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Speaker(s): Professor Miriam Bernard, Dr Kip Jones, Dr Gareth Morris Chair: Amy Mollett Recorded on 28 February 2013 in Wolfson Theatre, New Academic Building. Academic communication is changing. New emphasis on impact and public engagement, combined with new technologies that allow high quality and easy to use production methods are increasing the possible range of outputs from academic research. This session will hear from three researchers that have used alternative forms for their research dissemination. We will ask what strengths these forms had in comparison to traditional books and articles, their value to research users and their credibility with funders and academic assessors. Miriam Bernard is professor at Keele and looks at representation of aging in drama through a partnership with the New Vic Theatre. Kip Jones is a reader in performative social sciences at Bournemouth University, and film-maker. Gareth Morris of Salford University has used graphic novels to disseminate research findings on homelessness. Amy Mollett is managing editor of LSE Review of Books, a blog providing daily academic book reviews from the social sciences.This event forms part of LSE's 5th Space for Thought Literary Festival, taking place from Tuesday 26 February - Saturday 2 March 2013, with the theme 'Branching Out'. Event posting Related links LSE Space for Thought Literary Festival 2013
Debates on open access publishing may rumble on for some time to come. Until a perfect solution is found, Jørgen Carling writes that self-archiving, while not perfect, allows researchers to bring their work out from behind paywalls without jeopardizing academic integrity, and, at no cost.
Most academic journals allow authors to post their articles online after a while, for instance 12 or 18 months after publications. Very few social scientists do, unfortunately. Making publications available in this way is referred to as ‘green open access’ or ‘self-archiving’. While the debates about open access and the future of academic publishing continue, self-archiving is something most authors could do right away to make their work more widely available.
To start self-archiving, you must be aware that an article exists in three important versions: 1) the version that you originally submitted; 2) the version that was eventually accepted for publication, after peer review; and 3) the published version incorporating copy-editing, layout and correction of proofs. It is version 2 that you are usually allowed to post after a certain period of time, never version 3.
The difference between your final text (version 2) and the copy-edited published text (version 3) would usually make little difference to the general reader. Part of the argument for open-access publishing is indeed that science should become more widely available to all, not just people with access to university libraries.
For academics who might want to cite your paper, the difference could matter. In my view, it would be fine to make a general reference to the article (i.e. to the published version in the journal) after having seen only ‘version 2′ in a repository. Citing specific passages would not be possible, since the page numbers are different and sentences could have been changed in the course of copy-editing.
Here is what you need to keep in mind when you publish, in order to have the option of self-archiving:
- Keep the latest version of your accepted article in a safe place. It is easy to forget once you know that it will be published and that you’ll have a pdf from the journal.
- When you sign the copyright form that the publisher requires, check what it says about posting the article online. (And keep this form, too, for future reference.) Alternatively, check the publisher’s web site. Some publisher’s are easier to relate to than others. For instance, SAGE and Taylor & Francis have posted single policies for all journals. Wiley-Blackwell’s website, by contrast, says that policies vary and that you’ll have to check your form.
Before the specified time period has passed and you can post your paper, there are two more things you have to do:
- Format your paper for sharing. What you must do, is to include full reference information for the published article and a link to the article on the publisher’s web site. In addition, you could adjust the formatting to make it more reader-friendly — for instance abandoning the double spacing that was probably required for the submission.
- Decide where you want to post your article. There are several options including your institution’s web site, your personal web site, or an open access repository. For a comprehensive list of repositories, see OpenDOAR.
I recommend using an established repository. If you use a well-known repository such as SSRN, the publically available version of your article is more likely to show up in searches. A well-organized repository will also give you a short and reliable permalink. For instance, http://ssrn.com/abstract=2131335 links to an article in Ethnic and Racial Studies that I have posted on SSRN.
Few people will go to a specific repository to look for your work, so you need to link to it. Links from your own web site or staff page are an obvious start. If you also link from sites such as LinkedIn and Academia.edu you get a double benefit: visitors to your profile on those sites are guided to your work, and these inbound links to the repository ensure that your article shows up higher in search results on Google and elsewhere.
Self-archiving is not the perfect solution to the open access challenge — but neither are the other established options, nor the more radical proposals, for that matter. Like most researchers I greatly value the role of peer-reviewed journals in academia. Well-managed journals promote good research. Problems such as coercive citation, misuse of impact factors, excessive time lags and overpricing are results of mismanagement and unethical practice, as much as symptoms of a ‘broken system’. I live with the system as an author, reviewer, editorial board member, supervisor and research manager and believe that, on the whole, it serves us well.
What self-archiving offers, however, is a possibility to start bringing our work out from behind paywalls without jeopardizing academic integrity, and at no cost. The greatest shortcoming, of course, is the inevitable delay on top of the time it takes from submission to publishing in a journal. By the time you self-archive, several years could have passed since you wrote your text. To us — readers and writers of blog posts — that sounds horrendous. But we are also social scientists, and should be able to place this delay in perspective. My own first academic article was published in 2002. Thanks to Google Scholar Citations, I can see how it has fared, citation-wise, since then. The highest number of citations was recorded in 2011, when the text was ten years old! This is not unusual. Academic articles retain their value for a long time, and the fact that self-archiving is not instant should not stop us from doing it.
Note: This article gives the views of the author(s), and not the position of the Impact of Social Sciences blog, nor of the London School of Economics.
About the author:
Jørgen Carling is Research Professor at the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), and Research Director of one of the institute’s departments. His research focuses on international migration and transnationalism. He has a strong interest in academic writing and communication. Jørgen is on the editorial board of two leading migration journals and has run training on publishing for early-career scholars. He has been a visiting scholar at the University of Oxford and the National University of Singapore. Find him at www.jorgencarling.com and on Twitter as @jorgencarlingRelated posts:
- What about the authors who can’t pay? Why the government’s embrace of gold open access isn’t something to celebrate
- Paper books in a digital era: How conservative publishers and authors almost killed off books in university social science
- The Finch Report and RCUK Open Access policy: How can libraries respond?
- Digital visibility is king but what colour is our Open Access future?
- Elsevier, the Research Works Act and Open Access: where to now?
As money gets tighter, impact is going to become a key word around events. As the new kid on the block, social media is likely to be the first activity that has to justify it's impact on the success of your event. But it will only be the first.
New media ‘big up’ academics, create noise around them and make research seem to matter; all beneficial when counting the days to the REF. However, Conor Gearty writes that the old fashioned work that created the ‘expert’ in the first place is at risk from the dangerous attitude of the Twitter world where the moment counts for so much.
Twenty years ago the brilliant political scientist Brendan O’Leary wrote a pugilistic article in the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, pithily entitled ‘What Should Public Lawyers Do?’: (1992) 12 OJLS 404. O’Leary was thinking about the challenge of inter-disciplinarity and of how much any of us can risk gambolling across fields without making obvious the fact that we are not nearly as well-informed/well-read as we like to pretend. Disciplines not only frame how we write; they also guide us to what we should (need to) read. They pigeon-hole us for a purpose that we ignore at our peril.
All as true now as it was then. But right now I am not so bothered by inter-disciplinarity as I am by the even broader question – not of what but of where public lawyers should be writing.
I remember 1992 well. A public lawyer wrote books and ‘learned’ articles and every now and again might, exceptionally, get something into a newspaper of an upmarket generalist journal (the TLS say or the LRB) – a day warranting great rejoicing and the purchase of multiple copies for family and friends.
That was it, more or less.
Now consider today: where should public lawyers write? There are a multiplicity of additional platforms – blogs like this one; virtual newspapers (Guardian Unlimited) and journals as well (an electronic LRB); personal web sites and blogs; Facebook; and – of course – Twitter. As they feel their way to an effective business model, traditional print outlets offer virtual space with almost gay abandon while being clear that they will pay nothing or next to nothing to those who fill it. New outlets freed of the constraints of print create virtual intellectual sweatshops that academics queue up to join – at The Huffingdon Post it is called pitching a blog. Even the august British Academy asks its FBAs to blog these days.
Far from opposing such developments, the universities collude in them. Not only departments and subject areas but also various cross disciplinary initiatives seek 800 words on this or that to appeal to the wider community. While universities know they need scholarship which jumps the necessary hoops for the REF their heart is in impact – that Holy Grail of evidence of engagement with the ‘real’ world, a place where few believe these days that any kind of serious scholarship truly belongs.
