77
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: not found
      • Article: not found

      More Than Likes and Tweets: Creating Social Media Portfolios for Academic Promotion and Tenure

      research-article

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisherPMC
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Related collections

          Most cited references15

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Boyer's expanded definitions of scholarship, the standards for assessing scholarship, and the elusiveness of the scholarship of teaching.

          Debate about faculty roles and rewards in higher education during the past decade has been fueled by the work of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, principally Scholarship Reconsidered and Scholarship Assessed. The author summarizes those publications and reviews the more recent work of Lee Shulman on the scholarship of teaching. In 1990, Ernest Boyer proposed that higher education move beyond the tired old "teaching versus research" debate and that the familiar and honorable term "scholarship" be given a broader meaning. Specifically, scholarship should have four separate yet overlapping meanings: the scholarship of discovery, the scholarship of integration, the scholarship of application, and the scholarship of teaching. This expanded definition was well received, but from the beginning, assessment of quality was a stumbling block. Clearly, Boyer's concepts would be useful only if scholars could be assured that excellence in scholarly work would be maintained. Scholars at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching addressed this issue by surveying journal editors, scholarly press directors, and granting agencies to learn their definitions of excellence in scholarship. From the findings of these surveys, six standards of excellence in scholarship were derived: Scholars whose work is published or rewarded must have clear goals, be adequately prepared, use appropriate methods, achieve outstanding results, communicate effectively, and then reflectively critique their work. The scholarship of teaching remains elusive, however. The work of Lee Shulman and others has helped clarify the issues. The definition of this form of scholarship continues to be debated at colleges and universities across the nation.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: not found
            • Article: not found

            Free Open Access Medical education (FOAM) for the emergency physician.

              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: found
              Is Open Access

              The Altmetrics Collection

              Introduction What paper should I read next? Who should I talk to at a conference? Which research group should get this grant? Researchers and funders alike must make daily judgments on how to best spend their limited time and money–judgments that are becoming increasingly difficult as the volume of scholarly communication increases. Not only does the number of scholarly papers continue to grow, it is joined by new forms of communication from data publications to microblog posts. To deal with incoming information, scholars have always relied upon filters. At first these filters were manually compiled compendia and corpora of the literature. But by the mid-20th century, filters built on manual indexing began to break under the weight of booming postwar science production. Garfield [1] and others pioneered a solution: automated filters that leveraged scientists own impact judgments, aggregating citations as “pellets of peer recognition.” [2]. These citation-based filters have dramatically grown in importance and have become the tenet of how research impact is measured. But, like manual indexing 60 years ago, they may today be failing to keep up with the literature’s growing volume, velocity, and diversity [3]. Citations are heavily gamed [4]–[6] and are painfully slow to accumulate [7], and overlook increasingly important societal and clinical impacts [8]. Most importantly, they overlook new scholarly forms like datasets, software, and research blogs that fall outside of the scope of citable research objects. In sum, citations only reflect formal acknowledgment and thus they provide only a partial picture of the science system [9]. Scholars may discuss, annotate, recommend, refute, comment, read, and teach a new finding before it ever appears in the formal citation registry. We need new mechanisms to create a subtler, higher-resolution picture of the science system. The Quest for Better Filters The scientometrics community has not been blind to the limitations of citation measures, and has collectively proposed methods to gather evidence of broader impacts and provide more detail about the science system: tracking acknowledgements [10], patents [11], mentorships [12], news articles [8], usage in syllabuses [13], and many others, separately and in various combinations [14]. The emergence of the Web, a “nutrient-rich space for scholars” [15], has held particular promise for new filters and lenses on scholarly output. Webometrics researchers have uncovered evidence of informal impact by examining networks of hyperlinks and mentions on the broader Web [16]–[18]. An important strand of webometrics has also examined the properties of article download data [7], [19], [20]. The last several years, however, have presented a promising new approach to gathering fine-grained impact data: tracking large-scale activity around scholarly products in online tools and environments. These tools and environments include, among others: social media like Twitter and Facebook online reference managers like CiteULike, Zotero, and Mendeley collaborative encyclopedias like Wikipedia blogs, both scholarly and general-audience scholarly social networks, like ResearchGate or Academia.edu conference organization sites like Lanyrd.com Growing numbers of scholars are using these and similar tools to mediate their interaction with the literature. In doing so, they are leaving valuable tracks behind them–tracks with potential to show informal paths of influence with unprecedented speed and resolution. Many of these tools offer open APIs, supporting large-scale, automated mining of online activities and conversations around research objects [21]. Altmetrics [22], [23] is the study and use of scholarly impact measures based on activity in online tools and environments. The term has also been used to describe the metrics themselves–one could propose in plural a “set of new altmetrics.” Altmetrics is in most cases a subset of both scientometrics and webometrics; it is a subset of the latter in that it focuses more narrowly on scholarly influence as measured in online tools and environments, rather than on the Web more generally. Altmetrics may support finer-grained maps of science, broader and more equitable evaluations, and improvements to the peer-review system [24]. On the other hand, the use and development of altmetrics should be pursued with appropriate scientific caution. Altmetrics may face attempts at manipulation similar to what Google must deal with in web search ranking. Addressing such manipulation may, in-turn, impact the transparency of altmetrics. New and complex measures may distort our picture of the science system if not rigorously assessed and correctly understood. Finally, altmetrics may promote an evaluation system for scholarship that many argue has become overly focused on metrics. Scope of this Collection The goal of this collection is to gather an emerging body of research for the further study and use of altmetrics. We believe it is greatly needed, as important questions regarding altmetrics’ prevalence, validity, distribution, and reliability remain incompletely answered. Importantly, the present collection, which has the virtue of being online and open access, allows altmetrics researchers to experiment on themselves. The collection’s scope includes: Statistical analysis of altmetrics data sources, and comparisons to established sources Metric validation, and identification of biases in measurements Validation of models of scientific discovery/recommendation based on altmetrics Qualitative research describing the scholarly use of online tools and environments Empirically-supported theory guiding altmetrics’ use Other research relating to scholarly impact in online tools and environments. The current collection includes articles that address many of these areas. It will publish new research on an ongoing basis, and we hope to see additional contributions appear in the coming months. We look forward to building a foundation of early research to support this new field.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Grad Med Educ
                J Grad Med Educ
                jgme
                Journal of Graduate Medical Education
                The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education
                1949-8349
                1949-8357
                August 2017
                : 9
                : 4
                : 421-425
                Author notes

                Daniel Cabrera, MD, is Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester; Bryan S. Vartabedian, MD, is Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine; Robert J. Spinner, MD, is Professor of Neurological Surgery, Orthopedics, and Anatomy, and Chair of Academic Appointments and Promotions Committee, Mayo Clinic, Rochester; Barbara L. Jordan, MA, is Administrator, Academic Appointments and Promotions Committee, Mayo Clinic, Rochester; Lee A. Aase, BS, is Director of Mayo Clinic Social Media Network, Mayo Clinic, Rochester; and Farris K. Timimi, MD, is Assistant Professor of Cardiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester.

                The authors would like to thank Mayo Clinic Scientific Publications for their provision of technical support.

                Corresponding author: Daniel Cabrera, MD, Mayo Clinic, Emergency Medicine, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905, 507.255.4399, cabrera.daniel@ 123456mayo.edu
                Article
                PMC5559234 PMC5559234 5559234 jgme-09-04-23 Customer: JGME-D-17-00171
                10.4300/JGME-D-17-00171.1
                5559234
                28824752
                2988524a-30cc-4f9c-aace-47f46dcaa604
                Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education 2017
                History
                Categories
                Perspectives

                Comments

                Comment on this article