Love it or hate it, social media is no passing fad â and increasingly itâs intertwined with more traditional academic platforms. Numerous scholars have popular blogs, for example, on which they test out new ideas and share research. Other academics have made names for themselves on Twitter or Facebook â both to the benefit and detriment of their respective careers.
While few institutions have yet to formally incorporate social media into their tenure and promotion standards, itâs undeniable that such activity is already informing personnel decisions â again, for better or for worse. Seeking to get ahead of the curve in a field with many public communicators, as well as some social media controversies, a subcommittee of the American Sociological Association looked at social media and other public communications with regard to tenure and promotion.
The committeeâs report, called , doesn't recommend that professorsâ online profiles eclipse their traditional tenure dossiers. But it does suggest that departments either consider adding a public communication criterion for tenure and promotion beyond teaching, research and service, or ârecognize and rewardâ public engagement within the three traditional categories. It also seeks to âfill the vacuumâ in standards for assessing the work of public communication.
âDepartments traditionally consider tenure cases on the basis of three categories: research, teaching and service. Yet public engagement comes in many cross-cutting forms, including conventional types of public communication, digital scholarship and social media outreach, as scholars communicate about their research or teaching with a broader audience,â the report says.
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âSociologists engaging in public communication may struggle to appropriately highlight these types of contributions â which in some cases have substantial importance in their field â within the standard three categories for tenure. Departments may set their own priorities within these traditional parameters.â
The report offers several main assessment criteria, including type of content. Is the communication original research, synthesis, explanatory journalism, opinion or application of research to practical issues? Regardless of medium, however, a given piece should be âwell grounded in sociological theory and researchâ.
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Rigor and quality of communication matter, too, according to the report. Is the piece clearly written, foregrounding policy implications and compliant with the given format? Does it engage the audience?
Beyond mastery of the medium, public impact is also a factor â including number of readers and evidence that practitioners found it helpful. âNo single measure of reach or impact is sufficient, but solicitation of letters from affected parties outside of academia can be especially effective in conveying impact,â the report says.
Itâs important to note that the report doesnât focus exclusively on social media or blogging. It defines public communication in general as âcross-cutting the traditional categories of research, teaching and serviceâ. Sociologists could present research findings in op-eds for newspapers, or comment on the news, which many have done since long before the age of Twitter, for example. Yet the report pays particular attention to social media, saying sociologists may use it to share research findings, in particular, but also in teaching and service.
Several scholarly associations have signalled the growing importance of an online profile, or proposed standards for evaluating digital research. But the sociological association says itâs the first to focus on evaluation criteria for public communication.
The American Association of University Professors doesnât have a stance on whether public communication should be part of tenure and promotion decisions, other than that tenure and promotion criteria are the primary responsibility of the faculty.
A few institutions already have standards for assessing public communications in personnel decisions. Hans-Joerg Tiede, associate secretary for academic freedom, tenure and governance at AAUP, said he wasnât aware of any trend in that direction, but that some institutions do encourage faculty members to have a âpresenceâ on social media.
Pros and Cons
The sociological associationâs report outlines benefits of public communication, including that it advances scholarly knowledge and methods through new forums of communication and exchange and expands the visibility and relevance of the discipline with the public. It also provides a âjustification for public funding by states and federal granting agenciesâ and âdemocratizesâ notions of scholarly expertise.
For individual faculty members, social media use may help in developing a network, sharing information with a wider audience in a timely manner, generating new ideas and getting feedback, increasing citation counts of published work, bypassing traditional publication gatekeepers, and creating fresh materials for teaching, the report says.
