TALES FROM A SILVER MEDALIST:
Publishing an Interactive, Collaborative Article in JITP
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Amanda LicastroDoctoral Candidate, The Graduate Center, CUNYInstructional Technology Fellow, Macaulay Honors College, CUNYInstructor, New York University
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Mission Statement
The mission of The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy (ISSN 2166-6245) is to promote open scholarly discourse around critical and creative uses of digital technology in teaching, learning, and research. Educational institutions have often embraced instrumentalist conceptions and market-driven implementations of technology that overdetermine its uses in academic environments. Such approaches underestimate the need for critical engagement with the integration of technological tools into pedagogical practice. The JITP will
endeavor to counter these trends by recentering questions of pedagogy in our discussions of technology in higher education. The journal
will also work to change what counts as scholarship—and how it is presented, disseminated, and reviewed—by allowing contributors to develop
their ideas, publish their work, and engage their readers using multiple formats.We are committed first and foremost to teaching and learning, and intend that
the journal itself—both in process and in product—provide opportunities to reveal, reflect on, and revise academic publication and classroom practice.
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pedagogy
Graduate
Students
StaffFaculty
Editorial Collective
pedagogy
Authors
Graduate Students
Staff
Faculty
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Editorial Process
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http://jitp.commons.gc.cuny.edu/digital-literary-pedagogy-an-experiment-in-process-oriented-publishing/
Winner: “‘Psychopower’ of Cultural Diplomacy in the Information Age” by Natalia GrinchevaFirst Runner Up: “Digital Literary Pedagogy: An Experiment in Process-Oriented Pedagogy” by Roger Whitson, Kimon Keramidas, and Amanda LicastroSecond Runner Up: “The Digital Humanities Is about Breaking Stuff” by Jesse StommelVotes cast in this category: 673Other entrants (alphabetically):
“I’m not going to edit your £10,000 pay-to-open-access-publish monograph series for you” by Melissa Terras “Just Google It – Digital Research Practices of Humanities Scholars” by Max Kemman, Martijn Kleppe, and Stef Scagliola“Songs of the Victorians” by Joanna Swafford“Six Degrees of Alexander” by Diane Harris Cline“The Geographic Imagination of Civil War-Era American Fiction” by Matt Wilkens“The Three Orders or Digital Humanities Imagined” by Marjorie Burghart“What if Google killed Scholar?” by Max Kemman
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Three principle differences between digital and print scholarship in the humanities require a radical revision to how we review and assess scholarly production and to how scholarly work accrues value:
digital scholarship is often collaborative,
digital scholarship is rarely finished,
and digital scholarship is frequently “public.”
“Rethinking Peer Review in the Age of Digital Humanities,” Roopika Risam
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Sarah Thomas, vice president for the Harvard Library and Larsen librarian for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, says, “We are still in the Wild West of sorting
out how we will communicate our academic developments effectively.” – Havard Magazine, Craig Lambert
January-February 2015
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