Platform
Visibility, Digital Accumulation, and the Differentiation of Discovery,
Monitoring, and Organization: Evidence from Online Instructional Video
Michael
V. Miller and A. S. CohenMiller
Abstract
As online
materials increasingly accumulate outside formal publication channels,
instructors face growing difficulty sustaining awareness of potentially useful
content under conditions shaped by platform visibility. These difficulties are
often attributed to individual skill gaps or rapid technological change;
however, we argue that they also reflect a failure to distinguish among the
stages through which online materials are located, followed, and preserved for
later use. We introduce the Discovery–Monitoring–Organization (D–M–O)
framework, which treats discovery, ongoing monitoring, and long-term
organization as distinct stages in this process. Platform-centered search and
recommendation systems tend to compress these activities into episodic
retrieval, obscuring their different requirements and limiting cumulative
instructional practice. Using online video repositories in sociology and
economics as illustrative cases, we show how disciplinary contexts shape
problems of visibility, authority, and accumulation. We argue that low-cost
monitoring and organizational systems can support continuity in instructional
use across courses and semesters. Although developed in relation to online
video, the D–M–O framework offers a broader approach for working effectively
with digital materials under conditions of continuing content abundance.
Keywords: digital curation; online
video repositories; platform visibility; personal information management;
instructional media; RSS; social bookmarking; higher education
1.
Introduction: Information Management Under Conditions of Digital Accumulation
Much
instructional material now accumulates outside formal publication channels,
circulating through digital platforms where search, ranking, and recommendation
systems shape what becomes visible at any given moment. These systems allow for
the location of individual items but offer limited support for maintaining
awareness of productive sources or preserving materials for future use. As a
result, instructors often encounter useful content episodically while lacking
reliable ways to monitor its ongoing production or later retrieve it in
pedagogically meaningful ways.
Since
2010, recurring surveys administered by the first author in undergraduate
sociology courses have asked students from a wide range of majors and
backgrounds two basic questions about their online practices: when you
encounter valuable web content, how do you ensure that you can find it again,
and when you identify a website or video channel that reliably produces useful
material, how do you stay aware of new content from that source?
Although
most students report high confidence in their ability to work effectively
online, their responses reveal a persistent gap between perceived competence
and actual practice. When asked how they preserve materials for later use,
students commonly describe ad hoc strategies such as re-searching by title,
bookmarking browser tabs, saving links locally, taking screenshots, or emailing
links to themselves. These practices remain fragmented and unreliable for
supporting reuse over time. When asked how they monitor sources for new
content, most report not monitoring them at all, or relying on memory and
occasional manual checks.
This
pattern—high confidence paired with ineffective behavior—has remained stable
across cohorts. Its persistence suggests a broader problem rather than an
individual or generational one. If students, despite lifelong immersion in
digital environments, continue to lack systematic approaches to preserving and
monitoring online materials, there is little reason to assume that faculty have
spontaneously acquired them. Research on information management supports this
conclusion: instructors rely on similar ad hoc strategies, including informal
bookmarking, memory-based retrieval, and episodic searching (Jacques et al.,
2021).
These
findings run counter to a familiar assumption in higher education: that
students, as so-called “digital natives,” possess intuitive mastery of online
environments, while faculty are assumed to lag behind due to later-life
adoption (Prensky, 2001). This framing has been widely critiqued (Bennett et
al., 2008; Kirschner and De Bruyckere, 2017). Empirical research consistently
shows that students rely on episodic keyword searching, algorithmically ranked
results, and informal saving practices that closely mirror those of their
instructors (Head and Eisenberg, 2010, 2011). The issue, therefore, is not
technological lag, but the absence of taught workflows for monitoring content
sources, capturing pedagogically relevant materials, and maintaining retrievable
collections over time (Jones, 2007, 2012; ACRL, 2016).
The
significance of this gap has increased as online teaching materials have
shifted from relative scarcity to persistent accumulation. Advances in digital
production and distribution have enabled instructional materials—particularly
video—to be created and shared at unprecedented scale (Burgess and Green,
2009). Platforms such as YouTube now host vast, continually expanding
repositories of instructional content. Materials that were once scarce and
institutionally bound have become largely free, durable, and persistently
available.
This
transformation does not simply mean that more instructional material exists.
Rather, it reflects a condition of ongoing accumulation in which content is
produced continuously, remains accessible over time, and expands across
semesters rather than being replaced. Under these conditions, the instructional
challenge is no longer locating relevant material once, but sustaining
awareness of growing repositories over time.
In this
context, the ability to monitor instructional sources and organize selected
materials becomes more than a matter of individual efficiency. These practices
shape the resources that instructors encounter, retain, and integrate into
their teaching over time. In their absence, instructional media use remains
episodic, memory-dependent, and vulnerable to disruption; when supported,
instructors can reuse vetted materials, preserve pedagogical context, and
maintain continuity as curricula, platforms, and institutional conditions
change. Monitoring and organization thus function as basic instructional
supports rather than optional enhancements.
This
shift—from episodic scarcity to persistent accumulation—makes it useful to
distinguish among discovery, monitoring, and long-term organization as separate
problems. Discovery, in this sense, reflects broader conditions of visibility
that shape which instructional sources become known and remain salient, or fade
from view over time. Although often treated as a single activity within
platform-centered environments, these practices unfold across different
temporal horizons and require different forms of support.
Platform-centered
search not only treats instructional media as something repeatedly found rather
than continuously followed; it also shapes what remains visible over time.
Content that is institutionally supported or rewarded by engagement metrics is
repeatedly surfaced, while pedagogically valuable sources that do not align
with these signals often fade from view.
Although
concerns about algorithmic filtering and “filter bubbles” (Pariser, 2011) have
emphasized how personalization shapes content exposure, such accounts remain
focused on selection at the point of discovery. The present analysis instead
addresses a distinct but complementary problem: how platform environments
structure the temporal conditions under which discovered content can be
monitored, organized, and reused over time.
This
article advances a framework for understanding why instructors have struggled
to sustain effective use of online materials under conditions of digital
abundance. We argue that these difficulties stem not from individual skill
deficits or resistance to technology, but from failing to distinguish among
three stages of instructional media use: discovery, ongoing monitoring, and
long-term pedagogical organization.
More
broadly, this article contributes to ongoing efforts to understand how
individuals and professionals interact with digital information environments
under conditions of continuous platform-mediated accumulation. While much
research has examined how platforms shape visibility, attention, and
engagement, less attention has been directed toward the practical and
infrastructural conditions that enable users to sustain relationships with
evolving content sources over time. By focusing on monitoring and organization
as cumulative practices, the present analysis extends platform-centered
accounts of digital media use to include the user-managed systems through which
content is rendered durable, retrievable, and pedagogically actionable.
We
formalize this distinction as the Discovery–Monitoring–Organization (D–M–O)
framework and show how each stage is routinely compressed within
platform-centered search and recommendation systems. Rather than proposing new
tools or applications, our contribution lies in clarifying what is required to
support cumulative teaching practice over time. Using online video repositories
as a focal case, we illustrate how low-cost, faculty-managed systems for
monitoring and organization can strengthen pedagogical continuity and faculty
agency across courses and semesters. Although developed for online video, the
framework is intended to generalize across a broad range of digital materials
used in teaching.
2.
Personal Information Management and Educational Content
Research
on personal information management (PIM) examines how individuals acquire,
maintain, retrieve, and use materials in everyday work (Jones, 2007, 2008).
Across professional contexts, PIM studies consistently document difficulties in
maintaining materials over time, particularly when they are distributed across
multiple platforms, devices, and formats (Boardman and Sasse, 2004; Whittaker,
2011). These findings are directly relevant to instructional settings, where
instructors must manage large, continuously expanding bodies of digital content
under conditions of persistent accumulation.
Evidence
that instructors and students often lack systematic preparation for managing
ongoing flows of instructional media appears across PIM and related research.
Studies repeatedly show reliance on ad hoc practices such as episodic
searching, informal bookmarking, and memory-based retrieval rather than
explicit strategies for monitoring sources or maintaining retrievable
collections over time (Jones, 2007, 2008; Jacques et al., 2021). These patterns
recur across professional and educational settings, suggesting that the problem
extends well beyond any single cohort or user group (Whittaker, 2011). Rather
than simply extending personal information management concepts into a new
domain, this article treats instructional media curation as a problem shaped by
pedagogical time horizons, disciplinary norms, and institutional conditions.
The
distinction between discovery, monitoring, and organization has been recognized
unevenly in prior work on current-awareness tools. Research in library and
information science has examined how emerging web technologies reshape academic
practices of staying informed, typically emphasizing tools and systems that
surface new information or support personal collections rather than sustained
instructional reuse (Tenopir et al., 2013; Bawden and Robinson, 2009; Case and
Given, 2016).
For
example, from a librarian’s perspective, Mu (2008) identified RSS feeds and
social bookmarking systems as useful resources for managing new online
information streams, treating them as complementary practices rather than a
unified workflow. Mu and Kern (2011) later described workshops introducing
these tools to faculty, demonstrating feasibility and institutional interest
while framing adoption primarily through episodic training rather than as an
embedded, cumulative workflow.
Research
on Personal Learning Environments (PLEs) and Personal Learning Networks (PLNs)
likewise emphasized learner control over distributed digital tools, frequently
citing RSS aggregation and social bookmarking as illustrative components of
self-directed learning environments (Attwell, 2007; Downes, 2005; Drexler,
2010; Dabbagh and Kitsantas, 2012). In this literature, RSS typically appears
as a mechanism for accessing information streams, while bookmarking is treated
as a means of organizing and sharing resources; sustained monitoring and
pedagogical reuse remain weakly specified.
This
relative absence is analytically revealing: although both RSS and bookmarking
have persisted technically, neither has become strongly institutionalized
within mainstream faculty development, instructional design discourse, or
platform-centered teaching routines.
3. From
Individual Media to Repository-Level Thinking
Historically,
multimedia curation in higher education has focused on individual artifacts: a
feature film, a documentary, or an isolated video clip selected for a specific
instructional moment. This item-level approach remains pedagogically valuable,
particularly when instructors curate materials tightly aligned with discrete
course topics. However, it scales poorly under contemporary conditions in which
instructional video content is produced continuously and remains persistently
available across multiple online platforms (Burgess and Green, 2009; Cunningham
and Craig, 2019).
