Social media is an increasingly important part of academic life that can be a fantastic medium for promoting your work, networking with colleagues and for demonstrating impact. However, alongside the opportunities it also poses challenging questions about how to engage online, and how to represent yourself professionally. This practical book provides clear guidance on effectively and intelligently using social media for academic purposes across disciplines, from publicising your work and building networks to engaging the public with your research. It is supported by real life examples and underpinned by principles of good practice to ensure you have the skills to make the most of this exciting medium. You'll find advice on: Using social media to publicise your work Potential pitfalls and how to avoid them The evolving role of social media in higher education Defining digital scholarship Managing your identity online Finding time for social media Near-future trends in academia. Visit Mark's blog for more insights and discussion on social media academic practice at http://markcarrigan.net/
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Find out how to further your academic career by learning how to publicise your academic work, managing your online identity and demonstrating impact through social media.
Chapter 1: Social media and digital scholarship Chapter 2: Using social media to publicise your work Chapter 3: Using social media to build your network Chapter 4: Using social media for public engagement Chapter 5: Using social media to manage information Chapter 6: Professional identity in an age of social media Chapter 7: Communicating effectively online Chapter 8: Finding the time for social media Chapter 9: The future landscape of academic social media
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Mark Carrigan understands academic engagement with social media to require more than enthusiastic exhortations or dumbed down lists of rapidly out-of-date apps. Social Media for Academics offers a rich mix of research, scholarly commentary, discussion of key debates and potential pitfalls, personal experience and practical guidance which focuses not just on the how, but also the why of digital scholarship. -- Pat Thomson, Professor of EducationCarrigan has achieved what I thought to be impossible - produced a clear cut, incisive guide for the contemporary academic who is confused (as most of us are) about how to engage fruitfully with social media. One of the most difficult things about social media is finding a way to be true to your own personal style, while projecting an appropriate academic identity. Carrigan manages this by organising the types of social media options in what I think is a way that won't date quickly. I highly recommend this book to my colleagues and to PhD students contemplating an academic career in a world that increasingly values public engagement and impact. -- Inger MewburnIF you'd asked me in 2009 what the future would be in academia for a messaging/micro-blogging system limited to 140 characters, I'd have said - zilch. Yet Twitter + blogs and many other social media have transformed science and academic practice in the interim. Mark Carrigan gives the first book-length and in-depth advice on the many ways in which scientists and academics are developing new paradigms of collective thought, writing and scholarly practice using social media. If you're still hesitating, get involved by starting here. -- Patrick DunleavyThere is no one in the world better placed than Mark Carrigan to offer advice to academics on how to operate in the new informational environment. This book is brimming with ideas and practical tips for how academics might communicate better in the Twitter age. Brilliant, thoughtful and entertaining. -- Les BackThe book is called Social Media for Academics and I am pretty sure academics from any discipline could gain something from it... If you are thinking of venturing into the online world then this a great place to start your journey. And even if you consider yourself an old hand there is material here that will give you pause for thought. -- Alex MarshThis is the first book I know of to present a 'how-to' manual combined with reflections on the wider implications of academic social media engagement... This book is highly recommended for higher degree students and faculty staff members who are interested in the possibilities of academic social media for both research and teaching, as well as researchers interested in future directions for the university workplace and academic identities. -- Deborah Lupton, Faculty of Arts & Design, University of Canberra, AustraliaFrom the start, Carrigan gives the reader an insight into his own world; yet, despite being a social media champion, he is clearly not here to deliver a sermon. This is what makes the book different from many other guides you may come across: less dry but with plenty of academic rigour. Very often social media guides are aimed at the intermediate user; whilst this title will appeal to the most novice, it also adds weight to arguments by experts in the academic community. -- Andy Tattersall, LSE Book ReviewPerhaps the most valuable thing in Carrigan's book is the attitude that seems to inform the writing of it - the notion that the key to using social media well is seeing the various platforms as tools that should serve the users, not the other way around. He's promoting something I rarely see in discussions of new media: independent thinking. Carrigan's book actually teaches people how to think-through what they, personally, are doing online and question its benefits. Inevitably, some people will realize there's little value for them in social media. Which means seasoned social media users will find his book almost as useful as the novices. And if I had my way, it would be mandatory reading in all those quickie courses on how you, too, can be a social media guru. -- Shannon RuppCarrigan knows how to speak directly to academics. A scholarly how-to book, Social Media for Academics is short but academic-friendly because it is presented like a textbook with numerous references and recommendations for additional reading. Carrigan asserts there are two subgroups of academics and their social media use: those who use it and those who do not. For those of us who are social media savvy, the book includes smart tips to confirm that our strategy is on point. For those who have resisted social media, Carrigan argues convincingly that you need jump on the social media bandwagon, in spite of being neither a teenager nor a reality star. -- Joanne Broder SumersonThis book comes at an opportune time to help academics, researchers and postgraduate students who have been thinking about using social media in their professional lives to get started. The book also provides a useful way for those already engaged on social media to reflect on their goals and purposes and refine their approach. I recommend this book to academics, researchers and postgraduates who are using or thinking about using social media professionally. Even if you are a social media sceptic, you may find that you put down this book with a new perspective and an awareness of approaches that can help with your academic work in our increasingly digital and online world. -- Sarah Goodier
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781446298695
Publisert
2016-03-24
Utgiver
Vendor
SAGE Publications Ltd
Vekt
370 gr
Høyde
232 mm
Bredde
186 mm
Aldersnivå
05, UU, UP
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
208

Forfatter

Biographical note

Mark Carrigan is a sociologist in the Faculty of Education at the University of Cambridge. His research explores how the proliferation of digital platforms is reshaping education systems, with a particular focus on knowledge production within universities. He is internationally recognised as a leading expert on the role of social media within higher education, giving over 100 invited talks internationally and consulting for universities, research centres and publishers. He is associate editor of Civil Sociology and a member of the editorial boards of Applied Social Theory, Digital Culture & Education, Discover Society, Journal of Digital Social Research and Social Research Practice. He is a trustee of the Social Research Association and a member of the Centre for Social Ontology.