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Does Academic Blogging Enhance Promotion and Tenure? A Survey of US and Canadian Medicine and Pediatric Department Chairs.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Cameron, CB; Nair, V; Varma, M; Adams, M; Jhaveri, KD; Sparks, MA
Published in: JMIR Med Educ
June 23, 2016

BACKGROUND: Electronic educational (e-learning) technology usage continues to grow. Many medical journals operate companion blogs (an application of e-learning technology) that enable rapid dissemination of scientific knowledge and discourse. Faculty members participating in promotion and tenure academic tracks spend valuable time and effort contributing, editing, and directing these medical journal blogs. OBJECTIVE: We sought to understand whether chairs of medicine and pediatric departments acknowledge blog authorship as academic achievement. METHODS: The authors surveyed 267 chairs of US and Canadian medicine and pediatric departments regarding their attitudes toward the role of faculty participation in e-learning and blogging in the promotion and tenure process. The survey completion rate was 22.8% (61/267). RESULTS: A majority of respondents (87%, 53/61) viewed educational scholarship as either important or very important for promotion. However, only 23% (14/61) perceived importance to faculty effort in producing content for journal-based blogs. If faculty were to participate in blog authorship, 72% (44/61) of surveyed chairs favored involvement in a journal-based versus a society-based or a personal (nonaffiliated) blog. We identified a "favorable group" of chairs (19/59, 32%), who rated leadership roles in e-learning tools as important or very important, and an "unfavorable group" of chairs (40/59, 68%), who rated leadership roles in e-learning tools as somewhat important or not important. The favorable group were more likely to be aware of faculty bloggers within their departments (58%, 11/19 vs 25%, 10/40), viewed serving on editorial boards of e-learning tools more favorably (79%, 15/19 vs 31%, 12/39), and were more likely to value effort spent contributing to journal-based blogs (53%, 10/19 vs 10%, 4/40). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate that although the majority of department chairs value educational scholarship, only a minority perceive value in faculty blogging effort.

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Published In

JMIR Med Educ

DOI

ISSN

2369-3762

Publication Date

June 23, 2016

Volume

2

Issue

1

Start / End Page

e10

Location

Canada

Related Subject Headings

  • Social Media
  • Medicine
  • 3901 Curriculum and pedagogy
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Cameron, C. B., Nair, V., Varma, M., Adams, M., Jhaveri, K. D., & Sparks, M. A. (2016). Does Academic Blogging Enhance Promotion and Tenure? A Survey of US and Canadian Medicine and Pediatric Department Chairs. JMIR Med Educ, 2(1), e10. https://doi.org/10.2196/mededu.4867
Cameron, Christian Blake, Vinay Nair, Manu Varma, Martha Adams, Kenar D. Jhaveri, and Matthew A. Sparks. “Does Academic Blogging Enhance Promotion and Tenure? A Survey of US and Canadian Medicine and Pediatric Department Chairs.JMIR Med Educ 2, no. 1 (June 23, 2016): e10. https://doi.org/10.2196/mededu.4867.
Cameron CB, Nair V, Varma M, Adams M, Jhaveri KD, Sparks MA. Does Academic Blogging Enhance Promotion and Tenure? A Survey of US and Canadian Medicine and Pediatric Department Chairs. JMIR Med Educ. 2016 Jun 23;2(1):e10.
Cameron, Christian Blake, et al. “Does Academic Blogging Enhance Promotion and Tenure? A Survey of US and Canadian Medicine and Pediatric Department Chairs.JMIR Med Educ, vol. 2, no. 1, June 2016, p. e10. Pubmed, doi:10.2196/mededu.4867.
Cameron CB, Nair V, Varma M, Adams M, Jhaveri KD, Sparks MA. Does Academic Blogging Enhance Promotion and Tenure? A Survey of US and Canadian Medicine and Pediatric Department Chairs. JMIR Med Educ. 2016 Jun 23;2(1):e10.

Published In

JMIR Med Educ

DOI

ISSN

2369-3762

Publication Date

June 23, 2016

Volume

2

Issue

1

Start / End Page

e10

Location

Canada

Related Subject Headings

  • Social Media
  • Medicine
  • 3901 Curriculum and pedagogy