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EDU 807 Spring 2017 - Week 0 - Greenhow and Gleason, "Social Scholarship"

Author: Greenhow, C., & Gleason, B.


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Greenhow, C., & Gleason, B. (2014). Social scholarship: Reconsidering scholarly practices in the age of social media. British Journal of Educational Technology, 45(3), 392–402. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjet.12150

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Christine Greenhow is an assistant professor in Educational Psychology & Educational Technology, Michigan State University. She studies various forms of learning with social media, the design of social-mediated environments for learning and changes in scholarship practices with new media (More information at: http://www.cgreenhow.org and @chrisgreenhow on Twitter). Benjamin Gleason is a PhD candidate in Educational Psychology and Educational Technology, College of Education, Michigan State University. His research interests include teaching and learning through social media, focusing specifically on literacy practices, identity development and civic engagement in social learning spaces. Address for correspondence: Dr Christine Greenhow, Educational Psychology & Educational Technology, Michigan State University, 513F Erickson Hall, East Lansing, MI 48842, USA. Email: greenhow @msu.edu

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Abstract

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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.

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Practitioner Notes

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What is already known about this topic

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  • Scholarship has emphasized Boyer’s four dimensions of scholarship: discovery, inte-gration, teaching and application.
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    Jan 8
    Derek George Derek George (Jan 08 2017 11:17AM) : I'm glad the authors chose to restate the 4 dimensions of scholarship according to Boyer more

    I reckon this is just one indication of a well-planned journal article, but I am glad the authors make don’t take it for granted that readers are familiar with, or recall all four elements…

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  • Some surveys report that scholars are using social media in their research and teach-ing, whereas others report that faculty is reluctant to integrate social media into their practices.
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What this paper adds

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  • This paper reconsiders Boyer’s seminal conceptualization of the four dimensions of scholarship in light of widespread social media adoption and trends in scholars’ usage of social media.
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  • This paper offers a conceptualization of social scholarship with examples of its implementation.
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Implications for practice and/or policy

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  • This paper provides concrete examples that may assist scholars, especially those who study technology enhanced learning, in understanding how to practice social scholarship with what benefits and challenges.
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  • This paper offers suggestions for policies and programs that might support graduate students and faculty seeking to integrate social scholarship into their work practices.
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Introduction

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Increasingly, employers in various fields seek employees with social media savvy, which includes knowing how to construct an effective digital identity, communicate using diverse media, produce (not just consume) knowledge, distribute it, collaborate and catalyze others’ participation in digital knowledge creations (Preston, 2012). In higher education, universities emphasize the need to prepare students to be engaged citizens who possess competencies for collaborative, creative work in future workplaces. To accomplish such outcomes, institutions must consider how to prepare future faculty for the impact social media advancements may be having on contemporary schol-arship practices. Critical considerations of professional preparation are situated within larger discussions in higher education regarding democratization, human rights to education, equality, accessibility, transparency and accountability (Selwyn, 2011). These may be especially warranted in the field of educational technology where the integration of the internet and social media into scholars’ contemporary work practices raises ethical issues that have been largely underexplored (Moore & Ellsworth, 2014).

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Jan 4
Princess Natalie M Princess Natalie M (Jan 04 2017 9:48PM) : This sentence states how important it is for current teachers to teach their student these skills. This reminds me of the article from Mike's class about the importance of using peer feedback. Peer feedback teaches out students some of these skills list more

I ran out of room here is my last though, I will find the article. to post. Peer feedback teaches out students some of these skills listed.

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Jan 6
Tiffany Hightower Tiffany Hightower (Jan 06 2017 1:43PM) : Educators must have enhanced technological pedagogical knowledge to assist students in leveraging social media outlets effectively to be more marketable in digital workplaces.
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Jan 6
Princess Natalie M Princess Natalie M (Jan 06 2017 2:07PM) : I agree, our Educators are at the frontline for teaching our students these skills. Question, are the current educators knowledgeable enough about these new technologies?
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Jan 6
Princess Natalie M Princess Natalie M (Jan 06 2017 2:09PM) : This was the article I was referencing Hrastinski, S. (2009). A theory of online learning as online participation. Computers & Education, 52(1), 78–82.
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Jan 8
Sharon Murchie Sharon Murchie (Jan 08 2017 10:21AM) : "...engaged citizens who possess competencies for collaborative, creative work" -- So much of what virtual learning (and competency-based ed) is doing for our K-12 right now is simply student and computer; collaboration and creativity don't exist. more

I’m not sure what do about this. We know what our students need to be experiencing and we know the type citizen and community member and employee and critical thinker that we need to engender, and yet we are (more and more) asking them to sit staring at a screen with headphones on, completely devoid of human contact and interaction, let alone collaboration and creativity.

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Tiffany Ellison Tiffany Ellison (Jan 08 2017 4:59PM) : I think there is a "fear" of what will happen when you allow students to collaborate and explore. I think there is also a fear of losing control.
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Jan 6
Tiffany Hightower Tiffany Hightower (Jan 06 2017 1:34PM) : Scholarly journals, encyclopedias, books written by experts and periodicals have been the most reliable forms of research in the past and currently. However, some social media scholarship is being considered reliable research as well. more

Blogs, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube are now producing social scholarship that is interactive, collaborative and promotes synthesis of various perspectives.