Under
these conditions, the relevant shift is conceptual as much as practical: video
is no longer best understood as a standalone object but as part of an ongoing
repository. For this purpose, we focus on online video
repositories (OVRs): discrete, publicly accessible collections
of videos that remain available over time. OVRs function less
as static collections than as dynamic, accumulating archives (Lobato, 2019).
New material is typically added without displacing older content, producing
expanding media collections that persist across semesters and teaching cycles.
As repositories grow, the instructional challenge shifts from locating
individual videos to sustaining awareness of ongoing production while
preserving materials that prove useful for teaching over time.
Historically,
institutionalized curation has often emerged as a pragmatic response to
informational abundance. In anthropology, the postwar expansion of ethnographic
research prompted the creation of the Human Relations Area Files as a shared
system for indexing and retrieval. A parallel dynamic later emerged in
sociology with the launch of The Sociological Cinema in 2010.
In that earlier phase of online instructional video, curation necessarily
involved gathering one-off fragments—news stories, documentary excerpts, and
film clips—from a wide range of general-interest sites. Scholarly reflection
during this period, exemplified by work emphasizing the vetting of individual
fragments of found media, treated video primarily as a singular pedagogical
object rather than as part of a larger, continuously developing source
environment.
The
framework proposed here does not replace that curatorial impulse; rather, it
extends it by specifying the monitoring and organizational supports required in
a more mature, repository-driven environment. Under conditions of rapid digital
accumulation, the instructional problem shifts from finding the clip to
monitoring the source. Repository-level thinking reframes curation from a
series of discrete selection decisions into an ongoing process of repository
management. Discovery, therefore, becomes less a matter of repeated item-level
searching and more a matter of identifying productive repositories whose
ongoing output merits sustained attention.
Much of
this instructional content is currently hosted on YouTube. We treat YouTube not
as a pedagogical model but as the dominant platform through which
repository-level monitoring is most visible, particularly because channel-based
publishing remains compatible with stable RSS feeds. This practical shift
becomes especially evident when instructors move beyond occasional video use
and begin managing dozens of active repositories across multiple semesters,
where maintaining awareness of ongoing production becomes as important as
locating any single item.
Although
the present study focuses on OVRs as a primary case, the
underlying logic is fundamentally media-agnostic. Whether the source is a
YouTube channel, a news site, or a podcast series, the central challenge
remains the same: moving from episodic, search-based encounters to sustained monitoring
of productive sources.
Managing
such repositories requires forms of support different from those associated
with individual files. Instructors must remain aware of newly released content,
evaluate materials as repositories evolve, and organize selected items for
later reuse (Whittaker, 2011; Jones, 2012). Consistent with broader research on
technology adoption, these challenges appear less related to initial motivation
than to the practical conditions that make continued use manageable within
everyday instructional routines.
The
remainder of the article formalizes these challenges by distinguishing among
the activities required to locate relevant media, remain aware of ongoing
production, and preserve materials for future instructional use. We then show
how low-cost workflows support repository-level engagement while also enabling
instructors to retrieve materials efficiently during course planning and apply
them under ordinary instructional constraints.
4. The
Discovery, Monitoring, and Organization Problem
To address
these challenges, we distinguish among three related components of
instructional media use: discovery, ongoing monitoring, and long-term
pedagogical organization (D–M–O). In practice, platform-centered search and
recommendation systems—designed primarily for episodic retrieval rather than
sustained use—tend to compress these distinctions. Under conditions of
persistent accumulation in teaching-relevant media, that compression becomes
consequential, because instructors must not only locate useful resources but
also remain aware of evolving repositories and organize selected materials for
future reuse (Whittaker, 2011; Jones, 2012). These challenges become especially
visible under conditions of repository-level accumulation, where instructional
media are produced continuously and must be managed over time rather than
located episodically.
Discovery
(D) refers to the episodic identification of stable content repositories rather
than isolated items. Monitoring (M) refers to the ongoing, often automated
maintenance of current awareness once productive repositories have been
identified, shifting attention from memory-based checking toward durable
support systems. Organization (O) involves the selective retention, annotation,
and indexing of materials for long-term pedagogical reuse.
Platforms
vary in how they support discovery, monitoring, and organization.
Algorithmically driven systems such as YouTube and TikTok prioritize discovery
while offering limited support for sustained monitoring or long-term
organization. By contrast, subscription-based systems such as Substack
externalize monitoring through direct delivery but provide weaker mechanisms
for discovery and structured retrieval. Social media platforms such as Twitter
(X) and Facebook further illustrate the instability of accumulation, where
content rapidly decays from view and organizational support remains minimal.
These variations underscore that the D–M–O distinction is not platform-specific
but reflects underlying differences in how visibility and accumulation are
structured across digital environments.
These
components also differ in temporal structure. Discovery is contingent and
irregular, whereas monitoring and organization are cumulative processes that
unfold over time. Platform-centered search models, by contrast, compress
discovery, monitoring, and organization into repeated acts of retrieval,
obscuring the distinct forms of labor required for sustained use of
instructional media.
Although
these components describe the conditions under which instructional media can be
accumulated and indexed over time, their pedagogical value is realized most
fully through retrieval. Retrieval (R) involves locating already organized
materials under the temporal and cognitive constraints that characterize
teaching, where decisions often must be made quickly. Even well-organized
collections can fail pedagogically if instructors cannot readily recall or
locate materials when needed. In this sense, discovery, monitoring, and
organization function not as ends in themselves but as supports for reliable
retrieval.
Retrieval
alone, however, does not ensure instructional impact. The pedagogical value of
instructional media emerges through application—the integration of retrieved
materials into explanation, discussion, illustration, or analytical work in
instructional settings. Application (A) transforms archived media into active
teaching resources, enabling instructors and students to render abstract
concepts experientially visible and analytically tractable. When media are
successfully applied in the classroom, student responses often reinforce
instructors’ judgments about pedagogical value, increasing the likelihood of
future retrieval and reuse. In this way, discovery, monitoring, organization,
retrieval, and application form a cumulative process through which media become
incorporated into teaching over time. This extension is not a separate
framework but a clarification of how D–M–O becomes pedagogically consequential.
This
broader cycle is represented schematically in Figure 1.
[Insert
Figure Here]
Figure 1.
The Discovery–Monitoring–Organization–Retrieval–Application (DMORA) cycle of
instructional media use. The figure depicts instructional media use as a
cyclical process in which episodic discovery leads to ongoing monitoring and
cumulative organization, enabling retrieval under instructional constraints and
pedagogical application in teaching contexts. Arrows indicate both forward
movement and feedback loops through which application reinforces ongoing
organization and monitoring over time.
4.1
Analytic Approach and Empirical Basis
Although
this article is conceptual and methodological in orientation, its claims are
grounded in systematic documentation of instructional media curation rather
than abstract argument alone. The analysis draws on sustained, longitudinal
engagement with an operational workflow designed to manage platform-based
instructional videos amid persistent accumulation. This approach treats
curation not as an incidental practice but as an analytic site through which
processes of discovery, monitoring, and organization can be observed, compared,
and refined over time.
Empirically,
the study is based on the structured development and ongoing use of
repository-level collections and monitoring systems spanning multiple semesters
and instructional contexts. These materials include curated sets of online
video repositories (OVRs), RSS-based monitoring infrastructures, and social
bookmarking records that capture selection, annotation, and retrieval
decisions. Rather than relying on interviews or surveys, the analysis makes
visible the classificatory, evaluative, and organizational labor through which
instructional media are accumulated and maintained in practice.
The
appendices function as methodological documentation of this process. Appendix A
presents comparative repository-level starter collections in sociology and
economics, illustrating how disciplinary contexts shape discovery, visibility,
and accumulation. These collections are not exhaustive inventories but
analytically constructed samples drawn from a larger, ongoing curation system,
designed to represent broader patterns of repository development and use.
Appendix B, in turn, details the RSS monitoring and social bookmarking workflow
that supports ongoing awareness and long-term organization of instructional
materials. Together, these materials function as analytic demonstrations of the
decisions, routines, and infrastructures through which the D–M–O framework was
developed and operationalized, rather than as comprehensive records of a larger
underlying corpus.
4.2
Initial Discovery: Identifying Online Video Repositories
The
remainder of this section examines the components of the D–M–O framework in
turn, beginning with initial discovery, the stage at which instructors first
become aware of relevant OVRs. Although discovery is the most
visible point of engagement with instructional media, the framework’s central
contribution lies in distinguishing it from the cumulative work of ongoing
monitoring and long-term pedagogical organization, which are addressed in
subsequent sections. The discussion is framed at the level of the social
sciences, though the underlying problems extend across disciplinary settings.
The first
challenge instructors encounter is becoming aware of relevant OVRs,
a task distinct from locating individual videos for immediate classroom use. In
principle, discovery may occur through multiple channels,
including platform search, professional networks, syllabus circulation,
disciplinary journals, curated resource lists, and related aggregation
efforts. OVR discovery, therefore, involves identifying
websites, channels, or collections that consistently distribute pedagogically
relevant content over time, allowing instructional practice to move beyond
episodic searching toward sustained engagement with productive creators and
sources (Burgess and Green, 2009; Cunningham and Craig, 2019).
In
practice, however, instructors commonly rely on keyword searches through
platforms such as Google or YouTube, both of which are optimized to surface
individual items rather than stable collections. Search results are shaped by
engagement metrics, personalization histories, and recency biases, often
privileging popular or entertaining clips while obscuring repositories that may
have accumulated substantial instructional value but lack algorithmic
prominence (Noble, 2018). As a result, discovery practices tend to favor
short-term selection over long-term instructional planning.
One
indication that this problem extends beyond incidental search outcomes is that
repositories of clear pedagogical value may remain weakly visible even when
they are large, durable, and instructionally rich. SOC 119, for
example, constitutes one of the largest sociology-oriented instructional
repositories currently available, yet its scale alone does not ensure routine
discovery through standard instructional search pathways. Similarly, Pop
Culture Detective regularly produces sophisticated analyses of gender,
masculinity, and cultural power that align closely with sociological teaching
needs, yet these resources are inconsistently surfaced through
discipline-oriented discovery practices. These cases suggest that platform
visibility does not reliably correspond to pedagogical relevance, repository
durability, or disciplinary usefulness.