Here is the paradox that afflicts all in higher education today: the more scholarship there is and the better its quality, the less confident anyone is about its importance.
So what should we all do about these new media? Of course they are particularly attractive to young academics who are the most actively engaged in them, but is there a cost?
On the plus side, most ideas can be said simply and succinctly and ‘journalistic’ writing of the sort insisted upon by new media encourages this. My first newspaper articles were done under the benevolent guidance of an editor who gently insisted on a style that was not only informed (the point, after all, of asking me to write in the first place) but also clear and decisive in its delivery of its ideas as well. New media remind us that clarity is not an optional extra in the delivery of knowledge, it is part of what knowledge is.
New media also force us to think much more deliberately about audience, something we so rarely do in serious scholarship. Maybe this is because in our heart of hearts, we think there is no audience at all for such work, but the one way to guarantee this is true is never to think about who might be reading what we say.
And new media help ‘big us up’, swirl some noise around us, make us seem to matter. A similar kind of breakthrough occurred when I was starting out as an academic. This was 24 hour television news, CNN and later BBC News 24. People remembered for months you were on, even if they hadn’t a clue what you might have been saying. And as with new media being on was enough. You were no longer just another obscure scholar, you were ‘out there’ and therefore desirable. Profile helps with promotion and gets you pay rises, part of the same systemic lack of confidence in scholarship that makes impact seem so important.
Public lawyers are especially available in this world of instant-comment. Our stuff keeps coming up – prisoners’ votes; Scotland in the EU; a bill of rights for Britain; the removal of this or that suspected terrorist to a nasty ally; the list of potential virtual comment is virtually endless. And there are our subject blogs as well, places like this where it is good to be seen and important also to be able to help out.
So what is the downside? Well obviously there is the time factor. One 700-800 word essay every now and again is one thing, an essay of that sort every other day quite another. Not to mention updating your personal web site (how many future events are in fact years long past?) and remembering to keep an eye on Twitter (the never-ending Twitter where new messages pour in as you produce your latest brilliant, debate-defining Tweet, requiring yet more spontaneous brilliance if you are to keep up).
But it is more than the time. It is the attitude that the world of Twitter/blog generates that is its real danger. If the moment counts for so much can anything other than that moment every count at all?
Every working day brings some excitement in public law. The Twitter/Blog mind embraces the daily frenzy, scans the raw material to hand and produces an instant judgment – as though its owner were some kind of perpetually available law specialist on Radio 5 Live. The old fashioned hard work – quiet; library-based; thoughtful – that made the writer/speaker an expert in the first place gradually drifts off the daily agenda. At first because of time constraints and then – well – because it’s boring, like returning to decaff coffee after an espresso. Twitter/Blog erodes our confidence in the deeper stuff without which we would never have become experts in the first place.
Earlier this year I went off Twitter/blogging/Facebook pretty well entirely for about three months. My sabbatical from the frenzy of the moment was to allow me to finish a couple of writing projects. I needed distance from today not only to save time but also so that I could properly persuade myself that writing about more than the immediate was worth doing. I needed this respite care from new media in order to recover my confidence in what mattered and to relearn how to engage with difficult concepts in an in-depth and well-referenced way.
Now I am back. Short pieces; no footnotes; no worries about anonymous review; lots of sounding off on this or that; plenty of attention – what fun!
Note: This article gives the views of the author(s), and not the position of the Impact of Social Sciences blog, nor of the London School of Economics.
This article was originally published by the UK Constitutional Law Group blog, and is republished here with kind permission.
About the author:
Conor Gearty is Professor of Human Rights Law at LSE, and a Barrister at Matrix Chambers. His academic research focuses primarily on civil liberties, terrorism and human rights. He has been a visiting professor at a number of universities abroad and has also been an external examiner at many universities in the UK and Ireland. Conor ran The Rights’ Future, a collaborative online project and blogs here. His is also on twitter @conorgearty.Related posts:
- If you don’t have social media, you are no one: How social media enriches conferences for some but risks isolating others
- More than just a pretty picture? How sociologists (and other social scientists) can use Pinterest
- Becoming a Networked Researcher – using social media for research and researcher development
- Universities and social media: Academics need to be bold in our use of social media and not outsource digital dissemination to widget gurus
- Tweeting out loud: ethics, knowledge and social media in academe
Despite the apparent lack of centralised direction or supervision students would receive under this model, prominent voices in the OER movement frequently predict that it could lead to identical or superior educational attainment, improvements in participants' quality of life and global economic growth.
To start the interview, could you say a little about how you came to be so professionally active online?
It was a combination of factors, some going back a long time, some more recent. I have been interested in the sociology of computer use and cyberspace for quite a while. In the mid 1990s and into the early 2000s I conducted several studies examining the embodied nature of computer use, people with disabilities’ use of computer technologies (with Wendy Seymour) and the use of PCs in the academic workplace, including how people personalised these technologies (with Greg Noble). More recently I have become interested in researching how digital and social media are used in the medical and public health arenas. So it’s an area I have been pursuing in terms of research for many years.
My interest in using social media myself for academic purposes began with a desire to engage more with the general public. I had been thinking about how best to do this for a while. Earlier this year I eventually decided to try writing an article for an online news and research website that we have here in Australia called The Conversation. Only academics can write for this website, but it is designed for public readership and has a wide readership among the general public. Once my piece was published I was amazed by how many people read it in a short space of time and how many commented. It seemed clear to me that the best way to engage in the public arena was to publish online.
So then I decided to start my own blog (This Sociological Life), which went live in May this year. I have greatly enjoyed writing blog posts on my own research and other topics I have found interesting. Following setting up the blog I looked into ways to let people know about it and signed up to Twitter as a means of publicising it. I found Twitter to be not only an excellent way of publicising my blog posts as I published them but also of connecting with other people sharing my research interests globally and of sharing bits and pieces I had found on the web with them. Australia is a long way away from where most of the research in my fields is happening and researchers within this country are also separated geographically from each other, scattered around a very large continent. Twitter is a great way to connect quickly and easily, and in real time, across these vast distances.
I was then quite intrigued with the other different social and other digital platforms available and how they can be used for academic purposes, and investigated various tools, including Pinterest, Delicious, Scoop.it, Pearltrees, Quora, infographics tools, SlideShare, Storify, Mendeley, Paper.li and Facebook. I even made a (very simple) sociology app using an online wizard I discovered. And as I was investigating all these digital platforms I wrote a series of blog posts outlining to other academics what these tools have to offer. I have collected these posts together in a short e-publication, Digital Sociology: An Introduction, which I published on my university’s open repository for anyone to access.
What do digital tools have to offer sociologists?
My experiences of using the digital tools I have mentioned above have taught me that they are an excellent way to find, collate and curate information available on the web, to share it with others, to make connections and let others know about your own research.
I use quite a lot of the material I find on the web in my own research. For example, I have created a number of Pinterest boards on the specific topics I am researching at the moment. I have begun not only to use the images I have gathered on Pinterest in my research but to embed the links to these boards in journal articles and books I am writing, so that readers can click through and quickly view the material I am discussing. This material is also invaluable when I present the research in conference papers, as I can easily find images for PowerPoint presentations (or even call up the boards themselves if there is an internet connection available).
I also find a sense of creative achievement in using digital media. Such activities as writing a blog post, illustrating it and publishing it, or creating a Pinterest board or a Storify is a satisfying process not just because of content but also because of the way it looks. Many of these tools are very easy to learn to use and create a good-looking product. It is also very satisfying to be able to monitor how many people have viewed/read your creations and to receive comments on them.
I make sure that I use as many tools as I can to disseminate what I have written/made across various social networks. A blog post, for example, can be publicised via Twitter, LinkedIn, Academia.edu, Paper.li, Scoop.it, Delicious, Facebook, and Pinterest, just to name a few possibilities.
You’ve written recently about ‘digital sociology’. What do you mean by this?
In my view there are four major aspects to digital sociology:
1. Professional digital media use: using the kinds of tools discussed above for academic purposes.
2. Sociological analyses of digital media use: researching the ways in which people’s use of digital media configures these sense of selves, their embodiment and their social relationships.
