Editorial (September 2018): Wertschätzung von Berufen aus dem Sozial- und Erziehungsbereich

NASOWAS. Infos aus dem AWO Kreisverband München-Land e.V., S. 3. Editorial von Dr. Andreas C. Hofmann Wenn ich in der U-Bahn einer Kindergartengruppe begegne, empfinde ich jedes Mal höchsten Respekt dafür, mit welcher Professionalität Erzieher*innen die Kinder durch den Großstadtdschungel manövrieren. Sie tragen Verantwortung für junge Menschen, die für sich selbst noch keine Verantwortung übernehmen können. Kinder sind das Wichtigste, […]

Quelle: https://www.einsichten-online.de/2018/09/9621/

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Frohe Weihnachten, Wesołych Świąt, Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas! Wesołych Świąt! Frohe Weihnachten! wish you sincerely the Directors of Public History Weekly, Marko Demantowsky, Peter Gautschi, Thomas Hellmuth, Krzysztof Ruchniewicz, and all members of the Editorial Board.... Read More ›

The post Frohe Weihnachten, Wesołych Świąt, Merry Christmas! appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: https://public-history-weekly.degruyter.com/5-2017-43/frohe-weihnachten-merry-christmas/

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Bridge between Journal and Weblog

An Interview with Marko Demantowsky (PHW) by Mareike König (DHI Paris)

We are an international and multilingual journal that addresses the public use of history; our contributors are historians who are specialists in fields of the didactics of history and historical culture.


 

Die originale deutschsprachige Variante des Interviews vom 5.2.2015
finden Sie auf dem Weblog des Deutschen Historischen Instituts in Paris.
Siehe hier.

 

Mareike König (MK): Public History Weekly (PHW) is a BlogJournal devoted to the topics of history and the didactics of history that is available under Open Access at the website of the Oldenbourg/De Gruyter publishing house. What exactly is a BlogJournal or, in other words, what makes Public History Weekly a blog and in what respect is it more like a journal?

Marko Demantowsky (MD): We are an international and multilingual journal that addresses the public use of history; our contributors are historians who are specialists in the field of the didactics of history and historical culture. Since our launch in September 2013, we have published 63 issues, each of which contains one to two so-called initial contributions. To date, we have received 190 commentaries in response, most of which are very detailed and competent.

Indeed, the format is a new kind of hybrid, closer to a weekly magazine than a weblog. The initial question was: how should a journal in our field, today, be designed, in order to reach as many readers as possible? Many of the features of weblogs appeared, to us, to be extremely useful for this new kind of journal. And the spirit of blogging—writing unpolished texts, making oneself vulnerable — seemed to be a good approach to reach interested readers as well.

But, of course, there are important differences, compared to a weblog, particularly in terms of publication frequency and format standards. Readers can be sure that:

  • the contributions are published with never-failing regularity at a specified time, in fact a specified minute: Thursdays, at 8 am CET.
  • they have a prescribed format and meet all the requirements of academic publishing.
  • the comments are supervised editorially. PHW only publishes material that has been examined closely for formal aspects and content.
  • the comments are also published at specified times.
  • comments can be made with complete freedom. However, for most contributions, we ask one or two experts for their opinions (peer comment).

But we also differ, naturally, from specialist academic journals in several respects:

  • Our thematic articles start with an initial contribution that should be “offensive”, not isolated, and aim at a direct discussion. The subsequent indexing in scientific databases, undertaken according to all the rules in the book, then refers to the complete text unit and includes the initial contributions, comments and author responses (“Replik”). These multi-perspective, controversial texts are, in my opinion, a completely new text category. In order to achieve this, the thread must also be closed after the author responds. Social digital publishing doesn’t have to be a never-ending meandering event; the whole thing can only be cited once it is completed (see also Groebner’s criticism of digital publishing).
  • We work with a stable team of “core authors” who commit themselves for at least two years. This unique feature has been chosen for very pragmatic reasons: a reliable weekly publication date requires an absolutely reliable infrastructure for the editors and authors. With the help of our team, we can develop editorial plans 12 months in advance. In addition, authors who write for us face completely new challenges that result in a professionalization process related to the specific format. Our authors receive intensive support in this process from the editorial board and at the yearly Editorial Meetings in Basel. In addition guest authors repeatedly publish additional posts as surprise.

And, finally: we are not a classical publisher’s production and are not anchored to publishers’ sites; instead we are a co-operation project between the School of Education at the Northwestern Switzerland University of Applied Sciences and Arts and the De Gruyter Oldenbourg publishing house. This is why the website is neutral; the technical infrastructure, however, is provided and maintained by the publisher. This also expresses our novel hybrid character. We are putting the useless confrontation between “old” science publishers and new cultures of publication behind us. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, and in particular Martin Rethmeier, deserve a great deal of credit for undertaking this (expensive) experiment.

