity | Gender | Nationality | Age |
---|---|---|---|---|
(S1) Gabriel | >40 | Male | Brazilian | >60 <65 |
(S2 Milton | >40 | Male | Brazilian | >60 <65 |
(S3) Cesária | >10 <20 | Female | Brazilian | >40 <45 |
(S4) Gil | >20 <30 | Male | Portuguese | >55 >60 |
(S5) Damásio | >40 | Male | Portuguese | >65 <70 |
(S6) Clara | >20 <30 | Female | Portuguese | >50 <55 |
(S7) Cláudio | >10 <20 | Male | Portuguese | >55 <60 |
(S8) Carlos | <10 | Male | Portuguese | >30 <35 |
(S9) Telma | >10 <20 | Female | Portuguese | >40 <45 |
(S10) Vanda | >10 <20 | Female | Brazilian | >50 <55 |
(S11) Elisa | <10 | Female | Brazilian | >35 <40 |
(S12) Joana | >30 <40 | Female | Portuguese | >55 <60 |
(S13) Francisco | >10 <20 | Male | Portuguese | >50 <55 |
Theme A | Subtheme | Subtheme Description |
---|---|---|
Digital Presence Awareness | A1. Digital-Footprint Awareness | Subjects report a progressive awareness of their digital footprint and report historical/biographical changes in the way their identities have been constructed on the Web. |
A2. A Strategic, Deliberate, and Intentional Online Presence | Subjects report that there is a thoughtful, deliberate, and intentional strategy to build their online presence. |
Theme B | Subtheme | Subtheme Description |
---|---|---|
The Public and the Private | B1. Privacy and Intimacy | Subjects indicate the presence or absence of clear boundaries between their public and private/intimate lives. |
B2. The Personal and the Professional | Subjects indicate whether or not there is a clear separation between their professional and personal/private spheres. |
Theme C | Subtheme | Subtheme Description |
---|---|---|
Offline, Online, and Hybrid Selves | C1. Offline, Online, and Hybridization | Subjects assume strong boundaries between offline and online identity or weak boundaries between them, assuming then a hybrid identity. |
C2. Differentiation Between Contexts and Context Collapsing | Subjects assume strong or weak boundaries between contexts and report how they deal with possible context collapsing. | |
C3. Authenticity, Identity Projection, and Reputation | Subjects refer to problems of authenticity and identity projection and to possible reputational risks. |
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Quintas-Mendes, A.; Paiva, A. Digital Presence and Online Identity among Digital Scholars: A Thematic Analysis. Soc. Sci. 2023, 12, 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12070379
Quintas-Mendes A, Paiva A. Digital Presence and Online Identity among Digital Scholars: A Thematic Analysis. Social Sciences. 2023; 12(7):379. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12070379
Chicago/Turabian StyleQuintas-Mendes, António, and Ana Paiva. 2023. "Digital Presence and Online Identity among Digital Scholars: A Thematic Analysis" Social Sciences 12, no. 7: 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12070379
APA StyleQuintas-Mendes, A., & Paiva, A. (2023). Digital Presence and Online Identity among Digital Scholars: A Thematic Analysis. Social Sciences, 12(7), 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci12070379