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This conceptual exploration advances a step in this direction by addressing the question, what is scholarship reconsidered (Boyer, 1990) in the age of social media? How ought we to concep-tualize social scholarship—a new set of practices being discussed in disciplines, such as library sciences (Cohen, 2007, April 5; Taraborelli, 2008) and education (Greenhow, Robelia & Hughes, 2009; Veletsianos & Kimmons, 2012)—so that we might address it in doctoral education? Several scholars have used Boyer’s (1990) four-dimensional framework (eg, scholarship of discovery [SOD], integration, teaching and application) as a starting point for reconsidering contemporary scholarly practices, using terms such as open scholarship and digital scholarship, but with little consensus. This paper synthesizes and extends this conversation, situating the definition of social scholarship within it, and specifically addresses faculty and graduate students who research the domain of technology-enhanced learning.

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Moreover, the paper adopts the epistemological stance of social scholarship and then through this stance critically examines the practical and policy implications of reconsidering scholarship, as Boyer (1990) defined it. For each dimension of Boyer’s framework, we explain its epistemolo-gies and practices and then inquire how each dimension, reconsidered through the lens of social scholarship values and social media affordances, might be envisioned today. We offer concrete examples of how graduate students and established scholars, especially those in educational technology, might enact social scholarship with what benefits and challenges for future social scholars to consider. To contextualize our definition of social scholarship, we first describe the rise of social media and empirical work on social media in education.

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Jan 8
Erika Sharp Erika Sharp (Jan 08 2017 9:17PM) : I'm coming around to social scholarship as an instructor but... more

I’m coming around to social scholarship, but I instruct adults of varying ages from straight out of college to starting a second career after retirement. Social scholarship will work great for the younger crowd, but the older students will need much more investment than just a lesson in social media. They also need to understand the purpose, why it’s better or comparable to what they already know. I get this resistance already from them when I introduce either a new methodology that is different from what they know or even new technology itself.

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Tiffany Ellison Tiffany Ellison (Jan 04 2017 8:30PM) : Are these examples applicable to less mature and established students?
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Tiffany Hightower Tiffany Hightower (Jan 06 2017 1:54PM) : In K-12 education, middle and high school students can typically easily incorporate social media into learning and may even prefer it, since they are large producers and consumers of social media. more

However, younger elementary school students may require more scaffolding to ensure that their social media research is evaluated and determined to be scholarly. They may also require more assistance producing quality social media based on their reading and writing levels.

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Social media and education

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Since the publication of Scholarship Reconsidered over two decades ago, we have witnessed funda-mental shifts impacting scholarship broadly and the context in which education scholars do their work. Internet connectivity and mobile wireless access have become increasingly pervasive, ena-bling expanded sites for research. Technological advancements and pedagogies that emphasize learners as coproducers of knowledge (Selwyn, 2011) have contributed to people’s adoption of social media, a term often used interchangeably with Web 2.0, to indicate online applications that promote users, their interconnections and user-generated content (Cormode & Krishnamurthy, 2008). Typical social media features promote individual users through profile pages (eg, displaying likes, comments, recommendations). Social media can facilitate interconnections with features that allow others’ links or news feeds on one’s page. Social media features enable sharing of user-generated content (eg, photos, ratings, tags) (Cormode & Krishnamurthy, 2008).Pages can be dynamically updated and content embedded (eg, embedding a video). Examples of social media used by scholars (Moran, Seaman & Tinti-Kane, 2011) include social network sites (eg, Facebook), wikis (eg, wikispaces), media-sharing services (eg, YouTube), blogging tools (eg, Blogger), micro-blogging services (eg, Twitter), social bookmarking (eg, Delicious), bibliographic management tools (eg, Zotero) and presentation-sharing tools (eg, Slideshare) (Gruzd, Staves & Wilk, 2012).

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Conceptually, social media practices can embody social constructivist values of knowledge as decentralized, accessible and coconstructed among a broad base of users; “knowledge” may become “collective agreement” that “combines facts with other dimensions of human experience” (ie, opinions, values) (Dede, 2008, p. 80). Validity of knowledge in social media environments can be defined through peer review in an engaged community, and expertise involves understanding disputes and offering syntheses accepted by the community (Dede, 2008).

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Jan 4
Tiffany Ellison Tiffany Ellison (Jan 04 2017 8:36PM) : In social media does validity and expertise equate to the number of followers and number of likes or views you have on your work?
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Jan 8
Sharon Murchie Sharon Murchie (Jan 08 2017 10:59AM) : Ugh, right? It seems like this is sometimes viewed as the case (see recent political disasters) but just because everyone likes it or believes it does not mean that it is actually valid. more

Example: how many people continue to believe that vaccines cause autism or that GMO foods cause various other illnesses? These ideas have been proven invalid and yet I see them in my feed every day.

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Tiffany Ellison Tiffany Ellison (Jan 08 2017 5:00PM) : I need a like button on this platform. :-)
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Jan 8
Derek George Derek George (Jan 08 2017 11:43AM) : Group must be assembled for the purpose of creating/sharing knowledge. more

I’m glad you raised this question! I know that when I want answers to certain questions, my first step for how to do something “technical” like clearing a blockage in a can of spray paint is often to consult Youtube because Youtube gives both a visual/audio answer to some many questions. My query identifies forums that address the issue and the number of viewers/commenters usually push the best response to the top which makes it easy to find. (Which means I get a fast and most important/normally accurate solution to my problem) https://youtu.be/MqwSg9sZZOI

(Remembers to really shake your spray paint can for 5 or so minutes before you actually use it. It really helps!)

