[4] Marwick graduated with her political science and women's studies bachelor's degree from Wellesley College in Massachusetts in 1998.
[10] She also co-edited The Sage Handbook of Social Media (2016) with co-editors, Jean Burgess and Thomas Poell.
[3] A review from the American Library Association says that her book is important because it takes a needed female perspective on a world that is misogynistic with its technological feats.
[16] She has participated in podcasts examining far-right extremism, misinformation online, and the analyzation of the liberal left and the conservative right's social media habits.
[19] She was honored in 2017, as a 2017 Global Thinker from Foreign Policy Magazine for her work on examining the social aspects of fake news.