Christine Greenhow, Benjamin Gleason. Social scholarship: Reconsidering scholarly practices in the age of social media. British Journal of Educational Technology, 2014
This conceptual exploration inquires, what is scholarship reconsidered
in the age of social media? How ought we to conceptualize social scholarship—a
new set of practices being discussed in various disciplines? The paper
offers a critical examination of the practical and policy implications
of reconsidering scholarship in light of social media's affordances
toward a conceptualization of social scholarship. For each dimension of
Boyer's original framework, we explain its epistemologies and practices.
Next, we take a critical approach to inquiring how each dimension,
reconsidered through the lens of social scholarship values and social
media affordances, might be envisioned today. This exploration provides
concrete examples of how scholars might enact social scholarship with
what benefits and challenges.
RUL Staff networking & communicating re Academic Libraries, Resources, Scholarly Communication, Research Support, Access, Workplace, & more ...
Showing posts with label social media in academia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social media in academia. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
This Guy Drew a Cat. You Won’t Believe What Happened 4 Centuries Later
"....The argument that Twitter can bear only lightweight engagement ...........ignores an important point: Scholars and journalists live on the Internet like everybody else, and sometimes a small spark can ignite larger fires...."
Read more!
Monday, March 10, 2014
Walking the talk - interesting blog post from Kevin Smith of Duke University
Walking the talk:
"All of the presentations at the SPARC Open Access meeting this week were excellent. But there was one that was really special; an early career researcher named Erin McKiernan who brought everyone in the room to their feet to applaud her commitment to open access. We are sometimes told that only established scholars who enjoy the security of tenure can “afford” to embrace more open ways to disseminate their work. But Dr. McKiernan explained to us both the “why” and the “how” of a deep commitment to OA on the part of a younger scholar who is not willing to embrace traditional, toll-access publishing or to surrender her goals of advancing scholarship and having an academic career...."
(Thanks to Hilton Green for the alert to this blog post)
Duke
University’s first Scholarly Communications Officer - See more at:
http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2014/03/07/walking-the-talk/#sthash.qfzGZTwW.dpufKev
(Kevin Smith is Duke's first Scholarly Communications officer - Debbie, Ujala, Roelien and I met him at the Berlin 12 OA conference in Stellenbosh)
All
of the presentations at the SPARC Open Access meeting this week were
excellent. But there was one that was really special; an early career researcher named Erin McKiernan
who brought everyone in the room to their feet to applaud her
commitment to open access. We are sometimes told that only established
scholars who enjoy the security of tenure can “afford” to embrace more
open ways to disseminate their work. But Dr. McKiernan explained to us
both the “why” and the “how” of a deep commitment to OA on the part of a
younger scholar who is not willing to embrace traditional, toll-access
publishing or to surrender her goals of advancing scholarship and having
an academic career. - See more at:
http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2014/03/07/walking-the-talk/#sthash.qfzGZTwW.dpuf
All
of the presentations at the SPARC Open Access meeting this week were
excellent. But there was one that was really special; an early career researcher named Erin McKiernan
who brought everyone in the room to their feet to applaud her
commitment to open access. We are sometimes told that only established
scholars who enjoy the security of tenure can “afford” to embrace more
open ways to disseminate their work. But Dr. McKiernan explained to us
both the “why” and the “how” of a deep commitment to OA on the part of a
younger scholar who is not willing to embrace traditional, toll-access
publishing or to surrender her goals of advancing scholarship and having
an academic career. - See more at:
http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2014/03/07/walking-the-talk/#sthash.qfzGZTwW.dpuf
All
of the presentations at the SPARC Open Access meeting this week were
excellent. But there was one that was really special; an early career researcher named Erin McKiernan
who brought everyone in the room to their feet to applaud her
commitment to open access. We are sometimes told that only established
scholars who enjoy the security of tenure can “afford” to embrace more
open ways to disseminate their work. But Dr. McKiernan explained to us
both the “why” and the “how” of a deep commitment to OA on the part of a
younger scholar who is not willing to embrace traditional, toll-access
publishing or to surrender her goals of advancing scholarship and having
an academic career. - See more at:
http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2014/03/07/walking-the-talk/#sthash.qfzGZTwW.dpuf
All
of the presentations at the SPARC Open Access meeting this week were
excellent. But there was one that was really special; an early career researcher named Erin McKiernan
who brought everyone in the room to their feet to applaud her
commitment to open access. We are sometimes told that only established
scholars who enjoy the security of tenure can “afford” to embrace more
open ways to disseminate their work. But Dr. McKiernan explained to us
both the “why” and the “how” of a deep commitment to OA on the part of a
younger scholar who is not willing to embrace traditional, toll-access
publishing or to surrender her goals of advancing scholarship and having
an academic career. - See more at:
http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2014/03/07/walking-the-talk/#sthash.qfzGZTwW.dpuf
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Social Media Brings Academic Journals to General Readers
A University of Colorado Cancer Center study recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Association: Dermatology shows that a handful of academic journals have successfully leveraged social media to reach many times the readers of the journals themselves. But the majority of journals have yet to embrace social media and so lag behind professional organizations and patient advocacy groups in their ability to disseminate information in a culturally relevant way.
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