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The Internet and Higher Education   

Call for papers 

Special Issue: Social Media in Higher Education   

Guest editors 

Stefan Hrastinski, Assistant Professor, KTH Royal Institute of Technology  Vanessa Dennen, Associate Professor, Florida State University   

 

The social media hype has created a lot of speculation among educators on how  these media can be used to support learning. In this special issue, we would like  to  explore  how  social  media  can  be  taken  advantage  of  in  higher  education  to  support informal and formal learning. It is well agreed upon that most learning  takes place outside school in our everyday lives. On campuses, there are common  spaces  such  as  hallways,  lounges,  libraries,  and  cafés,  which  support  informal  learning better than classrooms or lecture‐halls. Social media  have potential to  support  learning  in  both  informal  and  formal  settings,  as  well  as  creating  an  entirely new setting in which learning may take place. We can learn a lot from  how students are already using such media to support learning in each of these  areas. 

 

Although most would agree that emerging social media support learning in new  ways,  we  still  know  little  about  how  students  currently  use  social  media  to  support  learning.  Prensky  put  forth  the  dichotomy  of  “digital  natives”  and 

“digital immigrants” when arguing that technology has dramatically changed the  way students of higher education live and learn. Similar arguments have labeled  today’s students the net generation, millenials, homo zappiens, generation M and  generation  Y  –  labels  intended  to  differentiate  their  relationship  to  and  use  of  technology  from  that  of  previous  generations  of  learners.    However,  a  growing  body  of  literature  questions  whether  there  is  really  a  sharp  and  fundamental  break between today’s young people and previous generations in terms of their  adeptness with  technology  and how  they  learn.  Although  we  see  today’s  youth  using  many  social  media  tools,  some  tools  are  more  frequently  used  by  older  people.  Similarly,  some  are  readily  adopted  by  students  for  personal  use,  whereas  other  social  media  tools  have  been  relegated  to  as‐required  or  as‐

assigned  use  and  have  been  met  with  resistance.  Thus,  there  are  many  perceptions of the role social media plays in education, some of which are myths  and other are realities. We believe it is time to go beyond the simple dichotomies  of the digital natives debate in order to understand how emerging social media  can  support  students’  informal  and  formal  learning.  We need to  move  forward  from  saying  that  “students  learn  in  new  ways”  towards  conducting  rigorous  research  that  can  help  us  understand  the  role  of  social  media  in  higher  education.  

 

In  this  issue,  we  seek  articles  that  present  the  outcome  of  rigorous  studies  of  social media use in higher education as well as articles that help provide strong  theoretical guidance for the directions future research might take.  

 

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Authors  are  requested  to  submit  manuscripts  via the  Elsevier  Editorial  System  (EES) no later than March 15, 2011. You need to select “Social Media in Higher  Ed” when you reach the “Article Type” step in the submission process. Contact  the Special Issue Editors if additional information is required: 

 

Dr. Stefan Hrastinski   Assistant Professor 

KTH Royal Institute of Technology  stefanhr@kth.se 

 

Dr. Vanessa Dennen  Associate Professor  Florida State University  vdennen@fsu.edu   

Important dates 

Deadline for paper submission: March 15, 2011  Notification of acceptance: May 15, 2011 

Camera‐ready version of accepted papers: July 15, 2011  Publication date: End of 2011 

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