MK: The subtitle of PHW is: “BlogJournal for History and Civics Education”. Which topics are dealt with in the weekly issues? How do you recruit your authors?

MD: This subtitle needs to be modified. On Twitter () and Facebook (), we appear as a BlogJournal on Public Use of History and History & Civics Education. However, the explicit connection to the didactics of history makes sense to us because we feel that including what happens in schools in the critical debate on historical culture is important for both sides and is—at least in the Anglo-Saxon community—new. Teaching history at school is a sublime expression of the predominating underlying historical narrative and it requires critical integration into historical culture. Similarly, we won’t be able to understand the recipients of material and conceptions offered by museums or the mass media if we ignore the fact that the teaching of history a school is an instance of historical socialization. We want to merge both discourses at PHW.

Our core authors have complete freedom of choice for the topics of their individual contributions. Of course, the yearly meetings and discussions there help to decide on a promising spectrum of possible topics, but in terms of text submission, the decisive factor is the pure passion, far removed from traditional academic activities, with which authors are prepared to get involved with us.

In a first step, we made a conscious effort to contact relatively young, prestigious, but not necessarily web-oriented professors in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland and encountered a great deal of sympathy, for which I am, after two years, still very grateful. In a second step, in 2014, we expanded our team to include authors writing in other languages. The aim was to gain leading representatives of the separate discourses on Public History from Argentina, Australia, Canada, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, Turkey, and USA. This has also been successful. In autumn 2015, PHW will undertake a further step towards globalization.

MK: A quick look at the statistics, if this is permitted: How often is the weekly issue of the BlogJournal accessed? Which topics are particularly favored, in terms of access and the commentaries?

MD: A few months ago, my response to this question was less reserved than today. This is because I don’t really trust very much the counting methods available to us. We have our own WordPress counter, and the WordPress Add-on Google Analytics Summary as well as the Google Analytics Tool itself are also available. Each with its own counts. If one sticks to the Google tool, which seems to me to be the most reliable, then it is important to remember that users with cookie blockers won’t be included. In terms of our tech-savvy readership, this is probably a significant number. Thus, the numbers should be treated with caution and the data are, basically, hard to verify … Google Analytics, however, offers several interesting features that allow us to recognize tendencies. At a conservative estimate, we had last year at least 4000 regular readers (approx. 32 000 unique clients). Last September, we switched to multilingual publication and, since then, the readership has grown and has become, naturally, more international.

In actual fact, the numbers of accesses for the various contributions differ greatly. In each case, this is not a good/bad criterion; specific features attract particular attention. Nevertheless, since 2013 real PHW stars who can claim stable and great success have developed; for instance, Prof. Dr. Markus Bernhardt, who was honored by our Advisory Board for his work in 2013/14. For all our authors, however, topics that promise important new information, argue a special case, and offer points of attack are really successful. Our articles are truly objectionable, if they work well. One last point: In the first few months, interest was very much focused on individual contributions; now, however, we can see that interest has become more diversified. This is due, on the one hand, to the increased number of contributions (79, to date) and, on the other, to features that were added later, after the launch. These include the menus for issues and contents, which make the variety and number of our articles constantly available, just like a classical list of contents. Thus, we are no longer just a kind of weekly magazine, but, rather, and increasingly, a pool for ideas and incentives.

MK: The contributions to the BlogJournal can be commented upon, but not randomly. They are supervised by the editors and, according to the guidelines, they should represent a “serious confrontation with the initial contribution”. Commentaries are solicited sometimes, and they are only activated during office hours. After a few weeks, the commentary thread is closed. Why do you have these restrictions?

MD: I’ve given some of the answers above. I’d now just like to go into more detail about one important aspect: social media have a poor reputation outside of the “social media bubble”. This is, naturally, partly based on a certain basic culturally conservative aloofness towards the web. In part, it is also, and naturally, based on more or less substantial experience with truly undesirable developments in communication within the social media, above all with internet trolling. Our main task is, thus, is to reduce this resistance and to emphasize the academic potential beyond these problems. We really see ourselves as bridge builders. We have, therefore, constructed a tool that exploits the benefits of social media for academic communication and, at the same time, tries to reduce the risks. We achieve this by a small retardation of real time and through careful and very liberal moderation.

MK: What have you experienced with the commentary function? How difficult is it to persuade scientists to write commentaries?