Importantly,
this article does not reject algorithmic search or platform recommendations
outright. Keyword searches and recommendation systems often play an important
role in initial discovery, leading instructors to usable individual videos. In
many cases, it is precisely through such encounters that instructors first
become aware of the existence, identity, and pedagogical orientation of an
underlying repository. Algorithmic search, therefore, often serves as an entry
point for repository-level engagement rather than as a comprehensive discovery
solution.
The
limitation of platform-centered search lies not in its capacity to surface
individual items but in its inability to sustain awareness of productive
sources over time. Platform systems are designed to optimize immediate
relevance and engagement rather than long-term instructional memory. Content
that is institutionally supported, professionally branded, or rewarded by
platform metrics is repeatedly surfaced, while pedagogically valuable
repositories that do not align with these signals often fade from view.
Instructors are therefore drawn back into repeated searching—not because
monitoring and organization lack value, but because platforms provide limited
support for keeping important sources visible and retrievable over time.
This
article does not propose a comprehensive method for OVR discovery,
which necessarily varies across disciplines and institutional contexts.
Instead, it assumes that at least some repositories have already been
identified—often through the search practices described above—and turns to the
less-examined problem of sustaining engagement with those repositories through
ongoing monitoring and long-term pedagogical organization.
4.3
Variability by Discipline
As noted,
the OVR discovery problem is uneven across fields. Economics,
for example, benefits from a strong tradition of public-facing explanation,
more centralized teaching venues that highlight digital resources, and greater
institutional visibility of educational content streams. Other fields,
including sociology, show a clearer mismatch between the volume of
repository-level content available and the visibility of mechanisms that make
those repositories routinely accessible to instructors.
This
unevenness became especially visible in earlier repository research (Miller and
CohenMiller, 2019), where economics yielded numerous readily identifiable
repositories, whereas fewer than ten sociology-specific repositories were
initially identified. Subsequent repository work indicated that sociology’s
actual repository field was considerably larger than that early count
suggested, implying that the contrast reflected differences in visibility as
much as differences in production. Economics repositories were more readily
signaled through journals, institutes, and public-facing educational
infrastructures, whereas sociology repositories more often required indirect or
cumulative discovery.
In
economics, discovery is frequently scaffolded by centralized journals, policy
institutes, and well-resourced public-facing organizations that regularly
signal the emergence and pedagogical relevance of new repositories. In
sociology, by contrast, journals have played a far more limited role in making
instructors aware of teaching-relevant OVRs, including repositories
created and maintained by sociologists themselves. Notable exceptions, such
as The Sociological Cinema, demonstrate that sustained,
high-quality curation exists within the discipline, but such efforts remain
weakly institutionalized and unevenly signaled. As a result, sociological
repository discovery more often depends on informal circulation, classroom
spillover, and episodic encounter rather than routinized journal-mediated
visibility.
4.4
Distinguishing Discovery, Monitoring, and Organization
Most
contemporary platforms effectively subsume OVR discovery, monitoring, and
organization into a single activity, typically labeled “search.” Although
platforms such as YouTube provide native tools such as subscriptions,
playlists, and saved-item functions, these remain tied to platform logics,
offer limited support for pedagogical annotation, and provide only limited
support for cross-course retrieval or instructor-defined metadata over time.
Keyword queries and algorithmic recommendation systems are designed to retrieve
items on demand, but they provide limited support for the continuing work
required to track and manage instructional materials as they accumulate. Even
after instructors identify productive repositories, they are often drawn back
into repeated searching, relocating materials rather than building durable
instructional collections. When visibility is mediated primarily through
platform systems, instructors are repeatedly returned to the point of initial
encounter rather than supported in maintaining stable relationships with
sources over time.
This
conflation has practical consequences. OVR discovery is contingent and
visibility-dependent, whereas monitoring and organization can become routine
once productive repositories are known. The framework proposed here therefore
separates these stages analytically, directing attention to monitoring and
organization as the activities that become increasingly consequential under
conditions of persistent digital accumulation.
Although
platform algorithms strongly influence which content becomes visible through
search and recommendation, this article does not directly evaluate their design
or bias. Instead, it examines how instructors can develop monitoring and
organizational practices that reduce continued dependence on opaque discovery
systems once repositories have been identified.
4.5
Integrating Monitoring and Organization as Sustained Practice
Once
repositories have been identified, the framework turns to sustained attention.
Monitoring and organization are analytically distinct but operationally
interdependent: monitoring maintains awareness of new material, while
organization records pedagogical judgments about what deserves future reuse. In
practice, these activities may occur at different moments, but they must remain
linked if repository-level accumulation is to become instructionally usable
across semesters.
Research
on current-awareness practices has recognized parts of this problem, though it
usually does not treat monitoring and organization as components of a single
curational process. Work in library and information science has examined how
emerging web technologies reshape academic practices of staying informed, often
emphasizing tools that surface new information or support personal collections
(Tenopir et al., 2013). Within this literature, awareness is typically framed
as a problem of keeping up with new information, while organization is treated
separately as a matter of storage, retrieval, or personal information
management.
What
remains less clearly specified is how these functions must be linked when
instructional materials accumulate continuously and are intended for repeated
pedagogical use over time. For instructors working with repository-level media,
awareness alone is insufficient if potentially useful materials are not
selectively retained, indexed, and made retrievable across future teaching
contexts. Conversely, organization without ongoing monitoring risks becoming
static and gradually disconnected from emerging content.
The
present article extends this tradition by explicitly linking monitoring and
organization into a unified practice oriented toward long-term instructional
use. Rather than treating RSS and social bookmarking as independent tools, the
framework conceptualizes them as complementary components within a
faculty-managed system for sustained monitoring and retrieval. In this
formulation, current awareness is reconceptualized not as an episodic activity primarily
tied to discovery, but as an ongoing process that supports continuous
monitoring and durable organization, thereby enabling selective pedagogical
reuse across courses and semesters.
4.6
Scaling Discovery, Monitoring, and Organization Across Course Types
The
demands associated with discovery, monitoring, and organization do not scale
uniformly across instructional contexts. In particular, courses organized
around substantive social phenomena place greater pressure on monitoring and
organization than discipline-centered courses because relevant instructional
media are produced continuously across multiple fields and platforms rather
than within a bounded disciplinary ecosystem. As a result, the relative
importance of monitoring and organization increases sharply in such courses.
In
discipline-centered courses, discovery is typically front-loaded and
convergent. Once a core set of discipline-relevant OVRs has been
identified—often reflecting professional associations, established educators,
or widely recognized explanatory channels—the marginal returns to continued
discovery decline. Monitoring practices stabilize as instructors track a
relatively limited number of repositories with predictable publication rhythms,
while organization can rely heavily on disciplinary categories that already
structure the field’s intellectual terrain. Discovery, monitoring, and
organization remain necessary, but their scale and complexity are constrained
by the discipline’s coherence and relative stability.
By
contrast, courses organized around substantive problems such as social
stratification or race and ethnic relations exhibit fundamentally different
scaling dynamics. Relevant instructional media are produced not only within
sociology but across adjacent fields, including economics, political science,
psychology, journalism, public policy analysis, data visualization, and
documentary filmmaking. Discovery, therefore, remains ongoing rather than
convergent, as new repositories continually emerge that address
inequality-related mechanisms, outcomes, and cases from multiple perspectives.
The instructional challenge is not simply identifying high-quality materials,
but sustaining awareness of a broad, heterogeneous, and continuously evolving
media environment.
Substantive-topic
courses are further complicated by their inherent dynamism. Because instructors
often animate these subjects through real-world, real-time developments,
instructional relevance is continually reshaped by social change. Shifts in
political regimes, policy agendas, cultural narratives, and institutional power
relations routinely generate new empirical cases, reframe existing
inequalities, and alter the interpretive stakes of long-standing theoretical
debates. Periods of rapid social and political change can render instructional
materials outdated not over decades, but over semesters.
These
dynamics place particular strain on monitoring. Substantive-topic courses often
require instructors to track dozens of active repositories across multiple
platforms, many of which respond directly to unfolding events rather than
stable curricular calendars. Without dedicated monitoring systems, the
cognitive burden of keeping pace with such material becomes prohibitive.
RSS-based aggregation provides one means of externalizing this task, enabling
instructors to maintain current awareness while reducing dependence on
continual searching or reactive content acquisition. As monitored feeds
accumulate over time, they also support longitudinal engagement with shifting
narratives, policy developments, and explanatory frames surrounding the
substantive topic.
Organizational
demands scale even more sharply in substantive-topic courses. Because
disciplinary categories no longer provide a sufficient organizing logic,
instructors must impose structure themselves to support retrieval, comparison,
and reuse across instructional contexts. Materials must be indexed according to
pedagogically salient dimensions—such as level of analysis, theoretical
orientation, empirical focus, political framing, or instructional
purpose—rather than disciplinary provenance alone. In this context, social
bookmarking systems function not merely as storage tools but as mechanisms for
constructing and maintaining instructor-defined order across a growing,
dynamically evolving body of media.
Taken
together, these contrasts show that the D–M–O framework becomes most
consequential where discovery remains open-ended, monitoring must respond to
rapid social and economic change, and organizational labor cannot be delegated
to disciplinary conventions. Substantive-topic courses, therefore, represent
scaling-intensive cases in which monitoring and organization are not ancillary
conveniences but essential supports for sustained teaching under conditions of
ongoing change. Rather than reflecting idiosyncratic over-curation, such
practices respond directly to the conditions under which media are produced,
circulated, and rendered pedagogically salient.
5. A
Workflow for Monitoring and Organizing Educational Content
The
distinctions developed above clarify why discovery, monitoring, and
organization should not be treated as interchangeable activities within
platform-centered instructional practice. Once productive repositories have
been identified, the practical challenge shifts to sustaining awareness of
ongoing content production while preserving selected materials in forms that
remain retrievable across courses and semesters. The issue is not simply
finding more efficient tools, but establishing lightweight routines that
externalize attentional and organizational labor amid ongoing repository
growth.
The
discovery of high-quality OVRs is not primarily a technical problem solved by
software alone. It is shaped by disciplinary norms, institutional visibility,
professional networks, and publication practices that vary across fields. For
that reason, the workflow begins only after relevant repositories have been
identified. This does not minimize the importance of discovery; rather, it
recognizes that repository visibility depends on conditions extending beyond
individual workflow design.
Rather
than attempting to solve discovery itself, the framework addresses the later
stages of ongoing monitoring and long-term organization through an integrated
workflow. Prior research has examined both activities separately, but their
practical alignment in educational settings remains underdeveloped (Whittaker,
2011; Jones, 2012).
