Q & A: Market research for book proposals
How do you select the most appropriate publisher, and position the book in the market?
MediaWell, the Social Science Research Council's new web platform for Disinformation Scholarship
In the last few years, a huge amount of scholarship has emerged on disinformation and related topics, such as toxicity, polarization, populist rhetoric, and election interference. Researchers in disciplines from anthropology to psychology are working on disinformation-related questions, often with different taxonomies. This volume makes it hard for researchers to stay abreast of other disciplines. Seemingly contradictory findings present challenges for journalists, citizens, and policymakers seeking clear answers.
MediaWell, the Social Science Research Council’s new web platform, is a response to this volume and spread – our aim was to create a one-stop platform that is freely accessible for researchers, policymakers, journalists, funders, and interested citizens alike. We’re excited to make the project available, and eager for feedback on this new format for curating research and promoting public scholarship.
Ten Ways To Unstick Your Writing
Dr. Helen Kara offers practical tips to help get out of your writing rut.
Contracts & Changes: When Publishers Merge
Abstract, the Textbook and Academic Authors Association (TAA) open access blog, includes excellent advice for writers who have book contracts with publishers when mergers, acquisitions, or other changes that can potentially impact the agreement. Learn from lawyers and experts who specialize in this niche.
Top 10 big data and social science innovations
People look to academia as the source of innovation, and especially so in the natural and physical sciences. Researchers in biosciences, clinical medicine, physics, and chemistry have always generated new ideas for industry to capitalize on. Generally, innovations coming out of the social sciences would be assimilated into the private sector via secondments or collaborative projects, with Richard Thaler’s Behavioral Insights Team as the finest example. However, the emergence of big data and computational social science has generated a host of technologies that are either developed together with social science researchers or have clear application in the social science praxis outside academia.
Working with Your Publisher
Abstract, the Textbook and Academic Authors Association (TAA) open access blog, offers advice for writers who want to cultivate a positive relationship with their editors and publisher.
Social Media for Book Promotion
Mentor-in-Residence Mark Carrigan offers suggestions about promoting your books.
Contracts & Agreements
Abstract, the Textbook and Academic Authors Association (TAA) open access blog, includes excellent advice for writers who are negotiating new contracts. Here are a few examples.
Collaborative Writing: Ten Top Tips
In this guest post Dr. Helen Kara discusses her experiences with collaborative writing.
Five Steps to Meeting the Challenges of Maintaining an Appropriate Writing Voice
It's Academic Writing Month! This is a great time to think about writing style and voice.
What can social science tell us about the future of work?
The rise in automation and our digital economy are changing the way we work. In recent years, there’s been a rising sense of anxiety around how new technologies will impact our working lives: Will robots steal our jobs? Will we need to learn new skills to be employable? In this changing landscape, social science has a critical role to play in understanding the impact of this digital takeover and examine where we go next.
Evaluation Q & A #3 with Wright & Wallis
Q & A about evaluation with Steve Wallis and Bernadette Peters
Evaluation Q & A #2 with Wright & Wallis
This post is the second of four Q & A posts with Bernadette Wright and Steve Wallis.
Evaluation Q & A with Wright & Wallis
Bernadette Wright and Steve Wallis, Mentors-in-residence for SAGE MentorSpace this month, offer four suggestions for preparing students or professionals for an evaluation.
Evaluative Focus Groups
When counting and measuring don't tell the whole story, consider using focus groups in evaluation.
Making Sense of The Knowledge Explosion with Knowledge Mapping
Bernadette Wright and Steve Wallis introduced knowledge mapping as a part of the evaluation profess.