social media for researchers

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Social Media for Researchers Dr Helen Webster Digital Humanities Network

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Page 1: Social media for researchers

Social Media for

Researchers Dr Helen Webster

Digital Humanities Network

Page 2: Social media for researchers

Modelling Good Digital

Behaviour…

These slides are on Slideshare, and the links are

live:

http://www.slideshare.net/drhelenwebster

Feel free to livetweet!

#DH23

Page 3: Social media for researchers

What do you use?

Social • Facebook

• Blogging (Wordpress, Blogger)

• Twitter

• Content sharing (Flickr, Youtube)

• Cloud email (Yahoo, gmail)

• Social Bookmarking (Delicious,

Diigo)

• Conferencing (Skype, Google

Hangouts)

Professional • LinkedIn, Academia.edu

• Blogging (Wordpress, Blogger)

• Twitter

• Content sharing (Slideshare,

Scribd)

• Cloud storage (Dropbox, Google

Drive)

• Social Bibliography (Mendeley,

Zotero)

• Alternative office tools (Scrivener,

Prezi)

Page 4: Social media for researchers

THES article this week:

Using Social Media

Responsibly

Page 5: Social media for researchers

Aims Not to teach tools, but...

• an awareness of the ways in which social and digital

media platforms can enhance and be embedded in your

work as a researcher

• an understanding of the issues raised by social and

digital media tools, potential pitfalls, good practice and

future impacts on the profession

• an awareness of and ability to evaluate the various

types of digital tool and make informed decisions about

your own engagement with them in your practice

Page 6: Social media for researchers

Thinking Digitally

•Digital

•Networked

•Open

•(Weller, 2012)

Page 7: Social media for researchers

Thinking

Professionally Research

Teaching

Administration Public

engagement

Professional activities

Page 8: Social media for researchers

Scale of digital

engagement

TechnoFEAR! TechnoJOY!

(Izzard, 1997)

Page 9: Social media for researchers

Issues

Page 10: Social media for researchers

Issues

Page 11: Social media for researchers

Do I have to…? The minimum you need to do…

• Google yourself and check for information

put online by others

• Check privacy and permission settings

carefully

• Be aware of Online and Real Life echo

chambers – what might you be missing?

• Find efficient alternative strategies

• Tailor your research topic and methods

Page 12: Social media for researchers

What can you offer?

Page 13: Social media for researchers

What do you want to

do? • Tools for Professional

Identity

• Tools for Networking

• Tools for Managing

information

• Tools for Creating and

Presenting Information

Page 15: Social media for researchers

Tips for Professional Identity • Ensure a stable web presence in the long term

• Don’t just broadcast – interact

• Think about your metadata – search terms

• Offer something of value to your audience

• Think about how personal you want your tone to be

• Collate and disambiguate your identity

• Have strategies for keeping other personal online

identities separate

• Have strategies for account and password

management

Page 16: Social media for researchers

What might you do

with a blog?

Page 17: Social media for researchers

Tools for Networking • Twitter

• Listorious, SocialMention, Technorati

• JISCmail lists

• Use the interactive functions of blogs and

social/professional platforms – don’t just

broadcast, discuss, comment, ask questions,

give answers.

Page 18: Social media for researchers

Tips for networking • Update at peak times – 9am, 3pm, 6pm

• Have a strategy and policy for

following/friending – who is your network and

how will you find it online?

• Be aware of who’s in that webspace and

avoid the echo chamber

• Link your identity to real life – a photo, a real

name

• Update ‘regularly’

Page 19: Social media for researchers

What might you do

with Twitter?

Page 21: Social media for researchers

Tips for managing

Information • Think about filtering information as much as

finding it

• Think about ethics – don’t store sensitive

confidential data in cloud storage (ie

Dropbox, Googledocs, Evernote)

• Think about data management, metadata,

file formats, backing up and security

• Many of these tools have a social function

also

Page 22: Social media for researchers

What might you do

with Dropbox?

Page 23: Social media for researchers

Tools for Creating and

presenting information • Scrivener

• Prezi

• Youtube (+ video editing software)

• Audacity + Soundcloud or itunesU

• Issuu

• Slideshare, Scribd, Flickr

• Bubbl.us, Easel.ly

Page 24: Social media for researchers

Tips for Creating and

Presenting information • Think about copyright infringement (check for

Creative Commons)

• Good practice – ask consent if including others

• Frictionless ‘collateral damage’ capture digital

artefacts from routine activities

• Share them if they would be of value to others*

• Update your wider network of what you’ve

created

Page 25: Social media for researchers

What might you do

with Youtube?

Page 26: Social media for researchers

How is Practice

Changing? • Publishing Models: Open Access Publishing

• Quality Assessment Models: Altmetrics

• Funding: Collaboration and large projects

• Pedagogy: digital classroom, ‘pedagogy of

abundance’

• Conference ‘attendance’ – livestreaming,

liveblogging, podcasting

Page 27: Social media for researchers

How is Scholarship

changing?

Digital Humanities • Born Digital and digitised research objects

• Big Data – data mining etc

• Digital analysis methods

• Data visualisation - Global information Systems

(GIS) etc

• Crowdsourcing and recruitment

Page 28: Social media for researchers

Resources On Good Practice for Researchers

• Vitae’s Handbook of Social Media for Researchers

and Supervisors

• RIN’s Social Media: A Guide for Researchers

On the impact of digital technologies on academic

practice

• Martin Weller (2012) The Digital Scholar

• John Naughton (2012) From Gutenberg to

Zuckerberg: What you really need to know about the

Internet

Page 29: Social media for researchers

Further Training

• DH23Things online course

• The Researcher Online workshops (see

CRASSH activities and AHSS PhD

email list)

• Digital Humanities Network