The networked academic: New identities & roles

15

description

Networked identities differ from institutional roles, and networked practices therefore change not only what scholars do, but who they think they are. The presentation outlines findings from a 2013/14 ethnographic study on the different ways and purposes scholars engage in networked scholarship, especially on Twitter.

Transcript of The networked academic: New identities & roles

Page 1: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 2: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 3: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 4: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 5: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 6: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 7: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 8: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 9: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 10: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 11: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 12: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 13: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 14: The networked academic: New identities & roles
Page 15: The networked academic: New identities & roles