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  3. Documenting Social Media Engagement as Scholarship: A New Model for Assessing Academic Accomplishment for the Health Professions.
 

Documenting Social Media Engagement as Scholarship: A New Model for Assessing Academic Accomplishment for the Health Professions.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/149979
Publisher DOI
10.2196/25070
PubMed ID
33263554
Description
BACKGROUND

The traditional model of promotion and tenure in the health professions relies heavily on formal scholarship through teaching, research, and service. Institutions consider how much weight to give activities in each of these areas and determine a threshold for advancement. With the emergence of social media, scholars can engage wider audiences in creative ways and have a broader impact. Conventional metrics like the h-index do not account for social media impact. Social media engagement is poorly represented in most curricula vitae (CV) and therefore is undervalued in promotion and tenure reviews.

OBJECTIVE

The objective was to develop crowdsourced guidelines for documenting social media scholarship. These guidelines aimed to provide a structure for documenting a scholar's general impact on social media, as well as methods of documenting individual social media contributions exemplifying innovation, education, mentorship, advocacy, and dissemination.

METHODS

To create unifying guidelines, we created a crowdsourced process that capitalized on the strengths of social media and generated a case example of successful use of the medium for academic collaboration. The primary author created a draft of the guidelines and then sought input from users on Twitter via a publicly accessible Google Document. There was no limitation on who could provide input and the work was done in a democratic, collaborative fashion. Contributors edited the draft over a period of 1 week (September 12-18, 2020). The primary and secondary authors then revised the draft to make it more concise. The guidelines and manuscript were then distributed to the contributors for edits and adopted by the group. All contributors were given the opportunity to serve as coauthors on the publication and were told upfront that authorship would depend on whether they were able to document the ways in which they met the 4 International Committee of Medical Journal Editors authorship criteria.

RESULTS

We developed 2 sets of guidelines: Guidelines for Listing All Social Media Scholarship Under Public Scholarship (in Research/Scholarship Section of CV) and Guidelines for Listing Social Media Scholarship Under Research, Teaching, and Service Sections of CV. Institutions can choose which set fits their existing CV format.

CONCLUSIONS

With more uniformity, scholars can better represent the full scope and impact of their work. These guidelines are not intended to dictate how individual institutions should weigh social media contributions within promotion and tenure cases. Instead, by providing an initial set of guidelines, we hope to provide scholars and their institutions with a common format and language to document social media scholarship.
Date of Publication
2020-12-02
Publication Type
article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
300 - Social sciences, sociology & anthropology::360 - Social problems & social services
Keyword(s)
accomplishment contribution crowdsource dissemination education health professions innovation medicine promotion research scholarship social media tenure
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Acquaviva, Kimberly D
Mugele, Josh
Abadilla, Natasha
Adamson, Tyler
Bernstein, Samantha L
Bhayani, Rakhee K
Büchi, Annina Elisabethorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik für Allgemeine Innere Medizin
Burbage, Darcy
Carroll, Christopher L
Davis, Samantha P
Dhawan, Natasha
Eaton, Alice
English, Kim
Grier, Jennifer T
Gurney, Mary K
Hahn, Emily S
Haq, Heather
Huang, Brendan
Jain, Shikha
Jun, Jin
Kerr, Wesley T
Keyes, Timothy
Kirby, Amelia R
Leary, Marion
Marr, Mollie
Major, Ajay
Meisel, Jason V
Petersen, Erika A
Raguan, Barak
Rhodes, Allison
Rupert, Deborah D
Sam-Agudu, Nadia A
Saul, Naledi
Shah, Jarna R
Sheldon, Lisa Kennedy
Sinclair, Christian T
Spencer, Kerry
Strand, Natalie H
Streed, Carl G
Trudell, Avery M
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Allgemeine Innere Medizin
Series
Journal of medical internet research
Publisher
JMIR Publications
ISSN
1438-8871
Access(Rights)
open.access
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