In this
article, workflow refers to the temporal sequencing of monitoring and
organizational practices that follow discovery rather than to fixed software
steps, prescribed interfaces, or a single technical solution. Framed in D–M–O
terms, the intervention therefore focuses on the monitoring and organization
stages through which productive repositories become durable instructional
resources.
5.1
Clarifying the Scope of the Framework
This
section specifies the scope of the intervention and the tasks the framework is
designed to support. It does not replace discovery practices or instructor
judgment. Instead, it supports two recurring tasks once repositories are known:
(a) maintaining awareness of newly published content and (b) organizing
selected materials so they remain retrievable and reusable across courses and
semesters.
In
pedagogical terms, these functions support the downstream capacity to retrieve
materials efficiently during course planning and to apply them in teaching
contexts where time, sequencing, and learning objectives constrain what can
realistically be used. While discovery is episodic and contingent, monitoring
and organization are cumulative by design. The framework supports these
processes by shifting them from individual memory and ad hoc practice into
stable technical routines.
5.2 Why
RSS Monitoring and Social Bookmarking Work Together
RSS
monitoring and social bookmarking address complementary dimensions of
instructional media management that neither technology resolves independently.
RSS monitoring supports ongoing awareness by allowing instructors to subscribe
to updates from known repositories. Instead of manually checking multiple
sources, instructors can review consolidated notifications as new material is
published (Miller, 2011, 2016; Tenopir et al., 2013).
Social
bookmarking, by contrast, supports long-term organization and retrieval. Beyond
browser bookmarks or platform-based “save” functions, social bookmarking
systems enable flexible tagging, brief annotations, and retrieval based on
multiple criteria, such as course, topic, theoretical orientation, or
instructional purpose (Whittaker, 2011).
Prior work
(Miller, 2011) suggested the value of linking monitoring and retention tools
into coordinated teaching workflows rather than treating them as independent
practices. Building on this insight, we conceptualize these technologies as
components of a two-stage system: RSS surfaces new content, while social
bookmarking supports organization by indexing and retaining selected items with
contextual metadata. This alignment reflects instructional time horizons in
which monitoring is continuous and organization is selective.
A central
advantage of integrating monitoring and organization in this way is that the
approach scales across different instructional time horizons and organizational
levels without requiring changes in underlying tools. RSS monitoring operates
continuously in the background, whereas organization occurs during periodic
curation sessions in which instructors index and evaluate materials for future
use. This separation enables sustained current awareness without requiring
constant manual intervention.
The
framework also accommodates variation in scope and depth of engagement.
Discovery efforts may range from identifying a small number of repositories for
a specific course to monitoring hundreds of sources across an entire
discipline. Similarly, organizational practices may involve minimal tagging for
basic identification or more detailed pedagogical metadata to support retrieval
across multiple criteria. Individual instructors may emphasize focused
discovery through selective, in-depth indexing, whereas collaborative or
departmental efforts may pursue broader discovery alongside shared
organizational standards. In each case, the same monitoring and organizational
system supports both targeted individual use and more comprehensive collective
curation, allowing instructional media management to scale without increasing
cognitive or procedural complexity.
5.3
From Reactive Searching to Cumulative Teaching Libraries
The
integrated framework shifts instructional media use from reactive searching
toward cumulative resource development. Rather than repeatedly reconstructing
instructional materials through keyword searches, instructors can build
teaching libraries that grow across semesters and courses. Each curated item
retains contextual information—its location, pedagogical relevance, and brief
instructional notes—supporting retrieval under the temporal and cognitive
constraints of course preparation rather than requiring repeated reconstruction
through search.
Over time,
these accumulated annotations reduce preparation costs, support reuse, and
facilitate adaptation as courses or institutional conditions change. In D–M–O
terms, this shift enables reliable retrieval under instructional constraints,
transforming media accumulation from a source of cognitive burden into a
durable pedagogical asset.
5.4
Technology-Agnostic Design and Durability
Because
specific RSS readers and social bookmarking platforms may change over time, the
framework is intentionally technology-agnostic. Its durability lies in the
underlying logic—automated monitoring paired with structured
organization—rather than in dependence on any particular application or
service. Instructors can therefore migrate between tools without abandoning
accumulated teaching libraries, tagging systems, or organizational schemes.
This
design principle addresses a common barrier to adoption: skepticism rooted in
prior experiences with discontinued, degraded, or rapidly changing educational
technologies. By emphasizing durable functions rather than branded solutions,
the framework aligns with long-term teaching practice rather than short
platform cycles (Weller, 2020).
5.5
Translating Curation into Instructional Practice
The
framework does not require advanced technical expertise. Its value lies in
formalizing practices that can be adopted incrementally and adapted across
different instructional contexts.
Individual
instructors may begin by identifying a small number of productive OVRs,
establishing lightweight routines for monitoring newly published content, and
selectively archiving materials for future reuse. Over time, such practices
generate teaching libraries within social bookmarking systems that preserve
pedagogical context and support cross-course retrieval.
Faculty
development initiatives can treat instructional media management as a teachable
skill rather than as an incidental activity. Workshops may help instructors
distinguish among discovery, monitoring, and organization, develop sustainable
curation routines, and adopt tagging practices aligned with instructional goals
without prescribing specific tools. Whether such practices become durable
likely depends on institutional support, shared conventions, and recognition of
curation as instructional labor.
Institutions
can further support distributed curation through guidance, shared conventions,
and stable resources such as curated repository lists and shared tagging
vocabularies.
In this
sense, discovery, monitoring, and organization operate not as abstract
principles but as practical activities whose form, labor demands, and
pedagogical consequences are shaped by institutional support and the
disciplinary environments in which instructional media is produced and reused.
The
appendices that follow extend the framework developed in the main text through
comparative, discipline-specific illustration. Appendix A presents parallel
starter collections of online video repositories in sociology and economics,
designed not as exhaustive inventories but as typological demonstrations of how
instructional media accumulates under different disciplinary conditions. Read
comparatively, these cases make visible the distinct production logics,
authority structures, and pedagogical labor that shape discovery, monitoring,
and organization across fields. Appendix B documents the monitoring and
organizational workflow used to sustain engagement with those repositories over
time. Together, these appendices make the framework operationally explicit by
specifying observable practices, artifacts, and workflows without constituting
an outcome-based evaluation of instructional effectiveness.
6.
Summary and Conclusions: Curation as Pedagogical Resilience
Scale is
the practical problem this article addresses. As online materials accumulate
outside formal publication channels, instructors increasingly confront more
potentially useful content than they can manage through routine searching
alone. Platform-centered routines encourage repeated searches for individual
items, yet systematic monitoring of high-quality repositories often provides a
more effective strategy. An instructor may check a few familiar sources, but
cannot reliably track large numbers of repositories through manual browsing
alone. What appears at first to be a problem of individual search practice is
therefore also a problem of how pedagogical attention is organized under
conditions of continuing digital accumulation.
This
article advances a framework for understanding how instructors can sustain work
with online materials as they accumulate. Drawing on parallel analyses of
sociology and economics, we show how online video repositories embody distinct
forms of pedagogical labor, authority, and scalability, producing
discipline-specific challenges of discovery, monitoring, and organization. The
Discovery–Monitoring–Organization (D–M–O) framework reframes the use of
instructional media as an ongoing pedagogical practice rather than a series of
isolated search decisions.
Over the
past two decades, the expansion of online video has been enabled by broader
technological changes in production and distribution (Burgess and Green, 2009;
Weller, 2020). User-upload platforms such as YouTube have provided durable
hosting, global distribution, and searchability for instructional content
independent of institutional systems, transforming instructionally relevant
video from a scarce resource into an increasingly abundant one.
These
changes have also reshaped teaching practice. As distribution channels
expanded, instructors became more willing to incorporate externally produced
materials into lessons (Bennett et al., 2008; Kirkwood and Price, 2014). While
this development broadens instructional possibilities, it also increases the
volume of material that must be monitored and organized.
Meanwhile,
videos in many instructor-created repositories circulate with limited audience
interaction and weak mechanisms for reuse beyond the originating course.
Scalable curation systems can increase visibility and selective reuse,
supporting instructional communities organized around shared topics or
pedagogical approaches (Lobato, 2019; Palmer and Schueths, 2013). The
importance of such conditions became especially visible during the rapid
transition to remote teaching during the COVID-19 pandemic, which exposed
vulnerabilities in practices reliant on episodic searching and individual
memory (Fyfield et al., 2021; Nguyen and Palmer, 2024).
The
framework proposed here addresses general instructional fragility rather than
exceptional circumstances by specifying the conditions under which
instructional media can be encountered, retained, and reused over time. By
foregrounding repository-level engagement, it supports pedagogical continuity
by enabling instructors to draw on curated resources, coordinate informally
around shared materials, and adapt under constraint (Jones, 2012; Whittaker,
2011).
As shown
in Section 4.5, these demands become especially acute in substantive-topic
courses such as social stratification, where ongoing social, economic, and
political developments continually reshape instructional relevance. In such
contexts, monitoring and organization are not supplementary enhancements but
central pedagogical capacities that enable instructors to sustain coherence
amid rapidly evolving empirical conditions. Systems that support discovery,
monitoring, and organization, therefore, help instructors connect individual
experiences and public narratives to changing contemporary conditions,
sustaining pedagogical relevance as biographies and social structures evolve in
real time.
At the
same time, the pedagogical significance of these practices lies in what they
enable instructors to do within teaching itself. Discovery, monitoring, and
organization create the conditions under which instructors can reliably
retrieve relevant materials during course preparation and apply those materials
in explanation, illustration, and discussion. Without retrieval and pedagogical
application, curation risks becoming an end in itself rather than a support for
teaching.
Taken
together, these processes form a broader instructional cycle extending beyond
discovery, monitoring, and organization alone. Discovery enables monitoring;
monitoring supports organization; organization stabilizes retrieval; and
retrieval makes pedagogical application possible. Repeated cycles of retrieval
and application then feed back into organizational refinement, reinforcing the
conditions that support sustained instructional use. While this article centers
analytically on D–M–O, its pedagogical significance is best understood in
relation to the fuller Discovery–Monitoring–Organization–Retrieval–Application
(DMORA) sequence.