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Regina Tronu Regina Tronu (Jan 08 2017 9:02PM) : I agree completely. "Peer reviewed" cannot be reduced to a comment in a post by someone who may or may not have knowledge about a topic.
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Erika Sharp Erika Sharp (Jan 08 2017 9:20PM) : To the uninformed I believe so. Also speaks to popularity. more

It’s the age in which we live where clicks, likes and followers mean more on the particular platform than in real work applications. Unfortunately that’s where most people live and breath these days. I think with the rise of fake news as Sharon pointed to and people believing even the most preposterous because it was online figuring out how to help students weed out what isn’t actually scholarly will be the next challenge.

Similarly, connectivism (Siemens, 2005; Kop & Hill, 2008), which views learning as the process of creating connections and articulating a network, also seems well aligned with social media practices. Being knowledgeable can be seen as the capacity to foster and traverse these connections and to access specialized information just in time (Siemens, 2005, p. 4). Connectivism allows for nonlinearity and unanticipated network effects in the learning process within “nebulous environ-ments of shifting core elements—not entirely under the control of the individual” (p. 4).However, we are not suggesting that social media are intrinsically imbued with these or other particular constructions of knowledge that determine practice, but rather technology both shapes and is shaped by practice.

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Tiffany Hightower Tiffany Hightower (Jan 06 2017 2:05PM) : Digital learning in Connectivism is more cyclical since it involves developing perspectives, considering others' perspectives, then synthesizing information.
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Heather Kellstrom Heather Kellstrom (Jan 10 2017 10:46PM) : I'm glad you highlighted this Tiffany. I wish more classrooms operated like this to some degree. In the moment it seems messy, but what the students might get the chance experience....worth the risk.
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Research on social media in education suggests that integrating social media in learning and teaching environments may yield new forms of inquiry, communication, collaboration, identity work, knowledge development or have positive (or negative) cognitive, social and emotional impacts (Gao, Luo & Zhang, 2012; Greenhow & Burton, 2011; Greenhow & Robelia, 2009a, b; Pimmer, Linxen & Grohbiel, 2012; Ranieri, Manca & Fini, 2012). Studies on scholars’ use of social media, though few, suggest that early career scholars especially are using social media in their professional lives for communication with peers and others outside academia, strengthen-ing relationships, finding collaborators, keeping up with research trends, publishing and reflect-ing on ideas, disseminating information, and discussing issues in an open, public format (Gruzd et al, 2012; Rowlands, Nicholas, Russell, Canty & Watkinson, 2011).

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Tiffany Ellison Tiffany Ellison (Jan 04 2017 8:41PM) : Social media transforms a teachers role from knowledge source to facilitator and guide. Knowledge becomes co-created.
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Heather Kellstrom Heather Kellstrom (Jan 10 2017 10:48PM) : I wonder what it might take to get the established faculty to join in? We have the same problem in a K-12 setting. Letting go and embracing the new are hard in the field of education.

Toward defining social scholarship

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Social scholarship seeks to leverage social media affordances (ie, promotion of users, their inter-connections and user-generated content) and potential values (ie, knowledge as decentralized, co-constructed, accessible and connective) to evolve the ways in which scholarship is accom-plished in academia. Cohen (2007, paragraph 1) defines social scholarship as “the practice [. . .] in which the use of social tools is an integral part of the research and publishing process . . . [and is characterized by] openness, conversation, collaboration, access, sharing and transparent revi-sion.” Social scholars use social media to publish and interact with scholarly output and to join an online community devoted to their topic (Cohen, 2007, April 5, paragraph 4). Although openness has typically referred to open access or freeing the scholarly journal literature from cost barriers, its meaning has expanded to include changes in peer review systems, the blurring of boundaries between articles and data sets, public engagement, and the increasing recognition of different forms of output as legitimate products of research effort (Willinsky, 2006). Like definitions of open scholarship (Pearce, Weller, Scanlon & Kinsley, 2010), we view social scholarship as embodying this broader view of openness. While Cohen conceptualizes social scholarship in relation to SOD, we seek to broaden this definition of scholarly practice, as others have done, to include discovery, teaching, integration and application scholarship as described in more detail hereafter.

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Scholarship reconsidered

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In 1990, Ernest Boyer’s ground-breaking essay, Scholarship Reconsidered (Boyer, 1990), sought to legitimize the range of academic work being produced. He proposed that scholars work in four interrelated areas, developing knowledge that addresses societal needs: (1) SOD (basic research), (2) scholarship of integration (SOI) (interdisciplinary work), (3) scholarship of teach-ing (SOTL) (informed and studied teaching practices) and (4) scholarship of application (SOA) (applied research). Boyer’s argument moved the conceptualization of scholarship beyond tradi-tional dichotomies (research vs. teaching or theory vs. practice) to align faculty priorities with the historic mission of the American university (Rice, 2002). Although Boyer was writing in the USA, scholars abroad have found his work relevant (Czerniewicz, 2013; Esposito, 2013; Garnett & Ecclesfield, 2012; Heap & Minocha, 2012; Pearce et al, 2010). Pearce et al (2010) and, for instance, state that the discovery and integration strands of scholarship are currently reinforced in frameworks used for promotion at research-intensive universities in the UK (Pearce et al, 2010). In Italy (Esposito, 2013) and South Africa (Czerniewicz, 2013), scholars have situated their evalua-tion of changing research practices within Boyer’s model.

