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The Internet and Higher Education — Call for Papers on Social Media

The Internet and Higher Education

Call for papers

Special Issue: Social Media in Higher Education

Guest editors

Stefan Hrastinski, Assistant Professor, KTH Royal Institute of Technology

Vanessa Dennen, Associate Professor, Florida State University

The social media hype has created a lot of speculation among educators on how these media can be used to support learning. In this special issue, we would like to explore how social media can be taken advantage of in higher education to support informal and formal learning. It is well agreed upon that most learning takes place outside school in our everyday lives. On campuses, there are common spaces such as hallways, lounges, libraries, and cafés, which support informal learning better than classrooms or lecture-halls. Social media have potential to support learning in both informal and formal settings, as well as creating an entirely new setting in which learning may take place. We can learn a lot from how students are already using such media to support learning in each of these areas.

Although most would agree that emerging social media support learning in new ways, we still know little about how students currently use social media to support learning. Prensky put forth the dichotomy of “digital natives” and “digital immigrants” when arguing that technology has dramatically changed the way students of higher education live and learn. Similar arguments have labeled today’s students the net generation, millenials, homo zappiens, generation M and generation Y – labels intended to differentiate their relationship to and use of technology from that of previous generations of learners.  However, a growing body of literature questions whether there is really a sharp and fundamental break between today’s young people and previous generations in terms of their adeptness with technology and how they learn. Although we see today’s youth using many social media tools, some tools are more frequently used by older people. Similarly, some are readily adopted by students for personal use, whereas other social media tools have been relegated to as-required or as-assigned use and have been met with resistance. Thus, there are many perceptions of the role social media plays in education, some of which are myths and other are realities. We believe it is time to go beyond the simple dichotomies of the digital natives debate in order to understand how emerging social media can support students’ informal and formal learning. We need to move forward from saying that “students learn in new ways” towards conducting rigorous research that can help us understand the role of social media in higher education.

In this issue, we seek articles that present the outcome of rigorous studies of social media use in higher education as well as articles that help provide strong theoretical guidance for the directions future research might take.

Authors are requested to submit manuscripts via the Elsevier Editorial System (EES) no later than March 15, 2011. You need to select “Social Media in Higher Ed” when you reach the “Article Type” step in the submission process. Contact the Special Issue Editors if additional information is required:

Dr. Stefan Hrastinski

Assistant Professor

KTH Royal Institute of Technology

stefanhr@kth.se

Dr. Vanessa Dennen

Associate Professor

Florida State University

vdennen@fsu.edu

Important dates

Deadline for paper submission: March 15, 2011

Notification of acceptance: May 15, 2011

Camera-ready version of accepted papers: July 15, 2011

Publication date: End of 2011

27th Annual Conference on Distance Teaching & Learning

The call for proposals is now open for the 27th Annual Conference on Distance Teaching & Learning.
The deadline for proposals is January 19, 2011, 4:00 pm (CST).
The conference will be held in Madison,Wisconsin August 3-5, 2011.
The new video share lessons sound like an interesting format for a presentation.
For more information: http://www.uwex.edu/disted/conference/
Submit a proposal

Finding Instructional Design Jobs

While the field of Instructional Design and Technology is growing, finding a job can be difficult (in part because jobs are posted all over the place).  It is important to know the right places to look.  The following are some of the top job boards to check when looking for a job as a instructional designer, instructional technologist or basically any job related to the field of Instructional Design and Technology (IDT). I recommend searching using key words (e.g., “instructional design” “educational technology” “instructional developer”) as well as searching by position/type or category (if available).

Higheredjobs.com
http://www.higheredjobs.com/

Chronicle of Higher Education
http://chronicle.com/section/Jobs/61/

Inside HigherEd
http://www.insidehighered.com/career/seekers

AECT
http://www.jobtarget.com/home/index.cfm?site_id=136

AACE
http://jobs.aace.org/home/index.cfm?site_id=3855

Sloan-C
http://sloanconsortium.org/jobline

ASTD
http://jobs.astd.org/

ISPI
http://www.jobtarget.com/home/index.cfm?site_id=2637

SALT
http://www.salt.org/salt.asp?ss=l&pn=joblistall

Indiana University Job Board
http://www.indiana.edu/~ist/students/jobs/joblink.html

Indeed
http://www.indeed.com/q-Instructional-Technology-jobs.html

The eLearning Guild
http://www.elearningguild.com/job_board/jobs/index.cfm?action=viewcats&selection=doc.25

Society of Technical Communication*
http://www.stc.org

Are there other places you look? If so, let me know.

*Added based on comments