Repeated
cycles of retrieval and application transform instructional media from isolated
discoveries into durable teaching resources. Materials that prove effective in
the classroom become easier to recognize, retrieve, and reuse, reinforcing the
organizational habits that support future selection. In this way, low-cost
curation practices do more than manage informational abundance: they allow
continuously produced instructional media to enter teaching with increasing
ease, without requiring extensive technological systems or formal institutional
support.
Recent
advances in artificial intelligence are likely to influence how instructors
encounter, assess, and reuse instructional media. These developments, however,
do not diminish the relevance of the distinctions outlined here. Contemporary
AI systems depend on structured inputs—stable content sources, accumulated
materials, and durable metadata—to support summarization, prioritization, and
retrieval (Bender et al., 2021). The potential value of AI is therefore
greatest where discovery has already occurred and where monitoring and
organization are sustained. Rather than collapsing these stages into a single
function, emerging AI tools are more likely to amplify the benefits of keeping
them distinct while leaving source selection and pedagogical judgment firmly in
human hands.
The
decision to adopt systematic monitoring and organizational practices will shape
how fully instructors can make use of the expanding array of online educational
resources. In the absence of such practices, the use of instructional media
remains episodic, limiting cumulative refinement and reuse across courses and
semesters. Much of the educational potential of internet-based content
therefore remains only partially realized—not because relevant repositories are
unavailable, but because they are not reliably monitored and organized.
Future
research could extend this framework in several directions. Comparative studies
might examine how D–M–O systems operate across additional disciplines,
institutional types, or national contexts. Longitudinal work could investigate
how instructional repositories evolve, including how monitoring and
organizational practices shape curricular integration. Design-oriented research
might also explore how emerging AI-assisted tools interact with existing
monitoring systems, clarifying when automation supports instructional judgment
and when it risks reintroducing the very forms of opacity the framework seeks
to avoid.
In sum,
curation functions as a form of pedagogical resilience. Rather than treating
online video as a set of static resources assembled during course preparation,
curation-oriented practices position instructional media as evolving artifacts
embedded in continuing instructional, organizational, and collegial activity
across courses, semesters, institutions, and disciplines.
Although
this article centers on video, the D–M–O distinction and the conditions that
support it extend to a wider range of digital materials, including podcasts,
data visualizations, interactive graphics, and text-based resources. The
broader contribution, therefore, lies not in optimizing video use alone but in
offering a general approach for realizing the educational potential of the
internet under conditions of sustained content abundance.
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APPENDIX
A: Online Video Repository Starter Collections
Purpose
and Status of Appendix A
This
appendix should be read as empirical documentation of the curation of applied
instructional media rather than as a descriptive inventory. It records
systematic decisions regarding the discovery, inclusion, exclusion, and
long-term organization of online video repositories (OVRs) across
disciplines. The materials presented here make visible forms of classificatory
and infrastructural labor that are typically hidden in platform-centered
accounts of instructional media use. As such, Appendix A functions as a
methodological record of how the Discovery–Monitoring–Organization (D–M–O)
framework was operationalized in practice over time.
This
appendix provides curated starting points for instructors implementing the RSS
and social bookmarking framework across selected social science disciplines.
Each starter collection identifies teaching-relevant OVRs selected
to represent diverse source types, institutional locations, and content
approaches. The collections are intentionally substantial enough to illustrate
disciplinary scope and infrastructural variation, while remaining limited
enough to foreground representative repositories rather than exhaustive
coverage.
Although
the framework described in this article is applicable across diverse academic
disciplines, the appendix focuses on two social sciences—sociology and
economics. These fields were selected strategically to illustrate how
repository-level accumulation of instructional media operates under contrasting
disciplinary conditions. Sociology and economics differ substantially in their
patterns of content production, funding, institutional support, and pedagogical
orientation, making them well-suited to demonstrating variation in the forms,
scale, and organization of online video repositories. Limiting the appendix to
two disciplines allows for greater descriptive depth and analytic clarity and
should be understood as illustrative rather than exhaustive.
Selection
Criteria
Sociology
and economics repositories were selected to reflect diversity in institutional
location (universities, research centers, independent creators, and
project-based initiatives), pedagogical function (student-facing explanation,
disciplinary memory, public engagement, methods, and pedagogy-as-object), and
scale. Each discipline-specific list is intentionally limited to 10
repositories to emphasize analytic breadth and comparative clarity rather than
completeness.
Using
the Collections
Each entry
identifies an OVR by name and provides a brief descriptive
annotation. Where applicable, a project website is listed first, followed by a
primary video channel. The collections are designed to support repository-level
discovery and monitoring rather than one-off video search and are intended to
be used in conjunction with the RSS monitoring and social bookmarking
infrastructure documented in Appendix B.
Scope:
Notes and Exclusions
Completed
Archival Curation Projects
The Sociological Cinema (http://www.thesociologicalcinema.com/videos) is a prominent example.
Although TSC effectively ceased active curation in 2017, it
includes more than 600 curated video entries with teaching applications and
continues to function as a rich, well-organized instructional resource. Within
the D–M–O framework, such projects are best understood as completed archival
curation infrastructures. Their value lies primarily in long-term pedagogical
organization rather than in ongoing monitoring or content accumulation. As a
result, they fall outside the scope of the discipline-specific starter
collections presented here, which emphasize repositories that reward active
engagement through continued production or expansion. Nevertheless, archival
status is not fixed. Should a project such as TSC resume
systematic curation activity, its status would change accordingly. Ongoing
monitoring remains the mechanism through which such changes become visible.
Note
on Crash Course Repositories
The Crash
Course (https://www.youtube.com/user/crashcourse) project spans multiple academic
disciplines and functions as a widely adopted, course-centered instructional
resource. Because Crash Course is organized around sequenced,
self-contained courses rather than open-ended repositories that reward ongoing
monitoring, it is not included in the discipline-specific starter collections
below. Instructors may nonetheless consider relevant Crash Course series
as general-purpose supplements for introductory instruction across fields.
Note on
Disciplinary Organizations
All social
science disciplines are supported by major professional associations at
national and international levels. While such organizations often maintain
substantial video archives documenting professional activity, public
engagement, and field-level debate, they are not included in the
discipline-specific starter collections below. Readers are encouraged to
consult relevant disciplinary organizations directly as part of ongoing
professional awareness.
Supplementary
Journalistic Video Repositories
Instructors
frequently draw on high-volume journalistic video repositories to illustrate
contemporary social processes, institutions, and everyday organizational
practices. While such repositories often provide descriptively rich and
engaging material, they are typically organized around episodic production
cycles, topical relevance, and algorithmic distribution rather than cumulative
pedagogical design or disciplinary coherence. As a result, they are less
well-suited to sustained repository-level monitoring or long-term instructional
organization.
Accordingly,
these repositories are not included in the discipline-specific starter
collections presented below, which emphasize stable repositories that benefit
from ongoing monitoring and systematic indexing. Instead, they are best
understood as supplementary instructional resources—repositories that are
selectively sampled and analytically interrogated rather than continuously
monitored. Representative examples include Business Insider, Vox, Bloomberg
Originals, and DW Documentary.
Supplementary
Pedagogical Resource Banks
In
addition to video-centered repositories, instructors often rely on curated,
cross-media pedagogical resource banks that aggregate video alongside books,
articles, guides, and websites. An illustrative example is The REAL
Resource Bank, a project-based collection focused on learning about race,
ethnicity, and antiracism. Rather than functioning as OVRs per
se, such resource banks organize video within broader pedagogical contexts
shaped by collective teaching practice. In the present framework, they are best
understood as supplementary pedagogical infrastructure: valuable for discovery
and contextual framing, but analytically distinct from video-centered
repositories designed to support sustained monitoring and cumulative
instructional organization.
Sociology:
Interpreting the SOC 10 Starter Collection
The
sociology starter collection highlights online video repositories that reflect
the field’s comparatively decentralized and heterogeneous patterns of
instructional media production. In contrast to economics, sociology’s video
ecosystem is largely instructor-driven, shaped by individual pedagogical
initiative, uneven institutional support, and diverse orientations toward
public engagement. Sociological OVRs tend to emerge from
classrooms, research projects, activist commitments, or professional reflection
rather than from centralized infrastructures designed for scale.
As a
result, these repositories exhibit wide variation in production style, pacing,
and instructional intent, with contributions accumulating episodically rather
than through regularized output. Taken together, the repositories listed below
illustrate how instructional video in sociology accumulates through dispersed,
labor-intensive practices, and why sustained monitoring and organization are
necessary for instructors seeking continuity amid fragmentation and change.
The brief
analytic descriptors that accompany each entry serve as a typological guide
rather than an evaluative ranking. Together, they show how accumulation in
instructional media can take multiple forms: modular explanation, disciplinary
memory, interactional record, public commentary, or institutional archiving.
Collectively, the SOC 10 demonstrates that repository-level engagement enables
instructors to draw on video not only as content but also as infrastructure for
sustaining sociological thinking, teaching, and professional practice over
time.
Sociology Online
Video Repositories
Alexander
Avila
https://www.youtube.com/@alexander_avila
(Accessible
Sociology, Narrative Explanation & Hybrid Reflexive Pedagogy)
Alexander
Avila is an
instructor-facing repository organized around long-form videos that address
inequality, identity, culture, and everyday social interaction. It combines
sociological explanation with humor, personal narrative, and visual
storytelling, deliberately lowering affective and cognitive barriers to
engagement while maintaining analytic intent.
The labor
performed here is hybrid and reflexive. Avila draws on personal experience
(including positionality as a trans creator) and formal sociological training
to render abstract concepts legible and memorable. Rather than presenting
sociology as detached analysis, the repository integrates biography and theory,
modeling how lived experience and disciplinary reasoning can coexist
productively. Accumulation occurs through a growing set of modular explainers
that can be recombined across courses rather than through a linear curriculum.
Monitoring
is valuable because new videos extend the repository’s conceptual coverage and
stylistic repertoire. Within the SOC 10, Avila’s work illustrates how sociology
video repositories can support accessible explanation, with pedagogy scaled
through humor and narrative without sacrificing disciplinary substance.
Andrew
Rezitnyk
https://www.youtube.com/@andrewreszitnyk4204
(Reflexive
Pedagogy, AI Integration & Institutional Adaptation)
Professor
Andrew Rezitnyk’s video repository treats pedagogy itself as a sociological
object, with a sustained focus on artificial intelligence, assessment design,
and academic integrity. Rather than positioning AI as an external threat to
instruction, the repository frames it as a structural condition that
instructors must theorize, manage, and incorporate into learning environments.