3. Digital data analysis: using pre-existing digital data for social research, either quantitative or qualitative.
4. Critical digital sociology: undertaking reflexive and critical analysis of digital media informed by social and cultural theory.The second of these dimensions of digital sociology has been undertaken for quite some time — since personal computers were invented and brought into popular use. The other three have yet to be taken up to any great extent in sociology. I believe the fourth dimension, critical digital sociology, is an area in which sociologists can really take the lead, given the theoretical and methodological tradition in sociology of social and cultural critique.
Is there a risk that digital activity can serve as a distraction from more traditional activity? It’s easy to imagine many people accepting your argument that there are valuable opportunities here but nonetheless wondering where and how they will find the time to engage online.
There’s no doubt that engaging in digital media use can take away time from more traditional scholarly pursuits. But the point is, such engagement enriches these pursuits. There is a wealth of material out there available on the web; there is a huge audience who are eager to engage with and share the ideas of sociologists and other academics; there are other academics you can find via social media networks and connect with who you may never had known about; and these media offer great potential to get your research out there and encourage a greater number of people to read it and know about it. It is a matter of investigating the various tools, finding out which ones work for your own purposes, and developing a way of incorporating them into your daily work routine that does not swallow up too much time. You can use them as little or as much as you like: you have full control over this!
Deborah Lupton is an independent writer and researcher in sociology and cultural studies, located in Sydney, and an Honorary Associate, Department of Sociology and Social Policy and the Biopolitics of Science Network at the University of Sydney. Prior to this she was Professor of Sociology and Cultural Studies at Charles Sturt University, Australia. You can follow her on Twitter @DALupton and at This Sociological Life.
Since the 2008 Great Recession, American higher education has experienced a new round of uncertainties and reductions -- especially, but not only, in public institutions. British academics refer to the current season of top-down austerity as "the cuts," but in the U.S., we might speak of lingchi, "death by a thousand cuts." Faculty lines slashed, programs eliminated, course seats lowered, graduate student aid reduced, the decentralized U.S. higher education system has struggled to maintain quality across the disciplines. Humanities programs, in particular, have appeared threatened.
Yet, in this same time we are in the first phase of a digital revolution in higher education. Much of the teaching and learning apparatus has moved online. Computational technologies and methodologies have transformed research practices in every discipline, leading to exciting discoveries and tools. New interdisciplinary initiatives, exploiting the digital, such as bioinformatics, human cognition, and digital humanities, are bringing faculty members together in ways never before attempted.
For the humanities, the threat of diminished resources has appeared hand-in-glove with the digital turn. The recent events at the University of Virginia demonstrate just how influential the digital paradigm has become, but also how unevenly applied its pressures can be. The university's board members seemed to be swayed by the model of massive open online courses (MOOCs) under development at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University, among other institutions, most of the key instances of which have been in the STEM fields. Meanwhile, some board members proposed to eliminate classics and German to save money in the face of the university's massive structural budget deficit. They apparently did not realize how many students actually take these subjects (a lot) or that the subjects have been required in state codes chartering the university.
As humanities chairs with a long involvement in digital issues, we have seen clearly that top-down budget cuts are often justified with arguments about how digital technologies are driving change in higher education. Just as the MOOC course model played a signature role in the University of Virginia saga, so one of the most visible controversies in the University of California system at the onset of the epic California budget crisis occurred when Berkeley Law School Dean Christopher Edley Jr. proposed an all-digital UC campus.
So we believe that humanities faculty members, chairs, and administrators right now have a choice. One option is to take no systematic action on the digital humanities (DH) front and thus let the long-term digital future be built for them. By taking "no systematic action," we mean the present practices of many of us in the humanities who automatically denounce university ambitions for digital education without looking into the issues, allow digital humanities to be the special province of "power" users, and treat digital humanities as a discretionary field. The results of this course have been anemic: settling the responsibility for leading the humanities into the digital age on adjunct faculty or library staff, ignoring the mismatch between digital humanities and established ways of measuring academic performance, and quarantining digital humanities in a project. We have too often outsourced digital humanities to a special center on campus or tiptoed into digital humanities by advertising for faculty in established fields but adding wistfully that "digital proficiency is a plus."
The other option is for humanities faculty, chairs, and administrators to plan how to integrate the digital humanities systematically through our departments -- to infuse departments with digital technologies and practices so as to create models of organically interrelated humanities digital research, teaching, administration and staff work. Of course, we have no proof that this will "save the humanities," a goal we share but that we fear is counterproductive when posed as an all-or-nothing proposition. Good strategy requires picking some point on the line to apply leverage. The leverage point in the policies now shaping the future university is the digital, and we feel that it is crucial that the humanities try for well-conceived, humanities-friendly models of digital work that are institutionally cohesive enough to influence policy.
How can we change the dynamic and create new structures for the humanities to flourish in the digital age? We recommend the following four principles for faculty members, department chairs and administrators to follow in integrating the digital humanities in the humanities.
Think departmentally.
It all starts with where scholars live and work natively: in their departments (or similar units). Currently, digital initiatives are predominantly institutionalized in campus units, library annex programs, or interdisciplinary entities; whereas in departments themselves they spring up accidentally like weeds around particular faculty, areas, or projects. We propose an organic strategy for integrating digital initiatives into core departmental research, teaching, administration, and staff work.
Departments should help spread digital methods and tools across the curriculum, for example, by sponsoring graduate students to research digital pedagogies and promoting their cross-adoption or engaging students and faculty to build websites for best practices. Departments might cultivate DH across a larger span of faculty research and craft job searches that alternate between prioritizing established fields, with digital expertise a "plus," and prioritizing digital expertise, with an established field a "plus."
Chairs and faculty should consider adopting new guidelines for tenure and promotion reviews that value such activities as writing grant proposals, collaborating on projects, creating digital archives, building cyberinfrastructure, or contributing influential non-refereed articles or blog posts (starting with steps as simple as standardizing categories for these activities in C.V.s). We have worked in our own departments to explicitly include digital scholarship expectations in letters of offer to digital humanities scholars; to train graduate students in DH (e.g., through an introduction to digital humanities course); and to work with office staff to improve administrative and clerical support of research and teaching through digital methods that meet campus standards, where they exist, of accessibility, preservation, privacy, and security.
Think collaboratively (across departments and divisions).
In our personal experience, the digital humanities are not just a field but a conduit. Digital technologies and media typically require a broad set of methods and skills to carry out -- as in computational or archival projects that require the combined expertise of computer-science engineers, social scientists, artists, and humanists. Digital methods can thus be the common link across departments or divisions collaborating on shared grants, research projects, and curricular initiatives that strengthen the humanities with partners and make them magnets for cost-share and other funding. We have personally benefited from collaborating with other departments and divisions on digital projects, and correlatively we have seen impressive results in our campus administrations' encouragement and cost-share support.
In teaching, the need for partnership is especially acute. For example, the humanities could play an important role in helping to develop innovative digital alternatives to the thrice-weekly 50- or 75-minute large lecture course. Such alternatives could better-serve their own university's students (augmented, perhaps, with instructors and students elsewhere chosen to enhance the educational experience) than astronomically supersized MOOC courses distributed worldwide to ill-defined masses.
In general, departments could expand the collaborative reach of the humanities by taking such steps as: meeting with other departments (and deans) to explore how multiple departments might co-develop a digital course, project, or administrative tool; providing incentives to faculty to try for collaborative grants (e.g., by offering course release for grant writing that, if successful, would repay the lost teaching through curricular development or a course buyout); and creating lecture series and workshops that expose faculty to digital research and pedagogy elsewhere on campus.
Think computationally.
Humanities departments need more intensive computing power to conduct research in today's era of large-scale text and data sets, distributed archival resources, and multi-modal (including visual, aural, and cartographic) materials. Yet they often lag in both simple and complex technology. This has spillover effects on teaching as well. Though universities and colleges often furnish classroom technology through central campus agencies, we believe that boosting department-specific technology for the humanities could lead to curricular gains.
