Items where Author is "Williams, Sierra"
Number of items: 50.
Sharing knowledge at a research university: experiences from the London School of Economics. (2018)
Williams, Sierra; Gilson, Chris
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2015 Year-In-Review: LSE Impact Blog’s Most Popular Posts.
Williams, Sierra
Blogging platforms are not neutral: challenging the underlying assumptions of our technology.
Williams, Sierra
Book review: female football fans: community, identity, and sexism by Carrie Dunn.
Williams, Sierra
By producing podcasts you can reach wider audiences, occupy your niche and create new items of research.
Mollett, Amy; Brumley, Cheryl; Gilson, Christopher; Williams, Sierra
Five Minutes with Nicholas A. Christakis: “Discovery is greatly facilitated by methodological innovation.”.
Christakis, Nicholas A.; Williams, Sierra
Five minutes with Carl Cullinane on the Democratic Dashboard: “There’s a big difference between open data and accessible data.”.
Williams, Sierra; Cullinane, Carl
Five minutes with Trish Greenhalgh: “We need to be clear that research impact isn’t a single dimension.”.
Williams, Sierra
Five minutes with: Victor Henning, co-founder of Mendeley – Connecting academic research to the outside world.
Henning, Victor; Williams, Sierra
Four questions you should ask yourself before undertaking a multimedia research project.
Mollett, Amy; Brumley, Cheryl; Gilson, Christopher; Williams, Sierra
Impact Round Up 10th May: Reputational gaps, registered reports, and serendipity in research.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round Up 16 November: Faculty leadership, Martin Buber in the academy, and social media’s Panopticon effect.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round Up 1st March: Data sharing, the defence of disciplines, and PhD employment.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round Up 24 November: Scientific closures, responsible sharing and how to evaluate scientific claims.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round Up 9 November: #solo13, Science on the Web, Big Data, and the history of the decline of Wikipedia.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 11th January: Social science fiction, systematic reviews, and #MLA14.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 12th April: Academese, #datadramas, and how not to think about the humanities.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 13th September: Referendum woes, corporate algorithms, and big bad journalists.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 14th December: Student protests, startups and takedowns.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 15th February: In gratitude to Stuart Hall, #publishperish14 and the fallacy of web objectivity.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 15th March: The Cosmos of science communication, rallying for the humanities, and #itooamoxford.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 16th August: Google Science, digital age knowledge creation, and scientific accountability.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 18th January: #altmetrics mania, adjunct invisibility, and quantitative sociology at Facebook.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 19th July: Crafting Op-Eds, fixing peer review, and ethical frameworks for social media research.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 1st February: Privacy and open data, publication bias, and the mechanization of scholarship.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 21st June: Universities as big business, coding the future, and openings in knowledge production.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 22nd February: Channels of academic influence, visualisations and turning raw data into actionable knowledge.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 22nd March: Data journalism, code as a research object, and the cure for impact factor mania.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 24th May: GitHub for science, research in the national interest, and myths of ‘big data’.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 25th January: Anonymity, metadata, and tacit knowledge vs reproducible results.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 26th April: The cost of journal subscriptions, writing for impact, and the Journal Openness Index.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 29th March: Citation types, commercialised knowledge, and boundary workers.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 4th October: Metrics for scientific outreach, Google Books fair use, and privacy in the digital age.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 5th April: Open access mandates, academic freedom, and homo academicus.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 6th September: Monsters of EdTech, visualising conferences, and for-profit masters.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 7th December: Academic blogging under threat, statistical literacy, and sexism in science communication.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 7th June: Prometheus gagged, Einstein’s peer review, and turning repositories into journals.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 8th March: Happy International Women’s Day, the failures of PowerPoint, and mental health in academia.
Williams, Sierra
Impact Round-Up 9th August: Research recommendations, open data outcomes, and keeping open access simple.
Williams, Sierra
Impact community insights: five things we learned from ourreader survey and Google analytics.
Williams, Sierra
Impact round up 12 October: Top research stories you might have missed this week.
Williams, Sierra
Impact round-Up 21st December: interdisciplinary collaboration, the econoblogosphere and obstacles to open access.
Williams, Sierra
Impact round-up 8th February:love warfare, copyright assignment, and illuminating Persian manuscripts.
Williams, Sierra
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Research assessment, altmetrics and tools for determining impact: Reading list for #HEFCEmetrics review launch.
Williams, Sierra
Science communication and social media: from iconic NASA moon landings to Instagramming astronauts.
Mollett, Amy; Brumley, Cheryl; Gilson, Christopher; Williams, Sierra
Science is a social process: facilitating community interactions across the research lifecycle.
Williams, Sierra
So you’ve decided to blog? These are the things you should write about.
Mollett, Amy; Brumley, Cheryl; Gilson, Christopher; Williams, Sierra
What constitutes valuable scholarship? The use of altmetrics in promotion and tenure.
Konkiel, Stacy; Sugimoto, Cassidy R.; Williams, Sierra
Why do university-managed blogs matter? On the importance of public, open and networked digital infrastructure.
Williams, Sierra
“Words divide, pictures unite” – great historic examples of the use of data visualisation for research communication.
Mollett, Amy; Brumley, Cheryl; Gilson, Christopher; Williams, Sierra