The
repository accumulates as a record of pedagogical adaptation under rapidly
shifting technological conditions. Videos address AI integration levels,
assessment redesign, and transparency in instructional expectations, offering
instructors conceptual tools rather than prescriptive rules. The emphasis is on
analytic clarity regarding institutional constraints and student incentives
rather than on moral panic or prohibition.
Monitoring
matters because new videos respond to evolving instructional technologies and
institutional debates. Within the SOC 10, the repository illustrates how video
can function as a medium for reflexive sociological practice, supporting
theorization of contemporary teaching conditions rather than delivering
disciplinary content alone.
Demographile
https://www.youtube.com/@Demographile
(Disciplinary
Memory, Demographic Scholarship & Archival Knowledge Preservation)
Demographile is a long-running sociology
and demography OVR curated by Professor Elwood Carlson,
devoted to documenting disciplinary knowledge, intellectual history, and
scholarly community. The repository includes interviews with researchers,
interpretive discussions of classic demographic studies, and sustained
attention to the lives and works of influential figures such as Charles
Nam.
Accumulation
here is primarily archival rather than curricular. Videos preserve disciplinary
memory, research trajectories, methodological debates, and institutional
histories that are often invisible in textbooks. At the same time, the
repository continues to grow through periodic new uploads, extending its role
as a living record of demography as a subfield.
Monitoring
remains valuable because new content periodically extends the repository’s
archival scope, reinforcing its function as a living record of disciplinary
knowledge rather than a static historical collection. Within the SOC 10, Demographile illustrates
how video repositories can function as disciplinary memory, memorializing
knowledge production and sustaining continuity across generations of scholars.
Havens
Wright Center for Social Justice
https://havenswrightcenter.wisc.edu
https://www.youtube.com/@HavensWrightCenter
(Institutional
Public Sociology, Social Movement Scholarship & Programmatic Accumulation)
Havens
Wright Center for Social Justice is
sponsored by the University of Wisconsin–Madison Department of Sociology,
honoring the memory of A. Eugene Havens and Erik Olin Wright. The repository
documents lectures, panels, workshops, and public events centered on social
justice, inequality, labor, democracy, and emancipatory social change.
Unlike
instructor-centered or creator-driven repositories, the archive reflects
institutionalized public sociology. Accumulation occurs through sustained
programming rather than episodic production: conferences, speaker series, and
collaborative initiatives generate a growing archive of sociological debate and
movement-oriented scholarship. Videos frequently foreground dialogue among
scholars, activists, and organizers, positioning sociology as a collective
intellectual practice embedded in broader political projects.
Monitoring
is valuable because new content reflects evolving research agendas and
contemporary struggles rather than curricular sequencing. Organization is
essential because individual videos are typically deployed selectively—as
contextual anchors, debate provocations, or exemplars of engaged
sociology—rather than as self-contained instructional units. Within the SOC
10, Havens Wright Center for Social Justice illustrates how
sociology video repositories can function as institutional movement
infrastructure, preserving, circulating, and extending critical sociological
knowledge beyond the classroom.
The
Mad Sociologist
https://www.youtube.com/@andosciamadsociology/
(Pedagogical
Resistance, Civic Engagement & Educational Conflict Documentation)
The Mad
Sociologist is
an OVR created by Michael Andoscia, a long-time high school
sociology teacher whose work bridges classroom instruction, civic engagement,
and public resistance to educational repression. The repository includes
recorded lessons, sociological explainers, and direct interventions addressing
contemporary political developments, censorship, and state-level control over
curriculum.
The
repository documents pedagogical labor under conditions of institutional
constraint, culminating in Andoscia’s public resignation following the removal
of hundreds of books from his classroom. Accumulation here is inseparable from
conflict: new videos respond to evolving political and educational pressures
rather than advancing a stable instructional sequence. Video becomes both
archive and testimony.
Monitoring
matters because the repository functions as a living record of pedagogical
struggle and educational contestation. Within the SOC 10, The Mad
Sociologist illustrates how video repositories can function as sites
of pedagogical resistance, archiving not only sociological knowledge but also
the conditions under which that knowledge is contested.
Pop
Culture Detective
https://popculturedetective.agency/
https://www.youtube.com/@PopCultureDetective
(Media
Critique, Gender Analysis & Cultural Power Examination)
Pop
Culture Detective is
an OVR created by Jonathan McIntosh, devoted to critical
analysis of media, gender, power, and representation. Although not explicitly
branded as a sociology project, the repository’s sustained engagement with
sociological themes and its systematic analytical approach make it widely
applicable to sociology teaching.
Videos are
carefully scripted, narratively structured, and analytically dense, designed to
stand alone as instructional objects. Accumulation occurs through thematic
expansion rather than curricular sequencing, with new releases extending an
ongoing critique of cultural narratives and power relations. Media texts are
treated as sociological data and analyzed for embedded assumptions
regarding masculinity, race, sexuality, and authority.
Monitoring
is important because each new video contributes to a growing archive of
sociologically informed media analysis. Within the SOC 10, Pop Culture
Detective illustrates how sociology can be practiced through cultural
critique, with media analysis serving as a vehicle for sociological explanation
and theoretical application.
Prof.
David Stuckler
https://www.youtube.com/@profdavidstuckler
(Professional
Sociology, Publishing Strategy & Academic Skill Formation)
Prof.
David Stuckler is
a sociology-adjacent instructional archive focused not on substantive empirical
findings but on the craft of academic production. Stuckler provides extensive
guidance on publishing strategies, manuscript positioning, journal selection,
navigating reviewers, and the rhetorical construction of sociological
arguments.
This
repository is distinctive in that its pedagogical object is professional
performance itself. Videos demystify processes that are typically learned
informally or tacitly, translating accumulated academic experience into
explicit, reusable instruction. Accumulation occurs through iterative
refinement of advice in response to changes in publishing norms, evaluation
regimes, and career structures.
Although
Stuckler offers paid consulting related to publishing, his public-facing
YouTube channel is encyclopedic in scope and exceptionally transparent.
Monitoring is useful because new videos often address emerging pressures in
academic labor markets and publication ecosystems. Organization is important
because instructors and graduate students typically revisit specific videos at
different stages of professional development. Within the SOC 10, this
repository illustrates how video can support reflexive professional practice in
sociology, facilitating the transmission of disciplinary know-how rather than
disciplinary content.
Snakegrrl
Sociology
https://www.youtube.com/@Snakegrrl_Sociology
(Integrated
Scholarship, Subcultural Research & Public Media Practice)
Snakegrrl
Sociology is
an OVR created by Professor Beverly Yuen Thompson, whose work
integrates research, teaching, and public engagement through sustained video
production. The repository draws heavily on Thompson’s long-standing research
on subcultures—most notably tattoo communities and digital nomads—as well as on
her broader commitment to visual sociology, public scholarship, and reflexive
engagement with academic labor.
Video is
treated not as an ancillary teaching aid but as a core methodological and
professional practice. The repository includes research-driven content,
pedagogical reflections, and meta-commentary on the risks and rewards of doing
sociology in public-facing media spaces. Accumulation occurs across multiple
domains of sociological life, blurring boundaries between scholarship,
pedagogy, identity, and outreach.
Monitoring
matters because new videos extend both substantive research themes and ongoing
reflection on sociological media work itself. Within the SOC 10, Snakegrrl
Sociology illustrates how video repositories can serve as integrated
media practices that support research dissemination, pedagogical
experimentation, and professional self-formation.
SOC
119
https://www.youtube.com/@SOC119
(Dialogic
Pedagogy, Classroom Sociology & Interactive Knowledge Production)
SOC 119 is composed of recorded
sessions from a long-running undergraduate course on race relations taught at
Penn State University by Professor Sam Richards. Unlike repositories built
around polished lectures or modular explainers, SOC 119 foregrounds
the classroom itself as a site of sociological production. Videos document
extended student participation, spontaneous dialogue, emotional disclosure, and
collective sense-making, treating interaction not as a pedagogical supplement
but as the core instructional medium.
The
repository accumulates through pedagogical risk rather than curricular design.
Content is unscripted and often unpredictable, capturing moments of conflict,
uncertainty, and reflexivity that are typically absent from formal
instructional media. Rather than refining explanation, the archive preserves
interaction.
Monitoring
matters because new recordings extend a living archive of classroom sociology,
offering instructors insight into how sociological concepts are negotiated,
resisted, and internalized in real time. Within the SOC 10, SOC 119 illustrates
how video repositories can support dialogic pedagogy, with accumulation taking
the form of documented interaction and video serving as a record of teaching
practice itself.
SociologistRay
https://www.youtube.com/@DrRashawnRay
(Public
Sociology, Expert Commentary & Aspirational Testimony)
SociologistRay is a repository created by
Professor Rashawn Ray, whose work exemplifies contemporary public sociology at
the intersection of empirical research, media commentary, and expert testimony.
Drawing on original scholarship in race, policing, health disparities, and
institutional power, the repository positions sociological knowledge as
publicly accountable expertise rather than as detached academic analysis.
Videos frequently intervene in current events, policy debates, and media
narratives, translating peer-reviewed research into accessible but
authoritative commentary.
Accumulation
occurs through conjunctural response rather than curricular sequencing: new
videos are added as sociological expertise is called upon in moments of
controversy, crisis, or public debate. Authority derives from research
credibility and the visible labor of sociological interpretation in real time.
Importantly,
the repository also documents Ray’s engagement with aspirational and
uplift-oriented public sociology, particularly in relation to Black youth and
social mobility. This dimension is visible in discussions of education, sport,
mentorship, and opportunity structures and research on racialized pathways in
athletics and schooling. These videos foreground community assets and
future-oriented goals alongside structural critique, showing how sociological
research can inform both diagnosis and intervention.
Monitoring
is valuable because new videos reflect evolving social conditions, research
agendas, and institutional initiatives rather than incremental conceptual
coverage. Within the SOC 10, SociologistRay illustrates
sociology as expert public engagement and aspirational testimony, where video
makes visible how sociological knowledge circulates beyond the classroom to
critique inequality while also articulating pathways toward collective and
individual advancement.
