| Literature DB >> 27731858 |
Christian Blake Cameron1, Vinay Nair, Manu Varma, Martha Adams, Kenar D Jhaveri, Matthew A Sparks.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Keywords: blogging; medicine; pediatrics; promotion; social media; survey; tenure
Year: 2016 PMID: 27731858 PMCID: PMC5041355 DOI: 10.2196/mededu.4867
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Med Educ ISSN: 2369-3762
Demographics of respondents (N=61).
| Demographic | n (%) | |
| Gender (male) | 49 (80) | |
| Medicine | 27/60 (45) | |
| Pediatrics | 33/60 (55) | |
| No response | 1 (2) | |
| 56 (92) | ||
| Medicine | 24/56 (43) | |
| Pediatrics | 31/56 (55) | |
| No response | 1/56 (2) | |
| Public | 38 (62) | |
| Private | 23 (38) | |
Figure 1State/province of respondents. State/province (n): Alabama (2), Alberta (1), Arkansas (1), California (1), Colorado (1), Florida (1), Georgia (1), Hawaii (2), Illinois (1), Indiana (2), Maryland (2), Massachusetts (3), Minnesota (1), Missouri (1), Nebraska (2), Nevada (1), New York (4), North Carolina (2), Ohio (6), Oklahoma (1), Ontario (2), Oregon (2), Pennsylvania (1), Saskatchewan (1), South Carolina (2), South Dakota (2), Tennessee (1), Texas (6), Vermont (1), Virginia (4), West Virginia (1), Wisconsin (2), all other states/provinces had zero respondents.
Figure 2Questionnaire items addressing importance of educational scholarship, leadership in e-learning tools, and valuation of blogging effort.
Figure 3If your faculty member is involved in contributing to an academic blog, which would you value most?
Comparison of attitudes categorized by favorable versus unfavorable chairs.
| Characteristic | Overall response, | Favorable group,b | Unfavorable group,c
| |
| Male | 47 (80) | 14 (74) | 33 (83) | .50 |
| Medicine department | 26/58 (45) | 12 (63) | 14/39 (36) | .09 |
| Have a clinician-educator pathway | 54 (92) | 19 (100) | 35 (88) | .17 |
| Educational scholarship important or very important for promotion | 52 (88) | 18 (95) | 34 (85) | .41 |
| Serving on editorial boards of e-learning tools important or very important | 27/58 (47) | 15 (79) | 12/39 (31) | <.001 |
| Aware of faculty bloggers in department | 21 (36) | 11 (58) | 10 (25) | .02 |
| Promotion and tenure form has field for blogging and e-learning | 26/58 (45) | 9 (47) | 17/39 (44) | >.99 |
| Effort contributing to a journal-based blog important or very important | 14 (24) | 10 (53) | 4 (10) | <.001 |
| Believe most journal-based blogs are peer reviewed | 13/55 (24) | 6/18 (33) | 7/37 (19) | .31 |
| Believe journal-based blogs disseminate knowledge | 48/57 (84) | 17 (89) | 31/38 (82) | .70 |
| Prefer contributions to journal blogs | 43 (73) | 13 (68) | 30 (75) | .76 |
| Prefer contribution to society blogs | 22 (37) | 10 (53) | 12 (30) | .15 |
| Prefer contribution to personal blogs | 1 (2) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) | >.99 |
a Respondents who failed to answer e-learning leadership question were removed from analysis. Likewise, respondents who answered leadership but did not answer question as outlined on the rows were not included in analysis.
b E-learning leadership considered very important/important.
c E-learning leadership considered somewhat important/not important.