The fact is that the latest technology improves humanities research and teaching together, affecting the way our faculty offer their classes by interweaving research and teaching to the benefit of both. For example, the National Endowment for the Humanities-funded English Broadside Ballad Archive (EBBA) project in the University of California at Santa Barbara's English department and the Digital History Project at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln's history department have driven the adoption of higher grades of department technology (workstations, servers, backup systems, remote conferencing tools, text-encoding and image handling tools), all of which has created a thriving digital environment (and busy shared physical space) where undergraduate and graduate students work directly on the project as part of their learning in courses. In general, the humanities are now at a point where we cannot settle for the minimal provision of one aging workstation in each faculty office plus a computer with digital projector in each classroom.
Departments and chairs should seek larger start-up packages for all new hires (and, opportunistically, larger retention packages for faculty with offers elsewhere) to encourage the adoption of powerful computational technologies; initiate a replacement cycle for faculty computers; explore creating a shared department computational research facility (or at least a grouped set of research workstations) if none exist; provide at least one departmentally controlled server for project development or collaborative experimentation that would not be possible on mission-critical university servers; boost large-scale faculty data storage and backup facilities; create remote conferencing facilities to accommodate the increasing number of online meetings and job interviews; and sponsor workshops to keep faculty current on new technologies and methods.
Think societywide.
Humanities fields have enjoyed immense cultural authority and interest in every state and community. But they have organized few systematic efforts to maintain, renew, and update these associations in the digital age -- a task that is especially vital when austerity makes some leaders discount the value of the humanities on the basis of misinformed cost-benefit calculations.
The coin of the realm in the digital age, we predict, will be service to society. On the one hand, crowdsourcing and other partnerships with "citizen scholars" will increasingly contribute to humanities scholarship. On the other hand, the humanities must continue to develop their expertise as differentiated from the new, networked public knowledge. The trick will be to evolve the roles of the humanities faculty both in, and distinct from, digital public knowledge so that they will be valued as a necessary instrument in the orchestra.
While the established humanities model of research followed by presentation of finished results in scholarly lectures and publications will continue to be important, that model can no longer stand by itself. Digital technologies allow and, indeed, encourage humanities scholars to engage in open discourse about unfinished research; and they also drive them to "publish" in a wider range of socially visible venues and formats.
Humanities faculty members, chairs, and administrators should start by doing what likely has not been done in recent institutional memory: review what is meant by "service" (typically denoting committee work, supplemented by ill-defined "community" or "other" work). The goal is not to take faculty time away from research and teaching, as if academic work were a zero-sum game, but instead to explore ways to integrate service with everything else for the gain of all. We know ourselves that the simple act of creating a webpage for a project that addresses the public enriches our understanding of the project's research and teaching potential.
In all this, digital technologies are a catalyst for change. Already, digital humanists are exploring methods for publishing in open, crowd-reviewed, blog-based ways. Indeed, there is an incentive for the humanities to ask digital humanists to go even further to create next-generation scholarly platforms that integrate public engagement seamlessly with core research and teaching. For example, online journals could employ text-mining, topic-modeling, linked-data, visualization, and other tools to create on-demand summaries or "WorldCat Identities"-like pages--to be used directly by the public or by scholars for easy import into public websites or course pages.
Humanities departments can take such initial, imaginative steps as conducting a department-wide exercise in revising the departmental web site. Tomorrow's departmental site must go beyond presenting people, courses, and events just one level deep to exposing to public view some of the real content and activity streams of all these (e.g., through interviews with faculty, showcases of student projects, or excerpts from faculty lectures and articles). Other initial steps might include organizing online events that allow faculty and students to share their research with alumni or the community or creating a new service role in the department for an annual "public faculty member" charged with cultivating public engagement, agreeing to meet with members of the community, working on collaboration with local public libraries and museums, and keeping a blog or creating an online showcase for it all.
We are aware that there are valid concerns by many of our colleagues that signing on to the digital revolution in higher education in any systematic way is tantamount to undermining some of the core principles and strengths of the humanities. After all, leading philanthropists have suggested that the World Wide Web will soon eclipse all "place-based institutions" of higher education, and enormous sums of venture capital funding have moved into "for profit" higher ed. Faculty could reasonably conclude that the digital project means participating in the eclipse of their field, ceding even more influence to the oligarchy of elite, private universities with the resources and cachet to start online course consortiums, detracting from the humanistic ideal of close inquiry carried out in intimate conversation, and -- it must also be said -- eroding the need for as many faculty and instructor positions as now exist.
What the current climate tells us, however, is something quite different: that we have an opportunity and a responsibility to reframe the humanities for the digital age. We also see in our respective institutions that administrators, many colleagues, students, and the public are eager to help. The questions and concerns of the humanities continue to speak to and inspire these constituencies, and we should enlist them in our efforts. The reframing project that humanities leaders face will require imagination, leadership, and experimentation. The work we propose is to adopt the necessary level of organizational vision to systematically harness the digital age for the humanities.
The (Coming) Social Media Revolution in the AcademyJessie Daniels and Joe R. Feagin
A revolution in academia is coming. New social media and other web technologies are transforming the way we, as academics, do our job. These technologies offer communication that is interactive, instantaneous, global, low-cost, and fully searchable, as well as platforms for connecting with other scholars everywhere.
Scholarship: Knowledge Production and Use in a Networked Society
Scholars now completing PhD’s have likely never known a world without the Internet and social media. For them, GoogleScholar is where you go to begin a search for articles, not a brick-and-mortar library or its bound journals. For scholar-activists, social media offer additional promises of public sphere engagement with other specialists beyond one’s discipline through blogs and Twitter. As barriers to long-distance travel increase, scholars are creating virtual conferences through digital video and web conferencing or follow conferences from afar via Twitter hashtags. For those who travel to conferences, backchannel Twitter communications can be important ways to extend the hallway conversations with colleagues. Scholars are experimenting with crowd-sourcing in ways that supplement old forms of peer-review. As publishing moves to ereaders, academic publishers face challenges to keep up with revolutionary changes.
Ultimately, this technological transformation is going to have major implications on expert knowledge. The Internet increases voices and knowledge available to all. Elitism in the expert knowledge world is declining; the Internet democratizes knowledge building and use. Much more knowledge has become available, and the distinction between experts and ordinary folks, what Gramsci might have called “organic intellectuals,” is declining. However, new problems arise. The ability of those without critical-methodological training to deal with data smog (including fake, misinforming, and corporate-propaganda websites) is a serious barrier to peoples’ understanding. Many Internet “analyses” remain superficial, even among supposedly expert analysts. The Internet provides the world with great new opportunities at democratization, open-source information and collaborative of scholarly knowledge production, while also containing serious, often hidden, pitfalls.
Online Research in the Academy
Now, academics do so much research online that it is difficult to remember a time when this wasn’t the case. In the dark ages before the Internet, doing research involved a library, searching drawers of card catalogs and bound volumes, and reading hard-copies of printed books and journals. This was supplemented by searching microfilm of newspapers and magazines, and much standing over a copying machine. Today, much work of academics has been transformed. Young professors and graduate students go to libraries, but rather than look in card catalogs, they look at library computers and their own wifi-ed laptops. There are still books on shelves, but librarians tell us these are circulated less as use of online databases and electronic access to journals and ebooks continue to increase--often outstripping the cost of older library technologies.
Most information once available only in hard copy is now accessible for academics working away from their campus or college library. This opens up tremendous possibilities for working remotely, collaborating with colleagues globally, and being untethered to particular locations. In addition to databases indexing journal articles behind the library paywalls, research tools that index scholarly resources on the open web are widely used by academics. GoogleScholar and GoogleBooks are now part of the repertoire of many researchers.
Academic Blogging and Microblogging
Academics are increasingly bloggers. In many ways, this is a natural fit. Academics mostly love writing and blogging is, at its heart, an activity involving much writing. Academic blogging involves writing that is a remix of such items as a news story, an op-ed piece, and a critical review. Academic bloggers frequently use blogs to keep up with the relevant literature in their field, thereby providing a kind of public note-taking and research-sharing exercise. Academic bloggers also use blogging as a rough draft for ideas they later develop fully for peer-reviewed papers or books. (The second author has done exactly this for a new book, White Man’s Party, on which he is currently working.) As they engage a wider audience beyond peers in their research subfield, academics’ blogging can become scholar-activism. As Jennifer Ho remarks recently in the Journal of Women’s History (Winter, 2010):
My initial blog entries were a form of pre-writing for my book chapters. Yet the sense of accountability that the blog inspired quickly grew beyond one of writing accountability to one of community accountability. . . . as I started to gather a group of readers beyond the friends and family in my address book, I began to see my blog writing as not merely free writing for my book but fundamental writing for issues about which I care deeply. And I began to see that my academic writing and my blog writing enrich and enhance one another; they both speak to the feminist ideals I believe in speaking truth to power and equality for all people.Ho and other academic bloggers have embraced Internet technologies in ways that broaden the scope of their research work beyond college walls and in ways reaching beyond old disciplinary silos. This is partly about reaching audiences in disparate geographic locations, but more importantly it is about connecting with multiple publics with a shared interest across institutional and other social boundaries.