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Recently, critics have sought to update the model to reflect contemporary thinking about schol-arly practices (Garnett & Ecclesfield, 2012; Heap & Minocha, 2012; Pearce et al, 2010; Weller, 2011). For instance, Pearce et al (2010) and Weller (2011) suggest a conception of digital schol-arship that values openness, or open access, within the four dimensions: open data, open publish-ing, open education and open boundaries. Garnett and Ecclesfield (2012) argue that Boyer’s framework inaccurately considers research and teaching as two separate spheres of activity, where researchers create knowledge (discovery) that teachers adopt. This “linear flow,” they argue, does not reflect the “cocreative” process of teacher–researchers, students and others collaboratively producing knowledge in “perpetual Beta” (Garnett & Ecclesfield, 2012, p. 6). Others argue that variations on Boyer (1990) to conceptualize “digital” and “open scholarship” could be combined as part of a new “long-term project of revision of scholarship” with emerging teaching and learning enabled by networked environments facilitating iterative knowledge production and distribution (Esposito, 2013, p. 6; Veletsianos & Kimmons, 2012). However, they caution that this vision may overly rely on idealized perceptions of the open digital behaviors of a small group of early adopters in specific disciplines (eg, educational technology).

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Jan 8
Sharon Murchie Sharon Murchie (Jan 08 2017 11:06AM) : "this vision may overly rely on idealized perceptions." YES, THIS. There is this idyllic view of what technology offers and how we all should behave...and then there is reality. more

Slightly off-topic but in terms of my own classroom, I run into this constantly. An assignment I created online that had them defining SAT terminology and rhetorical devices in an attempt to get them to interact with the resources and search for reliable answers turned into a copy/paste assignment. The students never even read what they were pasting. My idealized idea of their behavior in seeking information in order to create meaningful and usable personalized definitions of terms they would have to know and use on the SAT was actually a meaningless and useless activity.

Extending this debate, this paper takes Boyer’s (1990) model as a starting point while acknowl-edging the limitations and revisions others have suggested. Moreover, our conceptualization focuses on the socio-technical features of social media that afford some forms of social interaction and constrain others—rather than on the range of technologies that might fall under the heading “digital” or “internet.”

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Conceptualizing social scholarship

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Social SOD

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The first dimension of Boyer’s (1990) framework, SOD, is defined as original research that expands or challenges current knowledge in a discipline. Boyer (1990) described it as “following, in a disciplined fashion, an investigation wherever it may lead” (pp. 17–18). Questions asked include the following: What should be known? What has yet to be discovered? SOD may consist of rigorously controlled experimentation, systematic qualitative inquiry, statistical analysis or theoretical speculation. Although SOD is typically the most valued in merit, promotion and tenure reward systems, Boyer argued that this traditional view of scholarship marginalized other forms and served as a powerful disincentive to those pursuing promotion who are more active in teaching, integration and applied scholarship.

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Jan 8
Regina Tronu Regina Tronu (Jan 08 2017 9:18PM) : Can social media become a "rigorously controlled experiment?" If so, results collected would be unreliable because there is nothing controlled about social media. more

That is the beauty of social platforms in education. One post can lead to a myriad of conversation leading to engagement and learning.

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In contrast to social media practices and social constructivist and connectivist values, epi-stemologically, SOD seems to embody a “classical” view of “authenticated” knowledge (Dede, 2008, p. 80); knowledge is compiled by “experts with substantial credentials in academic fields and disciplines,” who through formal, evidence-based argumentation generate and present findings and conclusions (Dede, 2008, p. 80). Validity of knowledge is determined according to certain criteria, of appropriate quality, as agreed upon by experts. Dissemination of expertise is regulated through formal peer review via publications (Dede, 2008).

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Jan 8
Sharon Murchie Sharon Murchie (Jan 08 2017 11:08AM) : This seems to respond to Tiffany Ellison's comments, several paragraphs up. :)
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Jan 9
Leitha Delves Leitha Delves (Jan 09 2017 3:15AM) : Does "classical" always equal "outdated"? more

I know I, for one, place more value on knowledge authenticated by experts, than on the popularity vote. I can’t quite see why this should be wrong! :)

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Jan 9
Joy Creasy Joy Creasy (Jan 09 2017 7:40AM) : "experts" appears to be a title given to anyone with experience.
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Reconsidering SOD through the lens of social scholarship values and social media affordances suggests some powerful shifts. First, social SOD entails a blended publication process: scholarly work undergoes a journal’s peer review process and enters an informal, social review process that may help surface inaccuracies and engage a wider, nonspecialist audience. This review using social media tools can take two forms: explicit review and implicit review (Cohen, 2007, April 5). In explicit review, the scholarly work is made openly accessible, and the audience is invited to scrutinize, comment on or rate it. For instance, life science researchers recently used Twitter to criticize an article in the journal, Science, that claimed to have discovered a gene that predicted the human lifespan (Mandavilli, 2011). Through this explicit, public peer review, it was quickly discovered that the methodology used in the study was problematic, calling its findings into question. Social SOD also engages implicit review indicated by metadata (eg, tagging, bookmarking, favoriting, retweeting, page views, download numbers) that can signal the extent of connections the work has generated; however, challenges to implementation are that feedback may be superficial, irrelevant, deliberately misleading or derogatory, and metadata may be an inaccurate indicator of implicit review where people “game the system,” favoriting or downloading content they never read.