MD: Very often, really difficult. My response above provides some of the reasons. However, what we can already say is that good (in terms of the format: objectionable) contributions don’t have to wait long before commentaries come in. However, we are very interested in inviting additional experts to join the discussion, even though their over-stretched time budgets might make them reluctant to do this. Some prominent voices also basically expect to be invited. So much for the peer comments.

There is a further factor, and it also relevant for the initial contributions: many colleagues are quite unused to write for a real public—as we reach it, for sure subject-specifically. You wake up from writing texts for collective volumes and are supposed to write something for us, if possible from one day to the next. So fast, so public, so controversial! This obviously evokes feelings of trepidation in some. At the moment, there is no alternative to this, but it also characterizes the great challenge that highly specialized science is suddenly facing, today more than ever in the age of digital transition. The professional dimension of a “public intellectual” is something that many colleagues are completely unaware of.

MK: Do you have any tips and suggestions for bloggers who would like to attract more comments? What should they pay attention to? Or, are comments over-rated?

MD: No, comments are not over-rated; in fact, they are the tonic of digital and social publishing.

The basic problem in persuading prestigious researchers to write comments is one of economics: Time is so limited, the backlog of work is so big, that one has to choose a criterion for accepting or rejecting extra tasks. If the chosen criterion is not financial, then it is usually reputation enhancement. Through our cooperation with a respected academic publisher, through our choice of the renowned core author team and the members of the Advisory Board, and through our investment in providing a database indexing and an appropriate layout, we have tried to solve the reputation problem. This was and still is a major challenge, particularly from the perspective of establishing a sustainable allocation of reputation! I think we are on a good track.

MK: Can a hybrid between a blog and a journal, as exemplified by the “Public History Weekly”, help blogging to become more academically acceptable?

MD: Yes, I hope so. More generally, the hope is that increasingly more colleagues will use PHW’s bridge to accept communication in the social media, to understand the potential that these formats offer and also to recognize how important it is to be heard and be visible there.

MK: Do you blog yourself? If so, about what?

MD: As the managing editor of PHW, I expose myself to the evaluation and discussion of my own initial contributions. That sometimes leads to a double blind, but I also enjoy it. Because of my time-consuming tasks in Basle, my “normal” academic workload, and my editorial work at PHW, I can’t maintain my own blog (but my chair, however, does have one). In an ideal world, I would have the time for it, and I hope that it will be possible, at some point. I understand and value the principle of academic blogging and I really greatly admire those colleagues who blog; I don’t want to name them individually here, but they know whom I mean.

MK: How is the BlogJournal going to proceed? What are your plans for the future? Will the scales tip more towards a journal or more towards a blog?

MD: The first thing we will do is cultivating our hybrid nature. I believe that this is the only way to exercise our function as a bridge. The cooperation agreement runs till 2016, and it also guarantees our financing. My university has invested a lot of money in the editorial work, and the publisher has done the same for the technical infrastructure and marketing. At the moment, we don’t know what will happen after 2016. Our novel multilinguality, in particular, has created costs that we did not originally budget for. This spring, we will start a crowdfunding, and it would be really important for the project to receive contributions from as many of our readers as possible.

MK: Many thanks for this interview!

___________________

This interview is a contribution to the blog parade “Wissenschaftsbloggen – zurück in die Zukunft #wbhyp”. Marko Demantowsky replied in writing to the interviewer’s questions.

____________________

Image Credits
Altmodische Telegrafenleitung (2008) by Klaus Stricker / Pixelio.

Recommended Citation
A Bridge between Journal and Weblog. An Interview instead of an Editorial by Mareike König with Marko Demantowsky. In: Public History Weekly 3 (2015) 4, DOI: dx.doi.org/10.1515/phw-2015-3461.

Translation by Jana Kaiser

Copyright (c) 2015 by De Gruyter Oldenbourg and the author, all rights reserved. This work may be copied and redistributed for non-commercial, educational purposes, if permission is granted by the author and usage right holders. For permission please contact: elise.wintz (at) degruyter.com.

The post Bridge between Journal and Weblog appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: http://public-history-weekly.oldenbourg-verlag.de/3-2015-4/bridge-journal-weblog-instead-editorial/

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Summer Break

 

Editorial break, we are in the summer holidays … We wish all our readers a great time, lots of rest and relaxation.

We restart with a new issue on Thursday, September 1st. Although the comment box of the posts remains open all the time, but the comments are edited & approved only after August 27th. We ask for your understanding.

Dear Readers, stay true to our PHW journal, we look forward to your posts and comments!

 



[...]