Micro-blogging, such as the highly popular Twitter, is a way to send short updates (140 characters or less) to a collection of individuals (“followers”) that each user uses to their own liking. It seems surprising academics have taken to Twitter, given their deserved reputation for exceeding 140 characters, but they have. Academics, like others who use Twitter, have found short updates a useful way to find and maintain connections to others who share their research and other interests. While websites like Twitter can be accessed via desktop or laptop computer, they are also widely accessible via mobile devices, such as smart cellphones. Networking at academic conferences is no longer restricted to dull hallways of indistinguishable hotels, but simultaneously extended and constricted to fit within the short downtimes in any busy day. Time between classes means time enough to catch up on the interesting water-cooler conversation about my research area of interest among a handful of people on Twitter. For academics who work in departments or institutions where few share their research interests, Twitter can be a useful way to expand one’s intellectual impact and lessen intellectual isolation.
Virtual Conferences and Backchannels and Curating the Ideal Academic Department
The virtual conference is another significant shift in how academics share their work. Recently, Jessie received the following invitation, via email:
This is a virtual conference, presenters are not required to physically travel to a conference location but instead provide their presentations to viewers online. It’s completely free to submitters and viewers. The goal of the conference is to share the work being done…While these are not yet commonplace, the prohibitive cost of much professional travel, and shrinking department budgets to cover travel, may speed more of such virtual sharing of research with colleagues. While invitation to a virtual conference is still unusual, academics still meet face-to-face at annual conferences which are also being transformed by digital technologies.
Backchannel communications between those attending in-person conferences help academics make connections in real time. Text messaging and Twitter and blog updates allow networks of academics to coordinate in-person connections. Backchannel communications also expand knowledge distribution. As one friend was sitting in a conference session Jessie could not attend, she could read her Twitter updates about key research presented at that session.
For academics that may toil in relative isolation from others who share their immediate interests, the social connection of blogging and microblogging can also provide an opportunity to curate the ideal academic department. While in another era, scholars may have identified strongly with their PhD-granting university, the college or university, or the academic department in which they are currently employed, the rise of social media allows for a new arrangement of colleagues. Scholars now have conversations via Twitter, Facebook and blogs that maintain close collegial ties with others who share their scholarly interests even though they may not share an institutional home or the same academic department. Today, rather than being restricted to the colleagues one finds in ones’ own department, scholars (and teachers) go online to find intellectual companionship, in effect, curating the ideal academic department and tailoring it to their interests.
Open Peer-Review & Crowd-Sourced Edited Volumes
The open source movement has broad implications for higher education and the work academics do. While one early experiment in open-review at the journal Nature is regarded as a failure [i], there is a new attempt by Elsevier to launch an open-review system. Whether Elsevier’s effort will succeed remains to be seen, but there are now numerous examples of post-publication peer review that appear to out-perform traditional pre-publication peer review, especially in the natural sciences. In summer 2010 a research paper published in Science claimed to have identified genes associated with longevity with “77% accuracy”; it soon received a detailed and devastating post-publication review from the Google-owned DNA service, 23andme. This review was followed by detailed critiques from other science bloggers. [ii] The future many academics in the natural and other sciences envision is one where post-publication peer review dominates scholarly publication, with little or no pre-publication review necessary.
Crowd-sourcing, the concept that an open call to an undefined group of people will gather those best able to contribute with relevant and fresh ideas, is one that is appealing to many and could have interesting implications for the work academics do. In May 2010, academics Dan Cohen and Tom Scheinfeldt launched an exciting experiment they called “Hacking the Academy.” Their idea was to crowd source an edited volume about new approaches to higher education in one week. They asked potential contributors to consider questions like: Can an algorithm edit a journal? Can a library exist without books? Can students build their learning management platforms? Can a conference be held without a program? Can Twitter replace a scholarly society? In keeping with the spirit of ”hacking” in which they reimagined the edited volume, Cohen and Scheinfeldt devised this strategy:
“Any blog post, video response, or other media created for the volume and tweeted (or tagged) with the hashtag #hackacad will be aggregated at hackingtheacademy.org (submissions should use a secondary tag — #class #society #conf #journal #book #tenure #cv #dept #edtech #library — to designate chapters). The best pieces will go into the published volume. The volume will also include responses such as blog comments and tweets to individual pieces.” [iii]
Academic Publishers Confront E-Publishing, and E-Reading
Since 2005 the explosive growth of dramatic new publishing technologies is revolutionizing creation of and access to books. Millions of ebooks, earticles, and ereaders have created major challenges for academics and academic publishers. Publishers have seen ebooks increase to 10-20 percent of total sales, and the number of one major ereader, the Kindle, is now more than 8 million. Millions of other ereaders have also been sold.
Ereaders are lightweight, hold thousands of books, and can be carried almost anywhere. They allow people to read articles and books when they want, at larger fonts, with easy notetaking. They allow for nearly instantaneous downloads of hundreds of thousands of books. (Articles on the epublishing revolution can be found daily at www.teleread.com).
In a recent interview, Clay Shirky, prominent Internet and ebook technology analyst, asks a critical question: Who will vet for academic and other readers the billions of new books and articles that will explode across epublishing websites. [iv] Now publishers provide critical editorial work that makes for strong books. Without that editing and other publishers’ value-added work, most books would be, as one editor put it to us, just “junk.” Self-publishing on the web and other web-publishing mostly leaves out critical editorial revising and copyediting. For the billions of publications soon to be epublished, new software and vetting websites will be required to edit and polish publications for academic writers and to evaluate these new epublications for quality for academic readers.
The web cannot do this yet, and the visibility they generate for ebooks is not what counts, but the reliability and worth of who says something is worth reading.
Some existing paper book publishers are getting into epublishing with innovative new projects, such as the joint hardback/ebook series of short social science books under the editorship of Ben Agger and Steve Rutter at Routledge. This hardback part involves print-on-demand technology of (POD), which integrates traditional pulp publishing with Internet ordering. Cautiously, but actively, publishers will likely couple new epublishing ideas to their old tested models. Ebooks have the huge advantage of being fully searchable, more portable, and link-filled to other media and sources.
Web epublishing has also opened up much larger and global audiences for articles. One U.S. social science ejournal started by a sociologist, Fast Capitalism, get hundreds of thousands of monthly readers and much global visibility for authors and journal, including many submissions from researchers overseas. In creating online journals, the humanities are currently well ahead of the social science, but in the near future we predict that most social science journals will be ejournals (the ASR is already readable online).
These technological developments have serious implications for the academic enterprise. We only have room to list a few other issues: Ebook retailers often price serious academic books too low for them to be viable for publishers and authors. Until someone works out how to financially support serious academic book publishing ebooks available and on the web, we may see less serious academic publishers disappearing and fewer serious research efforts in book form. Online piracy of earticles and ebooks is skyrocketing, raising again the same question of academic ebook viability.
Digital Humanities but No Digital Sociology
All these changes in scholarship have been taken up with a great deal more enthusiasm by some in the academy than others. Our colleagues in the humanities have embraced digital technologies much more readily than those of us in sociology or the social sciences more generally. A casual survey of the blogosphere reveals that those in the humanities (and law schools) are much more likely to maintain academic blogs than social scientists. In terms of scholarship, humanities scholars have been, for more than ten years, innovating ways to combine traditional scholarship with digital technologies. To name just a two examples, scholars in English have established a searchable online database of the papers of Emily Dickinson and historians have developed a site that offers a 3D digital model showing the urban development of ancient Rome in A.D. 320. There are significant institutions being built in the digital humanities including the annual Digital Humanities Conference, which began in 1989, and the National Endowment for the Humanities’ Office of Digital Humanities.