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Jan 9
Leitha Delves Leitha Delves (Jan 09 2017 3:11AM) : Why not- co-existence rather than transcendance? more

I can’t agree that scholarship has to shift away from its current form, towards their reconfigured notion of social scholarship. I think they need to co-exist, with traditional scholarship retaining its sub-purpose of demonstrating an ability to engage in applied research at a deep and rigorous level, and social scholarship being an optional add-on that has a completely different, and fairly intangible, purpose.

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Jan 6
Princess Natalie M Princess Natalie M (Jan 06 2017 2:13PM) : I am thinking of our 802 class, respect the audience is coming to mind. I am thinking, I could be wrong here, but does the scholar know who the audience is reading there work? more

Also, we know about cyberbullying and “trolls” will there be rules or guidelines or monitoring for the work being posted? I hate for someone to do all that work and get nothing in return that will be helpful.

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Jan 8
Sharon Murchie Sharon Murchie (Jan 08 2017 11:22AM) : The online disinhibition effect is legit. You are spot on here: there is a huge risk to putting work online in this type of environment...not only for the obvious theft-of-ideas reason, but also because of the real and legit danger of trolling. more

I’ve been trolled for my work online, and it is shocking when it happens. Are we prepared to set ourselves up for that kind of personal and professional risk? The meritocracy that is supposed to exist in academia online is, perhaps, more of an ideal than a reality.

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Moreover, implementing a social SOD suggests revised norms for data gathering, analysis and reporting with an increased emphasis on transparency and data sharing. Such revisions align with USA and European plans to increase public access to scientific research, including access to digital data and peer-reviewed publications. However, publishing one’s SOD in social media-enabled spaces can change an author’s control over her published content. Online open access journal articles increasingly offer social reading options, such as social highlighting, ratings and links to Facebook, which may change the content that is read in ways that enhance (or miscon-strue) the author’s intended meaning.

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Jan 10
Heather Kellstrom Heather Kellstrom (Jan 10 2017 10:59PM) : Transparency is expected in a K-12 setting. With regard to publishing SOD's through social media, perhaps the product is a high-level abstract to allow for conversation, make connections, etc., and then a more traditional process is used finalize the work
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For scholars and graduate students who embrace these practices, the benefits may be a better contribution to the knowledge base, a more participatory research process, enhanced reputation, expanded definition of “expert” and democratized access to expertise. As the educational technol-ogy researcher shifts her gaze to her own learning with social media-enabled discovery, through critical reflection, she may better understand her biases and assumptions and her participants’ reported perceptions and experiences. She may identify opportunities or limitations to research practices; recognize new learning technology phenomena, social-mediated methods of inquiry or theoretical frameworks; and develop a connective capacity to know more through her work (eg, benefit from network effects that increase just-in-time access to information).

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That said, scholars and graduate students who use social media in these ways will likely find that these practices are considered in performance reviews, and conventional methods continue to determine promotion criteria. Peer-reviewed journals, academic conferences and scholarly mono-graphs remain the most legitimized methods of disseminating research (Housewright, Schonfeld & Wulfson, 2013). Thus, social scholars will have to navigate traditional expectations while embrac-ing novel practices, although the status quo may be shifting in their favor, especially in the social sciences. According to a survey of 2000 researchers in 215 countries, among social scientists, 84% reported using social media in their research practices (Howard, 2011), and recent surveys report that the majority of faculty has a largely favorable view about the quality of online-only scholarship and believe that it should be equally respected (Allen, Seaman, Lederman & Jaschik, 2012).

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Jan 10
Heather Kellstrom Heather Kellstrom (Jan 10 2017 11:03PM) : This is exactly what we're facing in my district as we transition traditional classrooms to Next-Gen classrooms. We've had to train the building administrators to encourage risk taking and not count risks against staff on evaluations.
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Social SOI

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A second dimension of Boyer’s (1990) framework, the SOI, exists at the boundaries between disciplines. It is concerned with connecting work that can interpret “new intellectual questions” arising from complex, societal problems (Boyer, 1990, p. 21). Scholars practicing the SOI must be able to critically analyze, interpret, integrate knowledge from different disciplines and create novel perspectives that yield more comprehensive understanding. Funding agencies, such as the National Science Foundation in the USA and the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) in the UK, champion integration work as important catalysts of innovation. Epistemologically, Boyer’s conception of SOI resonates with social constructivist values of knowledge as accessible and coconstructed by a broad base of users. Boyer’s conception of SOI also resonates with connectivist values of creating and articulating a network of relationships or intellectual patterns across disciplines.

