Catedral de Sal, Zipaquirá, Colombia (2017)
Picture
taken by Jonathan Acuña
The
Difference Between a Network and a Community
A comparative
chart
By
Prof. Jonathan Acuña-Solano, M. Ed.
|
|
Head
of Curriculum Development
Academic
Department
Centro
Cultural Costarricense-Norteamericano
|
Senior Language Professor
School of English
Faculty
of Social Sciences
Universidad
Latina de Costa Rica
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Sunday, August 2, 2020
Post
356
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“Online
communities do not represent every gathering of individuals on the Internet,
particularly those using social media” (The University of Sydney, (n.d.)) . As we will pay
attention below, online communities and community networks share similar principles
but do have nuances that must be pin-pointed and clarified. The mere conception
of both types of communities triggers lots of points in common, but at the same
time there is high level of reciprocity in one but not in the other, which
makes it more collective action driven than individualistic.
Let us begin to understand the
difference between online communities as opposed to network communities by
carefully analyzing the following comparative chart:
Online
Communities
|
Community Networks
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-
The group as the primary unit of
connectivity
|
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Large clusters of like-minded
individuals with a sense of belonging with other participants
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Small clusters of similar-minded
members who are chosen by an individual who stands at the core of the network
|
-
Globally linked “with kindred souls for
companionship, information, and social support from their homes” (quoted by The University of Sydney, (n.d.))
|
-
Individual operate within networks
organically, socially, or as meaning makers, not necessarily all of them at
the same time
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Papadakis’ offline community features
are present to benefit each other: a) commonality, b) reciprocity, c)
identity, d) collective action (or civility), and e) respect (quoted by The University of Sydney, (n.d.))
|
-
Not all Papadakis’ offline community
paradigm is part of a network community: a) no reciprocity and b) no civility
|
-
Possibility of access to knowledge
coming from a network of similar minded members who share a similar
profession
|
|
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The presence of social fabric much more
connected to the concept of how we interact with members of a neighborhood
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The presence of social fabric links
with user agency in the creation of meaning and access to knowledge
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“A community is a social reality
comprised of humans and objects where humans retain most of the social
agency”
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-
“A network is a social reality
comprised of humans and objects where humans delegate social agency mostly to
objects”
|
As it
was seen, the differences pointed out above are not finished to the last stone!
More and more can be added to this list to find the unblurred boundary between
the two of them.
Based
on Mejias (2005), there are also different types
of participants when online communities and network communities are compared.
Mejias (2005) identifies consociates and contemporaries. Within
an online community we are bound to find “those social actors that could be directly
experienced by the individual” (Mejias, 2005) , the consociates. Abd
based on this description, these people are individuals whom the social media
user might have met before face-to-face. Mejias (2005) also points out that
though these people may never meet in real life, they “can engage directly
(although through various layers of mediation).” On the contrary,
contemporaries are “actors that are indirectly experienced by the
individual” (Mejias, 2005) ; we get to know,
e.g., more about their career and ideas than about their personal lives,
something that is quite different from the consociates.
“How we construct our networks entirely depends on the
authority of those with knowledge and demonstrated agency within those groups” (The
University of Sydney, (n.d.)) . A community network is not for
everyone; it is just for a group of individuals in certain professional circles
who can really profit from them. On the
other hand, community network users can also be active members of online
communities. That is, they can be consociates and contemporaries.
On the other hand, “Beyond the superficial difference of navigating forums
versus profile pages, the interactions are somewhat different between the
network and the community” (The University of
Sydney, (n.d.)) .
And what about bloggers? Where do they stand in this symbotic online
relationship of media users?
References
The University of
Sydney. ((n.d.)). What is the difference between a network and a community? Retrieved August 2, 2020, from https://www.futurelearn.com/:
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/ethical-social-media/1/steps/824135
Mejias, U. (2005, October 16). Social agency and the intersection of communities and
networks (draft). Retrieved August 2, 2020, from Blog.UlisesMejias.Com:
https://blog.ulisesmejias.com/2005/10/16/social-agency-and-the-intersection-of-
communities-and-networks-draft/
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