Sociology lags far behind in the adoption of digital tools for scholarly work. As Paul DiMaggio and colleagues noted in 2001, “sociologists have been slow to take up the study of the Internet” (“The Social Implications of the Internet,” Annual Review of Sociology, 2001, p.1). While there are notable exceptions, such as Andrew Beveridge’s digitizing of Census maps (www.socialexplorer.com), when looking at the field as a whole these sorts of innovations are rare in sociology. In contrast to the decade-long conference in the digital humanities, there is no annual conference on “digital sociology.” Sociology graduate students Nathan Jurgensen and PJ Rey recently organized a conference on “Theorizing the Web,” that drew luminaries in sociology Saskia Sassen and George Ritzer, but this is the first sociology conference (that we are aware of) to focus exclusively on understanding the digital era from a sociological perspective. Analogously, there is no large institution, like the NEH seeking to fund digitally informed sociological research. The reasons for this sociological lag when it comes to the Internet are still not clear, but some point to the problems of getting digital publication projects recognized by tenure and promotion review committees.
Implications for Hiring, Promotion and Tenure
Scholars across disciplines often express reservations about the use of social media as a “waste of time” or a “distraction” that takes them away from their academic pursuits. Christine Hurt and Tung Yin refer to blogging without tenure as “an extreme sport” because of the risks involved (2006, p. 1235). They enumerate these risks of blogging for untenured faculty as including: the amount of time involved, being controversial, being wrong, and sharing too much personal information. These are all legitimate concerns that any blogger (not just an academic) should weigh in the balance before engaging with social media.
However, our experience with our academic blog (www.racismreview.com) has been quite the opposite of these pitfalls. Since we started the blog in 2007, a dozen or more junior faculty and graduate students have served as guest bloggers for us. These guest bloggers typically write about their own research and use the blog to reach a wider audience, which may include potential employers. It is now commonplace for graduate students’ guest blog stints to appear on academic CV’s or in cover letters for academic positions. How these end up being evaluated by hiring committees remains an open question.
When it comes to promotion and tenure, the recognition of the digital production of knowledge is still not uniformly recognized across institutions or disciplines. There are a variety of mechanisms within existing structures that could allow for the recognition of this sort of knowledge production. For instance, some institutions allow for a category known as “creative works in one’s discipline.” Originally intended to include works in fine or performing arts like interpretive dance, music scores or paintings, this category is expanding to include digital works of scholarship as “creative.” At other institutions, there is a category of work considered for promotion and tenure called “dissemination of research,” typically used to include public speaking or letters to the editor of newspapers. Increasingly, this is being adapted to include digital works. And most institutions have a “service” category that could also be expanded to include the digital production of knowledge, such as academic blogging. One thing is certain, as more and more scholars take up digital practices that expand their academic work, they will begin to expect that this work be taken much more seriously by hiring, promotion and tenure committees.
Implications for the Meaning of Expert Knowledge
The Internet has had a democratizing effect on expertise. One scholar referred to it as expertise as a “withered paradigm” given the web (Walsh, 2003). Concepts that once may have seemed an agreed upon cultural value, like “equality” and “objectivity” are now fought over online in ways unimagined previously. Similarly, concepts that have the weight of considerable scientific evidence behind them, such as global warming, become contested by climate change deniers. One especially pernicious way that the Internet challenges the notion of expertise is through the proliferation of hard-to-detect propaganda, much of it funded by wealthy arch-conservatives. For instance, the emergence of cloaked websites that disguise authorship in order to conceal a political agenda can be very confusing. The “California Latino Water Coalition” appears to be a grassroots organizing effort to stop the corporate control of the water supply, but it is in fact a front group for corporate agribusiness. A casual web user would never know this from the URL LatinoWater.com, without a visit to an additional site such as Internic WhoIS or SourceWatch. The presence of intentionally disguised propaganda online, along with the challenge to expertise brought on by the democratizing of the web, means that what we say we know is a constantly contested political terrain. The evaluation of expertise in this new online environment often has more to do with good graphic design than with the text-based content.
Conclusion
For some, the revolution is already here. The increasingly digital, geographically distributed nature of the work academics do opens up exciting new possibilities for research, collaboration and an open-source approach to peer-review, knowledge production and dissemination. For scholar-activists, the web creates new avenues for engaging with wider publics. Yet, the expanding, and radically democratized audience also challenges old paradigms of expertise. The democratizing influence of the Internet also has serious implications for expertise and how we evaluate expert knowledge claims.
RELATED WORKS:
Castells, Manuel. 2003. The Internet Galaxy: Reflections on Internet, Business and Society. (New York: Oxford University Press).
Cohen, Dan. 2004. “History and the Second Decade of the Web,” Rethinking History Vol. 8, (2):293-301.
Halavais, Alexander. 2006. “Scholarly Blogging: Moving toward the Visible College,” A. Bruns and J. Jacobs (Eds.), Uses of Blogs, (New York: Peter Lang).
Hurt, Christine and Tung Yin. 2006. “Blogging While Untenured and Other Extreme Sports,” Washington University Law Review (84): 1235-55.
Kamenetz, Anya. 2010. DIY U: Edupunks, Edupreneurs, and the Coming Transformation of Higher Education. (San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publishers).
Rheingold, Howard. 2002. Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution. (New York: Basic Books).
Shenk, David. 1997. Data Smog: How to Cope with the Information Glut. (New York: HarperCollins). And, see also, the author’s review of his predictions 10 years later: http://www.slate.com/id/2171128/.
Solum, Lawrence B. 2006. “Blogging and the Transformation of Legal Scholarship,” Washington University Law Review (84):1071-88 .
Vaidhyanathan, Siva. 2011. The Googlization of Everything: And Why We Should Worry. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Walker, Jill. 2006. “Blogging from Inside the Ivory Tower,” in A. Bruns and J. Jacobs (Eds.), Uses of Blogs, (New York: Peter Lang).
Walsh, Peter. 2003. “That Withered Paradigm: the Web, the Expert and the Information Hegemony,” MIT Communications Forum, http://web.mit.edu/comm-forum/papers/walsh.html.
Wellman, Barry and Carolyn A. Haythornthwaite, (Eds.). 2002. The Internet in Everyday Life. (Malden, MA.: Blackwell).
END NOTES
[i] See the discussion here: http://www.nature.com/nature/peerreview/debate/nature05535.html .
[ii] See the discussion here: http://cameronneylon.net/blog/p-%E2%89%A0-np-and-the-future-of-peer-review/ .
[iii] See the description here: http://hackingtheacademy.org/what-this-is-and-how-to-contribute/.
[iv] http://bnreview.barnesandnoble.com/t5/Interview/Clay-Shirky/ba-p/2880
A podcast recorded with Robert O’Toole at a Digital Change GPP event earlier this year.
If you’re at Warwick and you’re interested in the P.R.E could you get in touch with me? We’ll hopefully be getting a chance to build this next academic year and, to do so, we need participants to help design it.
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Over the last month I've been starting the process of moving my blog and eportfolio away from Warwick and onto a Wordpress site. I had anticipated that the biggest difficulties would be technical issues, but thanks to some good tips and resources on the Digital Tools course this isn't proving too much of a challenge.
According to Jeff Jarvis, author of Public Parts: How Sharing in the Digital Age Improves the Way We Work and Live, thanks to the internet, "we all have our Gutenberg presses and the privileges they accord." For academic institutions, the internet is a largely untapped resource for shaping and sharing scholarly research.
In my previous post (‘Digital sociology part 1: what is it?’) I explained the concept of digital sociology and presented four aspects I considered integral to this sub-discipline: professional digital practice, sociological analyses of digital use, digital data analysis and critical digital sociology. In this post I focus on professional digital practice, or using digital media tools for professional purposes: to build networks, facilitate public engagement, receive feedback, establish an e-profile, curate and share content and instruct students.
