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The Invisible College: Insights about KM from Academic Blogs

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The Invisible College: Insights about KM from Academic Blogs. Susan Dobscha, Ph.D. ... How Invisible Colleges Can Benefit from Blogs. Possible Uses ... Robert Boyle ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Invisible College: Insights about KM from Academic Blogs


1
The Invisible College Insights about KM from
Academic Blogs
  • Susan Dobscha, Ph.D.
  • Associate Professor of Marketing
  • Bentley College

2
Outline
  • Brief Discussion of Blogs
  • The Life of the Academic Scholar
  • The Invisible College
  • How Invisible Colleges Can Benefit from Blogs
  • Possible Uses
  • Why havent they been adopted more quickly?

3
Why are blogs so popular?
  • Ease of upstart and usage
  • No need for html (at first)
  • Interface is provided free by server provide
  • Provides opportunity for commentaries through
    comments sections
  • Means to archive and track knowledge
  • Way for disconnected colleagues to create
    connected communities
  • Dont need to be a blogger to read and
    communicate with colleagues

4
Blog Communities
  • Communities created around a central purpose or
    responsibility
  • MediaMatters
  • Treonauts
  • Smaller spheres within the blogosphere

5
The Life of the Academic Scholar
  • to talk in public, to think in solitude, to read
    and to hear, to inquire and to answer inquiries,
    that is the business of a scholar. (Samuel
    Johnson)
  • Research Teaching Service
  • Focus here is on Research Activities

6
What Scholars Do
  • Gather together existing knowledge
  • Analyze this knowledge
  • Create new knowledge
  • Requires a deep understanding of a particular
    sub-topic of a field

7
How We Do Research
  • Formal Training
  • Conference Attendance
  • Read works of peers
  • Informally
  • Formally
  • Create informal groups with people of similar
    interests
  • Invisible College

8
The Origins of the Invisible College
  • Robert Boyle
  • Colleagues at Oxford attempting to refute
    Aristotles element indivisibility hypothesis
    (1640s)
  • Pre-dated important associations such as Royal
    Academy of London in 1662
  • Underground society because of radical nature of
    such ideas
  • Belief that the Freemasons emerged from this
    invisible college

9
The Invisible College
  • Price (1963)
  • co-opted term to describe the forty or fifty
    people in the entire world who can understand
    what is being said or written in any given
    specialty
  • Means to facilitate knowledge
  • Creation
  • Transfer
  • Communication
  • Community

10
How Academic Blogs Could Facilitate Internal
Knowledge Management
  • Create a virtual community around a particular
    topic or research stream
  • Archive knowledge created
  • Allow for (mostly) open access to
    information/data
  • Provide forums for informal conversations around
    idea
  • Exchange practitioner information related to
    topic
  • Avoid space issues associated with user groups
  • (i.e. Yahoo!Groups)

11
Why Arent Invisible College Blogs More Prevalent?
  • Fear of idea stealing?
  • Blogs are still maintained by one or a few people
    so there is still a gatekeeping issue
  • Linear thinking
  • And reversed chronologically
  • Communities shaped like a wagonwheel not a network

12
Wikis
  • A website that can be edited without knowing HTML
  • Controversial because anyone can edit the content
  • Wikipedia
  • Academic Wikis
  • Students co-constructing meaning in a
    democratized digital space has a certain social
    constructivist elegance (Higdon 2005)

13
Examples of Academic Wikis
  • How Stuff is Made
  • Romance Audience Project (2)
  • Social Marketing Wiki
  • Bentley College Honors Students

14
Ways to Apply Wikis in an Academic Setting
  • Approach 1 Student Journaling
  • Approach 2 Personal Portfolios
  • Approach 3 Collaborative Knowledge Base
  • Approach 4 Research Coordination and
    Collaboration
  • Approach 5 Curricular and Cross-Disciplinary
    Coordination
  • Approach 6 Conference and Colloquia Web
    Site/Coordination (Jude Higdon, Project
    Manager, Center for Scholarly Technology,
    University of Southern California)

15
The Biggest Hurdle
  • In an academic setting
  • Stigma of social software
  • Facebook/MySpace
  • Blogging employees writing negative things about
    their employers
  • The fear of ever changing content
  • Reflects values reminiscient of a different time
  • The fear of everyone being able to change content
  • One truth vs. multiple truths
  • Within reason (login/password access)
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