Economics:
Starter Collection of Online Video Repositories
The
economics starter collection highlights online video repositories that reflect
the field’s distinctive patterns of instructional media production and
dissemination. In contrast to sociology, economics has developed a
comparatively centralized and well-resourced video ecosystem, shaped by
professionalized production, sustained institutional backing, and efforts to
standardize conceptual delivery at scale. Many economic OVRs are
organized around core principles and policy debates, often embedded within think
tanks, research centers, or philanthropic infrastructures. As a result,
economic video repositories tend to exhibit higher production values and more
regular output, with clearer pedagogical scaffolding than is typical in
sociology. Taken together, the repositories listed below illustrate how
instructional video in economics accumulates through infrastructure-intensive
practices, and why repository-level monitoring and organization are essential
for instructors navigating a dense and continuously expanding media
environment.
Economics Online
Video Repositories
Adam’s
Axiom
https://www.youtube.com/@adamsaxiom
(Conceptual
Economics, Instructor-Centered Explanation & Modular Accumulation)
Adam’s
Axiom is an
instructor-facing economics OVR organized around the
systematic explanation of core economic concepts. Rather than operating as a
news-responsive channel or policy commentary outlet, the repository is
structured as a growing conceptual archive, with individual videos designed to be
modular, reusable, and easily integrated into introductory and intermediate
economics courses. The emphasis is on clarity, internal coherence, and
pedagogical pacing rather than topical immediacy.
The labor
performed in Adam’s Axiom is didactic and cumulative. Videos
are produced to refine explanation rather than to intervene in controversy,
resulting in a repository that accumulates slowly but deliberately. New
additions tend to extend conceptual coverage, clarify difficult ideas, or
improve prior explanations, making monitoring valuable for tracking the
maturation of an instructional corpus rather than reacting to external events.
Within the
ECO 10, Adam’s Axiom illustrates how economics video
repositories can serve as long-term pedagogical assets, built through sustained
explanatory labor and oriented toward instructional completeness rather than
persuasion.
Democracy
at Work
https://www.democracyatwork.info/
https://www.youtube.com/@democracyatwrk/featured
(Political
Economy, Labor-Centered Analysis & Public Pedagogy)
Democracy
at Work is
associated with Richard D. Wolff and collaborators, which addresses political
economy, labor, and alternative economic arrangements from a Marxist
perspective. The repository foregrounds questions of power, class, and
workplace democracy, situating economic analysis within broader struggles over
ownership, governance, and inequality. Content includes lectures, interviews,
short explainers, and responses to contemporary economic developments. The
repository accumulates dialogically, with new videos responding to unfolding
political, economic, and labor-related events rather than advancing a fixed
curriculum.
Monitoring
is therefore essential: releases are episodic and often keyed to current
debates, policy changes, or crises, making the repository particularly valuable
for instructors seeking to connect economic theory to lived social conflict.
As an ECO
10 OVR, Democracy at Work illustrates how
economics video repositories can function as public pedagogy, with accumulation
reflecting ongoing engagement with social movements and political struggle
rather than a standardized instructional sequence.
Economic
Policy Institute
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBP_y4Vi31ZECb1I9rOTL0Q
(Institutional
Economics, Empirical Authority & Policy Translation)
Economic
Policy Institute is
a repository embedded within a broader institutional website that produces and
disseminates research on labor markets, wages, inequality, and economic policy.
Videos typically translate empirical findings into accessible formats,
contextualizing data within policy debates and institutional analysis. Unlike
creator-driven repositories, EPI’s video output is shaped by
organizational priorities, research cycles, and advocacy goals.
Accumulation
here is institutional rather than personal. Videos emerge as extensions of
reports, policy interventions, and public commentary, making monitoring
valuable as a way of tracking shifts in economic discourse and empirical
emphasis over time. Authority is derived from research credibility and
organizational continuity rather than personality or stylistic branding.
Within the
ECO 10, EPI illustrates how institutional video repositories
can serve as policy-translation infrastructures, accumulating pedagogical value
through sustained engagement with real-world economic governance.
Economics
Media Library
(Curated
Media, Edited Content & Pedagogical Indexing)
Economics
Media Library is
a curated repository of economics videos developed by Professor Jadrian Wooten,
building on and extending the tradition of edited-content projects such as the
“Economics of …” series. The repository aggregates clips from films,
television, news, and other media, organizing them around economic concepts and
instructional themes.
The labor
here is curatorial and organizational. Value is generated not through original
production but through systematic selection, indexing, and contextualization.
Accumulation occurs as new media examples are added and categorized, making
monitoring important for identifying newly indexed content relevant to specific
courses or concepts.
Within the
ECO 10, the Economics Media Library illustrates how curated repositories can
function as pedagogical indexing infrastructures, in which
instructional power derives from organization and reuse rather than authorship.
Gary’s
Economics
https://www.youtube.com/@garyseconomics
(Working-Class
Economics, Experiential Authority & Everyday Political Economy)
Gary’s
Economics is
grounded in Gary Stevenson’s lived experience and working-class perspectives on
economic insecurity, labor, and inequality. Rather than presenting economics as
an abstract system of models or policies, he frames economic processes in terms
of everyday struggles over employment, wages, debt, and survival. The tone is
direct and experiential, often privileging narrative over formal exposition.
The
repository accumulates organically, with new videos responding to shifts in
economic conditions, personal experience, and broader social developments.
Monitoring matters because content reflects changing material realities rather
than a stable conceptual sequence. Authority here is experiential rather than
institutional, offering a counterpoint to professionally produced or
donor-funded economics OVRs.
Within the
ECO 10, Gary’s Economics illustrates how video repositories
can function as ‘economics from below,’ where economic knowledge is articulated
through lived conditions rather than academic abstraction.
Learn
Liberty
https://www.learnliberty.org/
https://www.youtube.com/learnliberty
(Ideological
Instruction, Professional Production & Strategic Scale)
Learn
Liberty is a
professionally produced repository developed at George Mason University's
Institute for Humane Studies. It combines high production values, animated
explainers, and pop-culture references to advance market-oriented economic
perspectives. Videos are tightly scripted, visually polished, and explicitly
designed for wide dissemination and reuse.
Accumulation
in Learn Liberty is strategic and infrastructure-intensive.
New videos are produced in response to emerging policy debates, cultural
moments, and ideological opportunities, extending a coherent economic worldview
rather than completing a bounded instructional curriculum. Monitoring is
essential because releases are coordinated and episodic, often aligned with
broader advocacy initiatives.
Within the
ECO 10, Learn Liberty illustrates how economics video
repositories can serve as scaled ideological instruction, with professional
media production and philanthropic funding enabling sustained, high-volume
content creation to shape public understanding of economic life.
Money &
Macro
https://www.youtube.com/@MoneyMacro
(Macroeconomic
Explanation, Global Context & Narrative Reframing
Money
& Macro is
an actively publishing repository created by economist Joeri Schasfoort,
focused on macroeconomic theory, global economic dynamics, and public economic
narratives. Videos frequently connect abstract macroeconomic concepts to
concrete international developments, policy choices, and structural trends,
making the repository especially relevant for courses addressing globalization
and economic change.
The
repository is accumulated through narrative reframing rather than through
curricular sequencing. New videos reinterpret familiar economic ideas in light
of changing conditions, dominant media narratives, or emerging data. Monitoring
is therefore valuable for tracking how macroeconomic explanations evolve
alongside global economic transformations.
Within the
ECO 10, Money & Macro illustrates how video repositories
can support macro-level sensemaking, presenting economics as an interpretive
framework for understanding complex, interconnected systems.
New
Economic Thinking
https://www.ineteconomics.org/
https://www.youtube.com/@NewEconomicThinking/featured
(Heterodox
Economics, Disciplinary Critique & Intellectual Pluralism)
New
Economic Thinking is
associated with efforts to challenge and expand mainstream economic frameworks.
Content includes interviews, lectures, and panel discussions featuring
economists and scholars engaged in heterodox approaches, institutional
critique, and methodological reflection. The repository foregrounds debate,
disagreement, and alternative perspectives rather than settled consensus.
Accumulation
is dialogic and archival. New videos extend ongoing conversations about the
limits of orthodox economics and the need for conceptual renewal. Monitoring
matters because the repository reflects shifts in disciplinary critique and
intellectual alignment over time rather than a linear pedagogical progression.
Within the
ECO 10, New Economic Thinking illustrates how video can
function as a medium for representing economics as contested knowledge,
supporting disciplinary self-examination and reform.
Radical
Discourse
https://www.eo.foundation/radicaldiscourse
https://www.youtube.com/@RadicalDiscourse
(Creative Pop-Economics, Media Expertise & Scaled Ideological Persuasion)
Radical
Discourse is
an economics-oriented video repository and media brand associated with John
Papola and the broader Emergent Order ecosystem. The project extends the
creative approach pioneered in EconStories by staging economic
debates as performative, high-production cultural events rather than as
conventional instructional media.
Substantively, Radical
Discourse dramatizes economic disagreement rather than resolving it.
Competing positions are embodied in characters, lyrics, and storylines,
rendering economic theory a spectator experience.
The labor
performed here is aestheticized ideological pedagogy. Over time, the repository
accumulates as a media archive of economic controversy, where new productions
extend a recognizable style rather than a cumulative curriculum.
Within the
ECO 10, Radical Discourse illustrates how economics can be
rendered as popular culture, with disciplinary ideas disseminated through
professional media production rather than through classrooms, policy briefs, or
academic debate.
Unlearning
Economics
https://www.youtube.com/@unlearningeconomics9021
(Critical
Political Economy, Media Critique & Pedagogical Intervention)
Unlearning
Economics is
dedicated to critiquing mainstream economic narratives, methods, and teaching
practices. Videos often respond directly to popular explanations of economic
phenomena, exposing assumptions, omissions, and ideological commitments
embedded in conventional discourse. The tone is analytical and corrective,
aimed at reshaping audiences' understanding of economics.
Accumulation
is reactive and argumentative. New videos are produced in response to
prevailing economic claims circulating in media and education, making
monitoring essential for tracking the evolving targets of critique.
Within the
ECO 10, Unlearning Economics illustrates how video can
function as a tool for critical pedagogy, supporting disruption, correction,
and conceptual unlearning.
Comparing
Sociological and Economic Video Ecologies
Read
together, the SOC 10 and ECO 10 starter collections reveal systematic
disciplinary differences in how instructional video accumulates, circulates,
and becomes pedagogically usable. Sociology’s video ecology is comparatively
decentralized, creator-driven, and heterogeneous, with repositories emerging
from individual instructors, classrooms, subfields, and public intellectual
projects. Accumulation in sociology frequently takes the form of dialogic
interaction, disciplinary memory, pedagogical reflection, or integrated
scholarly identity, often requiring selective reuse, clipping, and contextual
framing by instructors.