It is clear that a revolution in how tertiary education is offered is on its way, as demonstrated by the recent decision of elite universities such as Princeton and Stanford to invest significant sums of money in massive open online courses which at the moment are provided free of charge to anyone who wishes to enrol (including, I note, an ‘Introduction to Sociology’ subject). The move towards open access and e-publishing of scholarly work also seems inevitable. Furthermore, creating en ‘e-profile’ is becoming an important part of academic work. Judicious use of social media allows you to exercise better control and manage the content of your online persona in a context in which search engines are constantly collating information about you.
For all these reasons, an understanding of how to present knowledge and promote learning in digital formats will soon become a vital part of academic practice. Here’s some specific ways in which academics can use some of the digital tools now available:
Building networks
Using platforms such as Twitter and Facebook can be a highly efficient way of connecting with other academics working in a similar area as well as interested people from outside academia. These platforms allow participants to join networks arranged around topic or discipline areas and to contribute in discussions and sharing information within these networks.
Facilitating public engagement
Blogging sites such as WordPress and micro-blogging platforms such as Twitter can be used as easily accessible forums in which academics can communicate their ideas in short form. Unlike traditional journal articles that are locked behind paywalls, these platforms are free to access and material can be instantly published, allowing academics to share some of their research findings quickly. They therefore allow academics to promote their research and share it with a far greater audience than they would usually find in the traditional forums for publication. Links can be provided to journal articles so that longer academic pieces can be followed up by readers.
Receiving feedback
Blogs and microblogging platforms also allow interested readers to comment and engage with authors, thus facilitating public engagement. You can ask a question in a blog or Twitter post and receive responses, or readers may simply chose to use the comments box to make remarks on something you have published. Quora is a social media platform designed specifically to ask questions of anyone who uses it. Once you have set up an account you can publish a question or answer other people’s questions, as well as follow others’ questions to see what the responses are. You can also follow topics or people.
Establishing an e-profile
Sites such as Academia.edu and LinkedIn, as well as your university profile webpage are ways of providing information about yourself. In Academia.edu, designed specifically for academics, you can list and upload your articles, conference papers and books and you can follow other individuals and topic areas and be followed in turn.
Curation and sharing of content
Curation and sharing platforms such as Delicious, SlideShare, Pinterest, Scoop.it, Pearltrees, Bundlr, Paper.li and Storify, as well as referencing tools such as Mendeley, Citeulike and Zotero, allow academics to easily gather and present information and, importantly, to then make the information public and share it with others online. On SlideShare you can share your Powerpoint presentations and the referencing tools allow you to gather lists of references on specific topics and then share these with others. Several of these tools, including Pinterest, Bundlr and Storify, allow you to insert your own comments or analysis on the material you have gathered.
Teaching
The platforms listed above can also be used as teaching tools, providing new ways of engaging students both through classroom teaching and in student assignments, where students can use the tools themselves to collect, curate and present information. Students in any area of study need to be trained in using social media and other digital technologies as part of preparing them for their future careers, as these technologies are increasingly becoming part of the working world.
Some examples of using digital and social media in sociology
This blog post itself is an example of professional digital practice in action. It is an edited version of a longer Storify presentation, and I was first inspired to write on this topic by an exchange I had on Twitter (for the Storify presentation, which contains additional information on digital sociology including weblinks to relevant courses, books, articles and blog posts, go to http://storify.com/DALupton/digital-sociology-2).
Digital media are being increasingly used as part of academic conferences. For example, academics often tweet about the content of the presentations they attend, providing a ‘back-channel’ of communication that can be shared with both those participating and those who cannot attend. These tweets can then be presented and preserved in Storify as a record of the conference to which anyone can have access.
I have previously written in detail about how Pinterest can be used for sociological research (see my previous post on ‘How sociologists and other social scientists can use Pinterest’). As I commented in this post, this curation platform is a wonderful way of collecting images related to one’s research interests. It also offers various possibilities for teaching, allowing students to curate and comment on their own image collections.
Paper.li provides a platform to create online newsletters by collating material downloaded from other sites. It can be used by academics to collect recent blog posts, the abstracts from newly published journal articles or online news articles relevant to a specific topic which they then share with their social networks on a daily or weekly basis.
Sociologists may also like to think about making their own apps for teaching purposes. It is possible to access app maker wizards online that are easy to use and inexpensive. See here for my account of how I made my own app explaining key concepts in medical sociology: http://tinyurl.com/7pndeeu.
Further Resources
The LSE Impact of the Social Sciences blog provides invaluable content for academics interested in using digital media. It also has a handbook on maximising the impact of one’s research (including via digital means) and a guide to using Twitter for academic purposes, both of which can be downloaded free (http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences).
See also the University of Warwick’s research page for links to useful articles about creating an academic e-profile: http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/researchexchange/topics/gd0035/.
See my Delicious stack ‘Social Media and Academia’ for an extensive collection of articles and blog posts (http://www.delicious.com/stacks/view/Kf2pNz) and Mark Carrigan’s Bundlr collection on ‘Academia 2.0’ (http://bundlr.com/b/academia-2-0). Also see #mlearning and #digsoc on Twitter for tweets on this topic.
My next post ’Digital sociology part 3: digital research’ will provide an overview of how sociologists can use digital data and research the ways in which digital and social media are used in everyday life.
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Academic publishers are considering fee-waived access to journals via the public library network, a facility university libraries already provide. Photograph: Guardian
Much has been written about journal publishers over the past few months but unfortunately this has focused almost exclusively on one side of the debate: the desire for greater access to peer-reviewed research outputs, especially journal articles, which publishers are painted as somehow resisting and restricting.
To be clear from the outset, we fully support expanding public access to publicly funded research. One only has to look at what has happened over the past year, especially since the publication of the government's Innovation and Research Strategy for Growth and the convening of the Finch Group to recommend strategy for extending access to global research for UK researchers. This is a process in which publishers have engaged fully and are making great strides to promote enduring, financially sustainable, open access models.
We also made a significant announcement on 2 May – on the day that the universities and science minister, David Willetts, came to speak at the Publishers Association AGM – that publishers are exploring fee-waived walk-in access via the public library network. As the minister pointed out, this proposed PA initiative would be a very useful way to extend public access to research outputs currently only available through subscription.
These are not merely words: a working group of journal publishers and public librarians is taking this work forward on behalf of the PA. A preliminary technical report should be available by mid-June with the objective of enabling access by the end of the year. This facility is already available through university libraries, although whether these libraries choose to allow walk-in access is a matter for them.
Much of the focus of this debate has been on the value of peer review and the role that scholars and researchers play in this process. By implication publishers are perceived as contributing very little, other than simply assembling articles into journals and pushing them onto cash-strapped libraries to make a gargantuan profit.
That is a gross distortion of reality. The publishing process involves: soliciting and managing submissions; managing peer review; editing and preparing manuscripts; producing the articles; publishing and disseminating journals; and of course archiving. And the end result acts as a calling card and mark of quality, helping readers find content that is relevant to them and is trusted.
And at a time when we are looking for an export-led recovery, UK-based scholarly publishers account for over £1bn in export sales.
Perhaps most important of all, from an access point of view, is the amount publishers have invested in platforms that support researchers in numerous ways. These include investments in article enhancement, visualisation, social networking, and mobile technology; valuable tools such as searchable image databases, navigation, alerts and citation notifications, and reference analysis. Publishers are also working on text-mining tools; linking to the datasets behind journal articles; and research performance measurement tools such as SciVal.
These are all part of the academic ecosystem and are provided by publishers, not to mention that almost 100% of journals are available electronically – created, digitised, structured, tagged and disseminated by publishers. But it seems to be much easier to belittle the role of publishers than to have a serious look at what is being provided.
The debate about the cost of journals is made difficult by the fact that there are wide variations across the industry, and of course competition issues debar any collaboration. However, in 2010 – the last year for which Society of College, National and University Libraries data are available – UK universities had access to 2.42m journal subscriptions, an increase of 93% over 2006. The price paid for these subscriptions, £134m, increased by only 31% over the same period, so the price paid per journal accessed actually fell by 32%.
In 2010, universities spent 0.54% of their total institutional expenditure on subscriptions to journals and 20% of their library budget, which in turn was 2.7% of total institutional expenditure. Journal collections or "big deals", though often criticised, have contributed significantly to this reduction in unit costs by enabling the most popular material to be sold at a lower price with an added extra slice of research material on top. And of course libraries can choose either to subscribe to these broad collections (against substantial discounts) or to purchase individual titles.