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Reconsidering SOI through the lens of social scholarship values and social media affordances suggests greater opportunities for advancing integration work today. For example, adoption of social media globally has facilitated large-scale data sharing and big data sets that can be mined in collaborative, interdisciplinary teams to illuminate complex issues. In April 2013, the ESRC announced £64 million for a Big Data Network to develop data access, new research methods and innovative research. A similar initiative is underway in the USA (Kalil, 2012). As governments use social media to spur political participation, creating online records that citizens can view, manipulate and even mash up data (Grant, 2012, December 3), and providing and collecting information (Jaeger, Bertot & Shilton, 2012), research teams are seeking ways to visualize the data and document collaboration across disciplines and organizations (Grant, 2012, December 3).

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Jan 10
Heather Kellstrom Heather Kellstrom (Jan 10 2017 11:06PM) : I think this is a valid point to consider. I know people have hesitation and fear about adding a "social media" component, but image the great conversations and discoveries that might not have happened in more of a closed/siloed system.
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Educational technology scholars who embrace social SOI may benefit from increasing institu-tional, federal and private foundation support for such work. However, research involving big data can also be extremely problematic. It can oversimplify complex human actions and motiva-tions; magnify data errors when data sets are combined; create ethical and Internal Review Board issues when anonymous data are published and then de-anonymized through the inter-rogation process; and create divides between those who have access to big data and those who do not (Boyd & Crawford, 2011). Furthermore, conflicting policies on data privacy, use and security and archiving can prevent integration work as governmental policies often predate the creation of social media technologies, and social media companies have their own policies (Jaeger et al, 2012, p. 15). Additional challenges include establishing norms for collaborating across big data projects while respecting ethical and privacy-related concerns; creating ways to measure and reward individual contributions (Grant, 2012, December 3); and defining the most pressing “grand” challenge problems, ie, the needle from the big data haystack.

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Social SOTL

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A third dimension of Boyer’s framework, the SOTL, is defined as “stimulating active learning” by encouraging students to be “critical, creative thinkers” (p. 24). Scholars of teaching are expected to “transform and extend” knowledge in ways that push all learners in new directions (p. 24). Thus, SOTL extends beyond simply delivering content to describe a process that transforms and expands students’ learning, their teacher–scholar’s learning and advances knowledge of evidence-based “best” teaching practices. Scholars of teaching take a studied approach to their pedagogy (eg, using classroom research to inform instructional designs). Epistemologically, this conception of SOTL seems well aligned with social constructivist views of knowledge as coconstructed, in this case among teachers and learners; however, the linear instructional design process implied in Boyer’s model (Garnett & Ecclesfield, 2012) seems not well aligned with the nonlinearity and unanticipated network effects implied in connectivist learning environments “of shifting core elements.”

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Jan 9
Joy Creasy Joy Creasy (Jan 09 2017 7:44AM) : Yes! This is one of my research path interests. The concept of learning has changed dramatically towards getting people (young and old) to think for themselves. Especially important when so much of the information available is fabricated.
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Reconsidering the SOTL through the lens of social scholarship values and social media affordances suggests both amplification and disruption of existing practices. For instance, incorporating social media in one’s teaching can facilitate the kinds of transformative and active learning that Boyer (1990) advocates, leading to higher student engagement and instructor knowledge (Greenhow & Gleason, 2012). Insights gained as teacher–scholars situate their practice in public social media spaces cannot only be fed back into the teaching process and used to improve pedagogy but also foster a new ethos in SOTL that values collaboration and greater public participation in shaping classroom practices.

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Jan 10
Heather Kellstrom Heather Kellstrom (Jan 10 2017 11:11PM) : I really like this paragraph. Hits at the core of perhaps what I believe or really wish for. New ethos = valued collaboration & greater public participation.
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One example of SOTL facilitated by social media is the City of Lit project, which highlighted Iowa City (USA) as an UNESCO-recognized city of writers and literature. An application constructed by scholars, writers, programmers and students, City of Lit amassed a large digital collection of author interviews, maps detailing fictional and real-life places of interest, and author biogra-phies, photographs and videos—many created by undergraduate students. The instructors collected and analyzed data on students’ motivation and experiences in using City of Lit and gathered feedback on their pedagogy from the online community. They discovered that partici-pating in the City of Lit was an engaging, meaningful experience for students and that creating digital media contributed to students’ development of digital literacies, research methods and writing skills (Draxler, Hsieh, Dudley & Winet, 2012). Insights on learning in City of Lit could then be used to improve the experience for the next group of students.

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Scholars and graduate students who teach in the domain of technology-enhanced learning may recognize a useful connection between the integration of social media within their teaching and the growing importance of learning analytics across the higher education sector around the world (eg, see Ellis, 2013). Defined as the “measurement, collection, analysis, and reporting of data about learners and their contexts,” learning analytics can identify patterns of student behaviors and activity and be used to improve student learning and university teaching, provide data for program improvement, and support better informed decision-making, transparency and accountability at the institutional level (Ferguson, 2012, n.p. as cited in Ellis, 2013). Educational technology scholars recently advocated using social media such as Twitter in university courses based on research that it can increase students’ engagement in course material, increase student– instructor interactions and help students connect concepts with their application (Greenhow & Gleason, 2012; Junco, Elavsky & Heiberger, 2012). Social analytics—automated methods for examining, filtering and categorizing social media content (eg, TweetReach)—can assist such scholars in examining and improving upon their teaching with social media by revealing stu-dents’ ideas, questions and other online content they find interesting. Social analytics can also reveal the “reach” of course-related Tweets beyond course participants, including how many people have viewed the tweets, who those people are and what they are talking about. This analysis could provide both explicit and implicit feedback to instructors, students and adminis-trators; it could suggest additional content and resources to weave into the course, illustrate the course’s relevance to current issues and, at the program level, indicate how certain courses may be engaging a broader audience and potential future students.