Economics,
by contrast, exhibits a more centralized and infrastructure-intensive video
ecosystem. Many repositories are embedded within think tanks, research
institutes, advocacy organizations, or professionally managed media projects
and are supported by philanthropic or institutional resources. Accumulation
tends to occur through standardized explainers, policy translation, ideological
persuasion, or curated media archives, with higher production values and more
regular release cycles. As a result, economics instructors face a denser and
more rapidly expanding media environment, in which pedagogical value often
derives from strategic monitoring and selective deployment rather than from the
sequential adoption of curricula.
These
contrasts underscore the analytic value of repository-level engagement. While
both disciplines confront problems of instructional media abundance, the forms
of accumulation they encounter—and the kinds of pedagogical labor required to
manage them—differ in predictable, discipline-specific ways. RSS monitoring and
social bookmarking infrastructures provide a common solution precisely because
they accommodate this variation, supporting heterogeneous accumulation patterns
without imposing uniform instructional models.
APPENDIX
B: RSS Monitoring and Social Bookmarking Infrastructure
This
appendix documents the RSS monitoring and social bookmarking infrastructure
that supports repository-level engagement with instructional video. The
infrastructure operationalizes the distinction between ongoing awareness and
long-term pedagogical organization introduced in the main text. Rather than
treating discovery, monitoring, and organization as a single activity collapsed
into platform-centered search, the system separates these functions across
complementary tools, enabling instructors to manage persistent growth in
instructional media without requiring continuous evaluative labor. In contrast
to Appendix A, which documents the repositories themselves, this appendix
focuses on the infrastructural processes that enable sustained engagement with those
repositories over time.
The
materials documented in this appendix should be read as worked operational
examples rather than as empirical tests of the framework’s effectiveness.
Discipline-Specific
RSS Monitoring Pages
For each
discipline included in Appendix A, a dedicated RSS page aggregates feeds from
the selected OVRs:
https://www.protopage.com/2026millercohenmiller#OVRs_Sociology
https://www.protopage.com/2026millercohenmiller#OVRs_Economics
These
pages serve as monitoring interfaces, allowing instructors to observe new
content as it is released without having to perform repeated manual searches.
Each repository contributes a single primary feed, ensuring that monitoring
occurs at the repository level rather than through keyword searches or
topic-specific alerts.
The
monitoring pages function as working exemplars rather than prescriptive
templates and may be adapted or replicated using alternative aggregation tools.
RSS pages
are intentionally limited to repositories that merit sustained attention over
time; repositories that do not reward ongoing monitoring are excluded from this
layer. In this way, RSS supports continuous awareness of the accumulation of
instructional media while minimizing noise and redundant effort.
Notifications
and Attention Management
In
addition to passive aggregation via RSS feeds, the monitoring layer may
incorporate optional notification mechanisms to alert instructors as new
content appears. Notifications function as a selective extension of monitoring,
allowing instructors to externalize attentional labor by delegating awareness
of change to the system rather than relying on habitual checking.
Importantly,
notifications are not intended to prompt immediate evaluation or adoption of
new materials, but to signal that new content exists and may warrant later
review. When configured, notifications support peripheral awareness of the
accumulation of instructional media while preserving instructor control over
when content is examined.
Social
Bookmarking and Pedagogical Memory
Social
bookmarking serves a distinct and complementary function. Whereas RSS surfaces
what is new, social bookmarking records judgment and retention. For each
repository included in the starter collections, a repository-level bookmark
captures the rationale for monitoring that source and documents its pedagogical
orientation, scope, and relevance. In addition, a representative video from
each OVR is bookmarked to illustrate how repositories can be
used for instructional purposes.
These
bookmarks function as an externalized pedagogical memory, allowing instructors
to retrieve previously evaluated materials across courses and semesters without
re-assessing them from scratch:
https://pinboard.in/u:2026millercohenmiller/
Pedagogical
Goals and Video Use
These
goals complement the repository-level distinctions described in Appendix A by
specifying how individual videos function pedagogically within those
repositories.
Video-level
bookmarks encode pedagogical goals that capture the instructional work a video
is designed to perform, rather than the topic it covers or the theory it
references. These goals provide a compact vocabulary for describing how videos
operate pedagogically and for supporting retrieval under instructional
constraints.
To
operationalize pedagogical goals, this project draws on the typology developed
by Andrist, Chepp, Dean, and Miller (2014). Although originally formulated in
the context of sociology, the typology identifies modes of pedagogical
mediation rather than discipline-specific content, making it applicable across
fields. In the present framework, the typology is extended to economics, with
attention to how the distribution of goals may vary across disciplines,
institutional locations, and production contexts.
The
typology identifies six pedagogical goals:
· Propaganda: Videos
oriented toward persuasion, advocacy, or the promotion of a normative or
ideological position.
· Testimony: Videos
that foreground lived experience, situated authority, or expert witnessing.
· Conjuncture: Videos
that connect concepts to unfolding events, controversies, or current
conditions.
· Infographics: Videos
that compress, summarize, or stabilize empirical information (not limited to
visual graphics).
· Pop
culture: Videos that use shared cultural texts or media artifacts as
entry points for analysis.
· Détournement: Videos
that repurpose or subvert dominant narratives to produce critical insight.
Pedagogical
goals are assigned at the level of individual videos rather than entire
repositories. A single video may serve multiple goals simultaneously, although
one may be more salient depending on instructional use. Goals are therefore
treated as analytic descriptors rather than exclusive classifications.
Although
goals are coded at the video level, repeated social bookmarking over time makes
visible patterned concentrations of goals within repositories. These patterns
are not treated as fixed properties of OVRs, but as emergent
tendencies produced through accumulation. Observing these patterns supports
comparative analysis across disciplines while preserving analytic precision.
Encoding
pedagogical goals as tags allows instructional judgments to be externalized and
retrieved across courses and semesters. Rather than re-evaluating videos from
scratch, instructors can draw on accumulated pedagogical memory to identify
resources suited to specific teaching purposes and instructional moments.
Organizational
Tagging and Pedagogical Retrieval
The social
bookmarking component relies on a deliberately designed tagging system to
support retrieval and pedagogical application under conditions of persistent
content accumulation. Rather than attempting exhaustive topical classification,
tagging functions as an infrastructural mechanism for encoding pedagogical
judgment in a retrievable form.
Tagging
follows a hybrid logic that combines a small number of structured metadata
fields with lightweight pedagogical and evaluative descriptors. Structured tags
are used for OVR dimensions instructors are likely to filter during course
preparation, while unstructured tags support recognition-based recall. This
design reflects the constraints of instructional work, where retrieval must
often occur quickly and under time pressure.
At a
minimum, each bookmarked item includes:
A
structured tag indicating object type (repository or individual video)
One or two
analytic frame tags corresponding to core conceptual lenses
Additional
structured tags may indicate pedagogical use (e.g., discussion catalyst,
illustration, provocation), allowing anticipated applications to be encoded at
the point of organization rather than improvised later.
Alongside
these structured tags, items may include deliberately coarse evaluative tags
(e.g., good, excellent, tested). These do not represent formal assessment but
function as retrieval accelerators, distinguishing materials judged to have
instructional value. Because pedagogical effectiveness is often confirmed
through classroom use, these evaluations remain provisional and subject to
revision.
Tags may
also capture affective or experiential qualities when pedagogically relevant.
Instructors often recall how a resource felt—surprising, uncomfortable,
engaging—before recalling its specific content. Encoding such qualities
supports recognition-based retrieval and helps explain why certain materials
become durable components of instructional repertoires.
Taken
together, this tagging scheme operationalizes organization as externalized
pedagogical memory. By encoding analytic orientation, anticipated use, and
evaluative judgment in lightweight metadata, the system supports retrieval
under instructional constraints and facilitates repeated application over time.
Importantly, the system remains intentionally minimal: its purpose is not
exhaustive description, but reliable retrieval.
Separation
of Functions
Taken
together, the RSS and social bookmarking components enable instructors to
separate ongoing monitoring from cumulative organization. RSS supports
continuous, low-cost awareness of instructional media as it accumulates, while
social bookmarking records durable decisions about what is worth retaining and
reusing.
This
separation allows instructors to remain informed about new content without
conflating awareness with adoption and to build structured instructional
archives incrementally over time. The infrastructure thus supports scalable
engagement with online instructional video by distributing labor across
distinct stages. For readers interested in implementing this system, a separate
step-by-step guide detailing setup and configuration is available from the
authors upon request.
The
resulting system clearly distinguishes among the accumulation of instructional
media (Appendix A), the infrastructural processes that support its management
(Appendix B), and the interface-level features that may shape interaction with
that media without altering its underlying organization (Appendix C).
APPENDIX
C: Platform AI Features and Analytic Scope
Recent
developments in platform-provided artificial intelligence have introduced new
interface-level features into video-hosting environments, including automated
summaries, conversational prompts, and enhanced recommendation systems. These
tools operate at the level of user interaction and access rather than at the
level of content production, repository structure, or pedagogical authorship.
Whereas Appendices A and B focus on repository accumulation and infrastructural
organization, this appendix clarifies the analytic status of platform-level
features that operate on top of those processes.
In this
study, such AI-mediated features are treated as ephemeral interface overlays
rather than intrinsic components of online video repositories. While they may
influence how instructors or students engage with instructional media at
particular moments, they do not alter the underlying processes of repository
accumulation, creator labor, monitoring requirements, or long-term pedagogical
organization that constitute the analytic focus of the D–M–O framework.
Accordingly,
the presence or absence of platform-provided AI features is neither a defining
property of OVRs nor a determinant of their pedagogical function over time.
Instead, these features are understood as potentially amplifying the value of
existing curatorial infrastructures by operating on already discovered,
monitored, and organized instructional materials whose availability and
coherence are established through prior human curation.
From this
perspective, platform AI features operate primarily at the level of retrieval
and interaction, rather than at the infrastructural stages of discovery,
monitoring, or organization that are central to the framework developed here.
This analytic separation ensures that the framework remains focused on durable
infrastructural processes rather than transient interface features.
Acknowledgments
This
article is conceptual and methodological in nature and does not report original
research on human subjects. No new datasets were generated or analyzed for this
study. AI-assisted tools were used to improve clarity and organization. All
substantive arguments, interpretations, and final decisions are the
responsibility of the authors.