It is clear, however, that further efficiencies can be made, for example in the peer review process. This is why publishers run peer review innovation projects. So far there seems to be no alternative to the view that pre-publication review by selected experts should sustain the production and dissemination of high-quality science over the longer term. This may, of course, change over time and publishers will continue to encourage innovation in peer review practices.
The profit margins of some of the larger publishers are portrayed as a moral affront, given the budgetary challenges that libraries face. Unfortunately, publishers seem to be part of a broader backlash against perceived corporate greed and abrogation of social responsibility. But publishers are entitled and need to make a profit. Profits derive from efficiency, profits fund investment and drive innovation, and profits are taxed – which provides the public money to fund research. Scholarly publishers support 10,000 jobs in the UK and we are significant net revenue earners for the UK. The members of the Publishers Association pay more in taxes to the UK exchequer than all UK universities collectively pay to all publishers globally for access to their journals.
Clearly the costs of publishing services must be met somehow, and these are of course in addition to the costs of doing the research itself. If we lived in a world where all such services were paid for prior to publication, then all research content could be made freely available. But we do not, or do not yet, live in such a world. A similar point can be made about the transparency of contracts: there is no UK legislation that interferes in commercial contracting between two businesses. Companies are perfectly entitled to negotiate terms and conditions on a case-by-case basis and to negotiate those terms in confidence.
To reiterate, scholarly publishers are happy to work with any long-term financially viable business model for publishing services. We are happy to work with models where funding is provided on the author-side or the user-side of the publication process, or hybrids of the two. By contrast, mandated deposit in repositories is not a publishing model, has no associated revenue stream and, worse, threatens to erode the revenues deriving from the subscriptions on which the model depends.
Publishers have nevertheless said that we are happy to work with this "green" approach – in combination with viable publishing models such as funded ("gold") open access or subscription – provided that the time gap (the "embargo period") between first publication and availability in a repository does not fatally undermine revenue streams. We are ready to work with funding bodies, government agencies, researchers, librarians and other stakeholders of all kinds to expand access in sustainable ways.
But that's just it - they need to be viable in the long term. Attacking publishers will not make open access any more sustainable. We all need to work together to achieve this.
Graham Taylor is director of academic, educational and professional publishing at the Publishers Association
May 11, ’12 8:00 AMIn this podcast I talk to Martin Weller, author of the Digital Scholar, about the changes which digital technology is bringing about within academia and where they might ultimately lead.
There is a proliferation of economics blogs, with increasing numbers of famous and not-so-famous economists devoting a significant amount of time to writing blog entries, and in some cases, attracting large numbers of readers. Yet little is known about the impact of this new medium. In the first of a three part series, World Bank Senior Economists, David McKenzie and Berk Özler measure the various impacts of economics blogs.
Question 1: “Do blogs lead to increased dissemination of research papers?”
We examine this question by using abstract view and download statistics from Research Papers in Economics (RePEc), matched to the dates that blogs link to these papers. A few graphs dramatically illustrate the potential of blogs to draw attention to research papers.
Example 1: Freakonomics blogs about a paper: (Click to enlarge)
Example 2: Marginal Revolution blogs about a paper: (Click to enlarge)
Example 3: Chris Blattman blogs about a paper: (Click to enlarge)
Ok, so there seems to be something there. To formally test for the impact of different blogs on abstract views and downloads we put together a database of 94 papers linked to on 6 blogs: Aid Watch (before it ended), Chris Blattman, Economix (New York Times), Marginal Revolution, Freakonomics, and Paul Krugman. We define t=0 in the month in which the blog entry occurred, t=-1 in the month before, t=+1 in the month after, etc. Then we estimate the impact of blog s linking to a paper i via the following regression: (Click to enlarge)
This controls for paper-specific fixed effects, and looks for a spike in views in the month the paper is blogged about, tests whether this continues into the next month, and also includes a lead term to rule out reverse causation whereby a paper gets a lot of downloads for some other reason, leading people to blog about it. For robustness we also include paper-specific linear time trends.
Results can be summarized as follows:
Blogging about a paper causes a large increase in the number of abstract views and downloads in the same month: an average impact of an extra 70-95 abstract views in the case of Aid Watch and Blattman, 135 for Economix, 300 for Marginal Revolution, and 450-470 for Freakonomics and Krugman. [see regression table here]
These increases are massive compared to the typical abstract views and downloads these papers get- one blog post in Freakonomics is equivalent to 3 years of abstract views! However, only a minority of readers click through – we estimate 1-2% of readers of the more popular blogs click on the links to view the abstracts, and 4% on a blog like Chris Blattman that likely has a more specialized (research-focused) readership.
There is some spillover of reads into the next month (not everyone reads a blog post the day it is produced), and no evidence that abstract views and downloads lead blog posts.
A more formal write-up of this section of the paper and the table of results can be found here.
This post originally appeared on the World Bank’s Developmental Impact blog. The full working paper can be downloaded here.
Related posts:
- Continual publishing across journals, blogs and social media maximises impact by increasing the size of the ‘academic footprint’.
- Five minutes with The Incidental Economist Austin Frakt: “Only 0.04% of published papers in health are reported on by the media, so blogs and other social media can help.”
- Academic blogging and collaboration make demonstrating pathways to impact an easier matter
- Academic tweeting: using Twitter for research projects
- From blogging to print: My journey to creating impact
I just came across some hastily scribbled notes I made from a crowded public debate about the future of the university last October. I thought I’d post them up here to entrench them in my memory simply because these barely legible scrawls actually encapsulate my views on this much more succinctly than I’ve managed since:
- Offering non-instrumental accounts of the value of research
- Avoiding rearguard action: offering a positive account
- Making a case for control of the academy by academics (as opposed to the market, state or the managers attached to either)
- What do the public think of social science? How can social scientists make a case for social science?
- The public engagement activities of someone like Richard Dawkins play a huge role in fomenting public understanding and appreciation of biology. Why are social scientists failing to offer anything equivalent? Social science is potentially in a strong position for this because it’s findings can illuminate everyday aspects of personal experience in fascinating ways.
- Recovering a more philosophical notion of research (and escaping from the false dichotomy between blue skies research and applied research) as whatever contributes to human knowledge.
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Blogs are often seen as a somewhat unglamorous medium. Witness BBC journalist Andrew Marr’s dismissal of bloggers at the Cheltenham Literary Festival last year: ”A lot of bloggers seem to be socially inadequate, pimpled, single, slightly seedy, bald, cauliflower-nosed young men sitting in their mother’s basements and ranting.”
However in conversations about blogging, the product is often confused with the platform. While many people do use blogs for the sort of sole authored ranting that Marr suggests, this is simplyone use of the underlying technology. The platform itself is immensely powerful: zero cost, immediate, easy to use, customisable, collaborative online publishing.
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As a type of social man, the intellectual does not have any one political direction, but the work of any man of knowledge, if he is the genuine article, does have a distinct kind of political relevance: his politics, in the first instance, are the politics of truth, for his job is the maintenance of an adequate definition of reality. In so far as he is politically adroit, the main tenet of this politics is to find out as much of the truth as he can, and to tell it to the right people, at the right time, and in the right way. Or, stated negatively: to deny publicly what he knows to be false, whenever it appears in the assertions of no matter whom … The intellectual ought to be the moral conscience of his society at least with reference to the value of truth, for in the defining instance, that is his politics. And he ought also to be a man absorbed in the attempt to know what is real and unreal.
- On Knowledge and Power
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by C. Wright Mills
from THE SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATIONMills wrote an Appendix in The Sociological Imagination, calling it "On Intellectual Craftsmanship." In this essay he kind of talks out loud about how he does things, offering advice to new and old sociologists, alike. He offers advice which corresponds to his own stance vis-a-vis "mainstream" sociological theory and methods...advice which I think is still sound today...some 40 years later. I have scanned the pages of this Appendix and present them here for consideration...under the Doctrine of Fair Use, as explained when you click on the "Fair Use" link above. It's presented here in 17 jpg images...with all but the first and last containing two pages each.
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This is also really cool…
Can anyone recommend any other videos like this? I think I want to write an article for SociologicalImagination.org about envisioning socio-technological futures…
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