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Scholars who practice a social SOTL may benefit from an increased ability to facilitate active, cocreated learning experiences through social analytic feedback. Students and instructors may also benefit from the diversity of perspectives that can be brought into the learning process via social media. Recent surveys suggest that today’s faculty largely favors using technology to support SOTL, such as facilitating student performance feedback loops and increasing collection and analysis of data on teaching and learning (Kolowich, 2012); however, the majority reported they do not regularly create open educational resources or interact with students using social media and are concerned that contributions made to digital pedagogy are not rewarded (Allen et al, 2012). Furthermore, situating learning activities in public or semipublic spaces and thenanalyzing and sharing them in published reports challenges established norms for safeguarding students’ privacy, an important ethical issue that must be negotiated.

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Social SOA

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A fourth dimension of Boyer’s framework, the SOA, aims to serve the interests of the larger community through a dynamic interaction between theory and practice. Through investigation into intractable social problems, scholars find an application for their unique “skills and insights” (Boyer, 1990, pp. 22–3). Application scholarship links the other forms of scholarship with prac-tice; scholars partner with various stakeholders (eg, practitioners, policymakers, community leaders) to apply theory and research-based insights to designing practical solutions. Of the four dimensions, Boyer’s conceptualization of SOA seems the most aligned with social constructivist views of knowledge potentially enacted in social media. It also seems to align with connectivist views of knowledge as articulated connections; however, the planning process implied in Boyer’s model, where research and theory inform practice, does not seem to allow for the unanticipated network effects implied in connectivism.

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Reconsidering SOA through the lens of social scholarship values and social media affordances, therefore, suggests expanded sites and methods for application scholarship that address commu-nity challenges. For scholars and graduate students who study technology-enhanced learning, practicing a social SOA may enhance the reach and quality of their work today. For example, the Engagement Game Lab at Emerson College (USA) aims to facilitate inclusive civic engagement processes by applying game theory to the creation and study of social media-enabled online games. Historically, community distrust has impeded civic participation, leading to low rates of participa-tion and few opportunities for informed deliberation (Gupta, Bouvier & Gordon, 2012). Using an online social game called Community PlanIt (CPI), participants collectively arrived at the most pressing issues facing the city of Boston’s K-12 schools: improving attendance rates, closing the achievement gap and graduating high school. Through multiple forms of social media-enabled participation—users could answer questions, respond directly to other comments, record video commentary, pinpoint learning sites on a map, or suggest new ideas to be discussed—CPI created opportunities for “sustained dialogue” among groups normally excluded from decision-making processes. By removing time constraints—players could edit and revise their responses before uploading and on their own time schedule—CPI facilitated a new avenue for public engagement.

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Scholars and graduate students doing social SOA may benefit greatly from such social media-enabled application projects. Instead of specialized knowledge flowing “down” from universities to be adopted (or not) by communities, such scholarship facilitated by social media becomes a joint venture that breaks down traditional binaries like research/practice, scholar/participant, inside/outside and contributor/user. Challenges, however, to conducting applied social scholar-ship are that its products may disproportionally benefit those with the resources (leisure time, internet and social media skills) to reap the rewards, whereas those lacking resources, who could potentially most benefit from application scholarship (eg, those with low socio-economic status and users with few Internet skills), may be least engaged (Hargittai, 2010).

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Conclusion

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This paper reconsidered scholarship in light of today’s social media adoption, trends in scholars’ usage of social media and social media affordances for scholarship to outline a conceptualization of social scholarship that encompasses Boyer’s (1990) four dimensions (eg, discovery, integra-tion, teaching and application). As we look across the four dimensions of scholarship to consider the relationships between them, we see that conducting scholarship in the age of social media facilitates the interdependence between scholars’ work and the society in ways anticipated by Boyer over two decades ago. Although the SOD, including the dissemination of discovery via traditional outlets, still dominates faculty lives at most universities, there is some evidence that the academy, and our culture, is becoming more open to data sharing, democratization of exper-tise, and alternative models of peer review and reputation management. We see instances of this every day. Scientists measuring and reporting insights on an earthquake in real time are working alongside public Twitter feeds from people on the ground, experiencing it.

