Transcript
Page 1: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Digital scholarship10 lessons in 10 videos

http://www.flickr.com/photos/lwr/

Page 2: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Book

Bloomsburyacademic.com

Page 3: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Definition

Page 4: Ten lessons in digital scholarship
Page 5: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

<Alternative title>

10 things I’ve come to believe after thinking about the impact of technology

for a few years, accompanied by 10 tenuously connected, and sometimes

amusing, videos

Page 6: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 1: It’s not just for geeks

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/fKXk1VhAuvE

Page 7: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

But it’s also about:

• Knowledge sharing• Knowledge creation• Networking• Generating ideas• Communicating• Democratisation of learning

Page 8: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Aren’t those all scholarly activities?

Page 9: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Sir Martin Rees:

“arXiv.org archive transformed the literature of physics, establishing a new model for communication over the whole of science. Far fewer people today read traditional journals. These have so far survived as guarantors of quality. But even this role may soon be trumped by a more informal system of quality control, signaled by the approbation of discerning readers”

Page 10: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

So there’s something going on here,

beyond just geeks

Page 11: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

The Boyer view of scholarship

• Discovery• Integration • Application• Teaching

Page 12: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 2: Researchers are caught in a dilemma

• YouTube clip http://youtu.be/LnQcCgS7aPQ

Page 13: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

But researchers aren’t keen

“frequent or intensive use is rare, and some researchers regard blogs, wikis and other novel forms of communication as a waste of time or even dangerous”

(Proctor, Williams and Stewart (2010)

Carpenter et al describe researchers as ‘risk averse’ and ‘behind the curve in using digital technology’

Harley et al (2010) “We found no evidence to suggest that “tech-savvy” young graduate students, postdoctoral scholars, or assistant professors are bucking traditional publishing practices”

Page 14: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Is it tenure?

“The advice given to pre-tenure scholars was consistent across all fields: focus on publishing in the right venues and avoid spending too much time on public engagement, committee work, writing op-ed pieces, developing websites, blogging, and other non-traditional forms of electronic dissemination”

Page 15: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Is it caution?

Waldrop 2008 (on blogging)

““It's so antithetical to the way scientists are trained," Duke University geneticist Huntington F. Willard said... The whole point of blogging is spontaneity--getting your ideas out there quickly, even at the risk of being wrong or incomplete. “But to a scientist, that's a tough jump to make,” says Willard. “When we publish things, by and large, we've gone through a very long process of drafting a paper and getting it peer reviewed.”

Page 16: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Is it habit?

Kroll & Forsman

“Almost all researchers have created a strong network of friends and colleagues and they draw together the same team repeatedly for new projects…

Everyone emphasizes the paramount importance of interpersonal contact as the vital basis for agreeing to enter into joint work. Personal introductions, conversations at meetings or hearing someone present a paper were cited as key in choosing collaborators.”

Page 17: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

<A tension between potential and context>

Page 18: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 3: Interdisciplinary is the network

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/LJr8uAqQCBM

Page 19: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

New economics

Interdisciplinary used to be CostlyDifficulty

Now it’s

Cheap

Easy

Page 20: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

New cultural normsWhat are the cultural norms of blogging?• a willingness to share thoughts and experiences with others at an

early stage;• the importance of getting input from others on an idea or opinion;• launching collaborative projects that would be very difficult or

impossible to achieve alone;• gathering information from a high number of sources every day;• control over the sources and aggregation of their news;• the existence of a ‘common code’: a vocabulary, a way to write posts

and behaviour codes such as quoting other sources when you use them, linking into them, commenting on other posts and so on;

• a culture of speed and currency, with a preference to post or react instantaneously; and

• a need for recognition – bloggers want to express themselves and get credit for it.

(Le Muir 2005)

Page 21: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

How ‘sticky’ are these cultural norms?

Page 22: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 4: We’re all broadcasters now

Public engagement used to look like this:

YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/2un9rO2ZF4g

Page 23: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Now looks like this:

YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/5zVaFjSxAZs

Page 24: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Research papers

Lectures/Teaching content

Conferences Data

Code

IdeasDebate

A long tail content production system

Page 25: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Digital outputs

• Low cost (free?)• Small but unpredictable

audience• Open• No compromise• High reuse potential• Different distribution

Page 26: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 5: Teaching in an attention economy

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/DRBW8eJGTVs

Page 27: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

• Pedagogy of scarcity?• Lecture – one to many• Library• Instructivism/didactic

http://www.flickr.com/photos/skyfaller/8394194/

Page 28: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

What would a pedagogy of abundance look like?

http://www.flickr.com/photos/42903611@N00/387761039/

Page 29: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

• Content is free• Content is abundant• Content is varied• Sharing is easy• Social based• Connections are ‘lite’• Organisation is ‘cheap’• Crowdsourcing• Network is valuable

Page 30: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Do we need different skills to compete in an attention economy?

Page 31: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 6: Rethink research

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/7KLnXjqKL5g

Page 32: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Start a journal today!

http://metaedtech.wordpress.com/

Page 33: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Invent an app today!

Page 34: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Interrogate data today!

Ouseful.info

Page 35: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Heppell (2001) “we continually make the error of subjugating technology to our present practice rather than allowing it to free us from the tyranny of past mistakes”

Page 36: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 7: New skills will be required

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/7KLnXjqKL5g

Page 37: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

• Video• Networks• Data visualisation• Analytics• Writing for online• Managing online

identityhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/stevendepolo/5749192621/

Page 38: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

<Do we need to be taught these skills?>

Page 39: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 8: It’ll impact even if you ignore it

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/rIABo0d9MVE

Page 40: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Conferences

• Amplified• Online• Backchannel

Page 41: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

The new conference archive

Page 42: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Alternative formats

• Barcamp• Pre-presentation• Voting• Produce something

Page 43: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 9: It’s about alternatives

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/SKVcQnyEIT8

Page 44: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Alternatives

• Communication• Publishing models• Research methods• Networking

Page 45: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

The following are not dead:

• VLEs• Peer review• Universities• Teaching• Books

Page 46: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

But they are operating in a different ecosystem

http://www.flickr.com/photos/luc/393887467/

Page 47: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Lesson 10: Don’t focus just on risk

• YouTube clip - http://youtu.be/w7RIgs3eygo

Page 48: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

• Doomed - we're all destined to become stupid, dysfunctional & lessened by the technology eg Carr

• Marooned - we are placing technology in too powerful a position and dehumanising ourselves in the process eg Lanier

• Entombed - the more we communicate, the more alone and isolated we are becoming eg Turkle

Page 49: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

http://www.flickr.com/photos/markusram/1361719776/

Tversky and Kahneman: We give risk/loss more weight

Page 50: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

James Boyle:

“We are very good at seeing the downsides and the dangers of open systems, open production systems, networks of openness. .. Those dangers are real… we are not so good at seeing the benefits and the converse holds true for the closed system.”

Page 51: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

To recap

1. It’s not just for geeks

2. Resolve the researcher’s dilemma

3. Interdisciplinarity is in the network

4. We’re all broadcasters now

5. Teaching in an attention economy

6. Opportunity to rethink research

7. New skills will be required

8. It’ll impact even if you ignore it

9. It’s about alternatives

10.Don’t focus just on risk

Page 52: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

<and now – disagree>

<polite applause>

Page 53: Ten lessons in digital scholarship

Links ‘n’ stuff

• Videos: www.youtube.com/edtechie• Twitter: @mweller• Blog: Edtechie.net• Book: bit.ly/w80vcq


Top Related