370 likes | 538 Views
Scholarship 2.0. Gideon Burton Asst. Prof. of English Assoc. Editor, BYU Studies Presentation to HBLL Faculty Council March 23, 2007. Media Evolution. Scriptorium. Media Evolution. Printing Press. Media Evolution. Computer. The Library and the Book.
E N D
Scholarship 2.0 Gideon BurtonAsst. Prof. of English Assoc. Editor, BYU Studies Presentation to HBLL Faculty CouncilMarch 23, 2007
Media Evolution Scriptorium
Media Evolution Printing Press
Media Evolution Computer
The Library and the Book No longer the beginning or ending point for scholarship
A Need for Change “As with individuals, universities also quickly face obsolescence when they fail to continue to change, grow, and adapt to their new and often rapidly different environments.” –Pres. Cecil Samuelson (“A More Excellent Way: A Changing BYU in a Changing World” 8/24/04)
Key Changes to Scholarship • Research Methods • How Scholarship is Created • How Scholarship is Reviewed • How Scholarship is Communicated • How Scholarship is Preserved
Scholarship 1.0 • Books • Articles in print journals • Library • Conferences
Scholarship 1.0 • Print oriented • Distinct roles • Scholars • Publishers • Librarians
Scholarship 1.0 Scholarly Research: Labs, Libraries, Archives Scholarly Output: Books and Articles Peer Review: Part of Academic Publishing ScholarlyCommunication: Journals and Conferences Preservation of Scholarship: Libraries and Archives
Scholarship 1.1(late 1980s) • Wordprocessing • Stand alone Databases • Electronic Library Catalogue • Design software for publishers
Scholarship 1.5(1990s) • Digitization of print scholarship • More access to secondary materials • Commercial / Online Scholarly Databases • More access to primary and secondary materials • Email and Email Lists • Delivery medium for exchanging ideas/manuscripts • Online scholarly communities
Scholarship 1.5(1990s) • Websites and Hypertext • Research (Internet becomes primary research tool) • Library catalogues accessible through web browser • Databases worldwide available online • Finding Aids & Subject Portals through web links • Scholarly Communication • Online presence for scholarly societies • Calls for Papers and Conferences • Conference Programs or Proceedings online • Self-publishing of traditional and hypertext scholarship
Scholarship 1.5(1990s) • Digital Tools Blend Scholarship 1.0 Roles • Libraries put archival material online • Archiving becomes publishing • Academic publishers archive back issues, create databases, subject portals • Publishing becomes archiving • Scholars create websites • Academic publishing bypasses academic publishers • Parascholarship by the Public
Toward Scholarship 2.0 • Scholarship 1.0 (books & articles) • Scholarship 1.1: .wpd .doc • Scholarship 1.5: .html .pdf • Scholarship 2.0: .xml .rss
The Digital Incunabular Period • New genres • New roles & relationships • New conventions
The Digital Incunabular Period • New genres • New roles & relationships • New conventions
Emerging Digital Genres • E-book Collections • Digital Scholarly Editions • Subject Gateways / Thematic Research Collections • Databases • “Born Digital” and “Social Media” genres: • Wiki • Weblog • Podcast
Wikis A website that allows anyone visiting the site to add, remove, or otherwise edit content, quickly and easily. Wiki software catalogs all prior versions, and are sometimes moderated. Wikis are tools for pooling knowledge and for collaborative writing.
The Digital Incunabular Period • New genres • New roles & relationships • New conventions
New Roles for Academic Libraries • Brokers of digital knowledge, not just curators of the printed scholarly record • Archiving as publishing • Digital collaboration with faculty, consortia • Keepers of the “Institutional Repository” • Metadata and markup, not just cataloging
The Digital Incunabular Period • New genres • New roles & relationships • New conventions
Digital Conventions • PDF (Portable Document Format) • HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) • XML (Extensible Markup Language) • RSS (Really Simple Syndication)
Digital Conventions Web 1.0 • PDF (Portable Document Format) • HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) Web 2.0 • XML (Extensible Markup Language) • RSS (Really Simple Syndication)
Web 1.0 Static and passive Web as delivery medium Monologue Limited feedback (email comments passively allowed) Searching Web 2.0 Dynamic and active Web builds and sustains communities Dialogue Content co-developed with online community Syndicating Web 1.0 / Web 2.0
Web 1.0 Taxonomy / Set categories Websites and databases as “information silos” (isolated, restricted to original presentation form and location) Web 2.0 Folksonomy (“tagging”) Websites and databases marked with metadata and structured with XML (available for intelligent repurposing, reformatting, or combining with other digital resources) Web 1.0 / Web 2.0
Web 2.0 • Dynamic web resources • Push/broadcast content via RSS feeds • Readers as authors, reviewers, collaborators • Social software enabled • Wikis • Blogs and Comments • Shared Feeds
Toward Scholarship 2.0 Scholarly Research: Labs, Libraries, Archives Online primary and secondary texts, Scholarly Output: Books and Articles Websites, databases, new “born-digital” genres Peer Review: Via Academic Publishing, but also via scholarly societies, reputation systems ScholarlyCommunication: Journals and Conferences via email, websites, blogs, podcasts, wikis Preservation of Scholarship: Libraries and Archives blended with publishing, not just library activity
What Should We Do? • Evaluate how familiar our colleges and departments are with evolving scholarly forms and practices • Educate ourselves on emerging scholarly media and changes to peer review, etc. • Promote discussion about digital scholarship issues • Propose changes within the university and colleges so BYU becomes current with Scholarship and Web 2.0
Scholarship 2.0 Gideon BurtonAsst. Prof. of English Assoc. Editor, BYU Studies Presentation to HBLL Faculty CouncilMarch 23, 2007 Presentation Available at http://GideonBurton.typepad.com