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On the other hand, we acknowledge the complexities of shifting entrenched interests, practices and power structures as new forms of social media become part of scholarly activities (Selwyn, 2011; Veletsianos & Kimmons, 2012). Costa (2013, unpublished data) noted how her study of the Participatory Web revealed “conflicts between modern and conservative approaches to schol-arship,” placing researchers who use innovative methods “in contention” with traditional schol-arly practice (p. 7). Without departmental and institutional policies for promotion and tenure that recognize, support and reward social scholarship practices, they are unlikely to become widespread in academia, and even with support, some fields may be more likely to integrate them than others. The steps stakeholders might take to develop such policies include critically reflecting on the list of acceptable publishing outlets and expanding them to include open access journals while recognizing that not all OA journals are truly open (eg, pay-to-publish journals) (Veletsianos & Kimmons, 2012). Similarly, departments and universities may consider alternative approaches to evaluating scholarly outputs and measuring impact. Research has shown that traditional indicators of performance (ie, Web of Science ISI citation counts) disadvantage schol-ars in educational technology, in particular, relative to scholars in other disciplines, whereas alternative measures (eg, Google Scholar citation counts) do not (Van Aalst, 2010). Alternative approaches alongside conventional measures may provide a matrix of authority or more com-prehensive valuing of scholarship’s impact on research and practice (eg, PDF downloads, Page views), mentions (eg, news media hits, blog mentions, online comments) and ratings (likes, retweets, favorites) (Czerniewicz, 2013).

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Jan 10
Heather Kellstrom Heather Kellstrom (Jan 10 2017 11:13PM) : This is key if there is ever to be any movement outside of the traditional practice.
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Furthermore, programs for preparing doctoral students as future faculty and ongoing faculty development that introduce social scholarship will be important in mitigating the participation gap between early adopters, such as those in educational technology, and those who seek to benefit from social scholarly practices but are not yet literate in them (Veletsianos & Kimmons, 2012).As institutions create social media guidelines for employees, and social media platforms themselves have terms of service, scholars and programs for those who study technology-enhanced learning might introduce tools for managing social scholarly participation (eg, tools to manage digital identity, analytics to record impact). They might engage participants in critical evaluation of their surrounding issues, such as benefits and challenges to social, informal review, revised evaluation and impact measures, data sharing and working with big data in social media spaces like Facebook, and community engaged scholarship. Finally, we need more examples of social scholarship in action, within each of the four domains and across them, by graduate students, early career scholars and those in the late stages of their career to most fully evaluate its potential and limitations.

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Jan 5
Princess Natalie M Princess Natalie M (Jan 05 2017 2:01PM) : Great comment, but do we have enough students going into the technology or educational technology field? more

There is a huge difference between students like us( who use technology as a tool), and people who use technology everyday to play games, watch tv or do entertainment on them.

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Jan 8
Sharon Murchie Sharon Murchie (Jan 08 2017 11:18AM) : Definitely a huge gap. And even within these groups there are so many subgroups. I have huge reservations about technology in ed, while also recognizing that, since it is and will be there, we have to make sure that it is meaningful and best practice. [Edited] more

Others may glowingly embrace the cool aspects without recognizing what the detrimental features are. I guess I’m thinking about the affordances versus the drawbacks. There are so many different philosophies within each group and subgroup (and then there’s corporate greed as the cherry on top or as the foundation of the entire pyramid, depending on your philosophy…) As educators, we are attempting to connect with “the people who use technology everyday to play games, watch tv or do entertainment on them” who may not WANT their favorite platform to be overtaken by learning targets and performance tasks…

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References

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Allen, I. E., Seaman, J., Lederman, D. & Jaschik, S. (2012). Digital faculty: professors, teaching and technology 2012. Babson Survey Research Group and Quahog Research Group, LLC. Retrieved October 15, 2013, from http://www.insidehighered.com

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Boyd, D. & Crawford, K. (2011). Six provocations for big data: a decade in internet time. Proceedings of the Symposium on the Dynamics of the Internet and Society. Symposium conducted at the University of Oxford,Oxford, England, September 2011. Retrieved October 21, 2013, from http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1926431

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Boyer, E. L. (1990). Scholarship reconsidered: priorities of the professoriate. Princeton, NJ: Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.

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Preston, J. (2012). If Twitter is a workplace necessity. The New York Times. Retrieved April 8, 2013, from http://www.nytimes.com

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Ranieri, M., Manca, S. & Fini, A. (2012). Why (and how) do teachers engage in social networks? An exploratory study of professional use of Facebook and its implications for lifelong learning. British Journal of Educational Technology, 43, 5, 754–769.

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Rice, R. E. (2002). Beyond scholarship reconsidered: toward an enlarged vision of the scholarly work of faculty members. New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2002, 90, 7–18.

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Rowlands, I., Nicholas, D., Russell, B., Canty, N. & Watkinson, A. (2011). Social media use in the research workflow. Learned Publishing, 24, 3, 183–195.

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Selwyn, N. (2011). Social media in higher education. In A. Gladman (Ed.), The Europa world of learning (pp. 1–9). London: Routledge.

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Siemens, G. (2005). Connectivism: a learning theory for the digital age. International Journal of Instructional Technology and Distance Learning, 2, 10, 3–10.

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Taraborelli, D. (2008). Soft peer review: social software and distributed scientific evaluation. Paper presented at The 8th International Conference on the Design of Cooperative Systems, Carry-Le-Rouet, France.

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Van Aalst, J. (2010). Estimating the impact of journal articles in education. Educational Researcher, 39, 387–400.

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Veletsianos, G. & Kimmons, R. (2012). Assumptions and challenges of open scholarship. The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 13, 4, 166–189.

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Weller, M. (2011). The digital scholar: how technology is transforming scholarly practice. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

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Willinsky, J. (2006). The access principle. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.

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DMU Timestamp: January 02, 2017 19:32

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