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In their own discussions about evaluating public communication, departments should consider standards that promote gender and economic equity, as well as âvaluable stewardshipâ, according to the report. âPublic engagement can lead to amplification of work, but only the highest-quality work should be promoted,â it says, noting that sociology at large will have to âvet work and make sure to clarify when work reported beyond the academy is based on flawed methods, or when work may have a certain agenda by disclosing potential conflicts of interest.â
One major, potential drawback of public communication as a tenure criterion is âadding another demand on our time, particularly if it distracts from our conventional responsibilities to conduct research, teach and serve our professionâ, the report says. âAs we all know, valuable time can be squandered online, and as noted above, negative and unproductive lines of communication can develop (e.g., regarding the job market or teacher evaluations).â
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For those reasons, caution needs to be exercised in âadvocating for an increase in the public engagement of faculty members; only that which clearly supports and enhances research, teaching, service, professional development and stewardship to the public should be embracedâ.
Beyond wasting time, sociologists and others scholars can get into hot water for their online comments. Saida Grundy, an assistant professor of sociology at Boston University, for example, was in 2015Â . While many sociologists came to her defence, saying her comments were backed up by research, her case demonstrates that social media is a potential minefield in a tenure bid.
Philip Cohen, a professor of sociology at the University of Maryland at College Park, hasnât avoided controversy with his longtime blog, . He used it as a platform to criticise a now-largely discredited  on adoptions by gay parents, for example.
Cohen said he wasnât at all opposed to the new American Sociological Report, with a few caveats. First, he said, âWe don't need credit toward promotion for every thing we do.â Scholars who take a âpublic-facing stanceâ often find that it enhances the quality and quantity of their work in terms of teaching, scholarship and service, he said, so separately rewarding it isn't always necessary. Cohen said his own blog has led to research and teaching ideas, better feedback on his research, quality graduate students, invitations to contribute to policy, and book contracts, for example.
To the Grundy point, Cohen said, âWeâd all love to be promoted for authoring a great tweet, but no one wants to be fired for a bad one.â So assessment of public engagement âneeds to be holistic and qualitative, taking into account the quality, quantity and impact of the workâ.
âSimplistic, quantitative metrics will not be useful,â he added.
Echoing the subcommitteeâs suggestion that departments may incorporate public communication into the existing criteria of teaching, research and service, Cohen said itâs important to âvalue and reward openness in our routine work.â That includes posting working papers, publishing in open-access journals, sharing replication files and disseminating open teaching materials. Public engagement âdoes not need to mean separate activities and products, but can mean taking a public-facing stance in our existing workâ, he said.
The associationâs report lists a few universities that already have begun incorporating public communications into personnel decisions. Virginia Techâs tenure dossier template for âInternational and Professional Service and Additional Outreach and Extension Activitiesâ, for example, includes a subsection suggesting candidates list such items as âoutreach and extension publications, including trade journals, newsletters, websites, journals, multimedia items, etc.â.
The document âdoes not delineate specific items beyond websites, though the umbrella term âmultimedia itemsâ seems to invite other types of digital public engagementâ, reads the sociological associationâs report.
Sarah Ovink, an assistant professor of sociology at Virginia Tech, served on the associationâs public communication subcommittee and helped co-author the report. Asked whether social media is a part of her own tenure portfolio, Ovink said it depends how that's defined. Sheâs included her posts to the popular  blog, for example, but not her Twitter and Facebook comments.
âDifferent sociologists may also interpret how social media use figures into a tenure portfolio quite differently, depending on how they use it,â Ovink said. A sociologist who, for example, uses Twitter "extensively as part of their teaching effort â say, creating a feed tied to a particular class, as some do â may indeed highlight this usage as part of a tenure portfolio".
Leslie McCall, a professor of sociology at Northwestern University, chaired the subcommittee â admittedly with little previous thought to the role of social media in personnel decisions. She said a major takeaway of the report is that external letters of evaluation â so important in terms of assessing traditional research criteria - could be solicited "explicitly with the intent of evaluating a candidate's public communication and social media activities." That's if those activities are an important part of the candidate's professional work and if the candidate requests it.
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Another big finding is that âevery academic should become educated about the social media terrain â its advantages and disadvantages, though we think on balance the former outweigh the latterâ, McCall said, âand make an informed decision about whether and how to participate in it, and in the broader process of public communicationâ.
This first appeared on Inside Higher Ed
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