Quelle: http://public-history-weekly.oldenbourg-verlag.de/4-2016-27/summer-break-sommerpause/

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Neue Ausgabe des Soziologiemagazins zum Thema “Krisen und Umbrüche – Wie wandeln sich Gesellschaften?”

K R I S E N, liebe Leser_innen, sind scheinbar allgegenwärtig. So wird zumindest vielerorts getitelt: Von der Europa-, Finanz- und Schuldenkrise hin zur Krise der Demokratie und schlussendlich zum Subjekt selbst angelangt, ziehen sich diese und viele weitere Krisendiagnosen … Continue reading

Quelle: http://soziologieblog.hypotheses.org/6454

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Basler Fasnachtspause

 

Was dem einen sein Fasching ist dem anderen seine Fasnacht. Die Basler Fasnacht folgt dem alten Termin und beginnt eine Woche nach dem rheinischen Fasching und Karneval. Die Redaktion von Public History Weekly macht wie alle Basler eine Pause. Wir starten neu mit der Redaktionsarbeit am Montag, den 17. März 2014. Bis dahin bleiben die Kommentarfenster der Beiträge geschlossen. Wir freuen uns auf Ihre Beiträge und Kommentare nach der Fasnachtspause!

What to some is a “Carnival” is a “Fasnacht” to others. The “Basler Fasnacht” follows the old calendar and begins one week after the Rhenish Carnival. The editors of Public History Weekly take a break - like all (or most) Basel inhabitants. We resume the editorial work on Monday, the 17th January 2014. Until then, the comment function for postings is shut down. We look forward to your posts and comments after the “Fasnacht” break!

 

Abbildungsnachweis
© Markus Walti / pixelio.de

The post Basler Fasnachtspause appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: http://public-history-weekly.oldenbourg-verlag.de/2-2014-10/fasnachtspause/

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Frohe Weihnachten & Merry Christmas

 

Wir wünschen allen unseren LeserInnen ein frohes und besinnliches Weihnachtsfest und ein gutes neues Jahr 2014. Public History Weekly macht ebenfalls eine Pause. Wir starten neu mit der Redaktionsarbeit am Montag, den 6. Januar 2014. Bis dahin bleiben die Kommentarfenster der Beiträge geschlossen. Wir freuen uns auf Ihre Beiträge und Kommentare 2014!

 

We wish all our readers a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year 2014. Public History Weekly is also taking a break. We restart with the editorial work on Monday, the 6th January 2014. Until then, the comment window of the contributions remain closed. We look forward to your posts and comments in 2014!

 

 

 

Abbildungsnachweis
© LordSilver/ Pixelio.de

The post Frohe Weihnachten & Merry Christmas appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: http://public-history-weekly.oldenbourg-verlag.de/1-2013-17/frohe-weihnachten-merry-christmas/

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Editorial. Yet Another Journal?

 

There is a rich and diverse range of German-speaking journals in the field of history and civics education. The usual forms of assuring formalised scientific quality are well-established. Now it may seem to the observer that there is no lack of publication opportunities, but rather of texts worth reading and able to stimulate discussion. The excessive demand for materials by editorial boards is distinctly augmented by the plethora of themed volumes appearing on all fronts. However, this large-scale production of texts also raises the question of who is supposed to read all these publications attentively. Seemingly, therefore, it would not be feasible to launch yet another journal, only to compete against the many established ones already available.

 

Three Problems: Publication Frequency, Hermeticism, Marginality

Closer scrutiny reveals that the journal landscape in the field of history and civics education is fraught with characteristic problems and shortcomings. Journal issues are published at long intervals and production times are lengthy (also due to elaborate quality-assurance processes). As a result, it is very difficult to initiate a lively and controversial discussion on the key problems of history and civics education via these journals.  The controversies so very essential for this field of inquiry in particular take place on the margins of conferences. As a rule, moreover, contentious topics and issues remain undocumented and hence fail to develop their potential for wider debate. The contributions to conventional journals lead a somewhat monadic existence. Besides, the skirmishes routinely waged in the footnotes are matters of yesterday. Usually appearing a great deal later, a published response to any such monad is equally monadic. Contributions to the established journals are largely hermetic, sometimes even esoteric. This is due not only to their sophisticated scientific language, but also to the small print run and small circulation range of such journals. Generally, not more than one hundred copies of any given issue are sold, most of which end up filling library shelves. History didacticians thus write mostly for themselves, and hence fail to reach not only their key target audience—teachers—but also a wider public interested in history and civics education. This problem is bound up with a further difficulty: among the general public and its media there are time and again conflicts directly concerning the field of history and civics education. Because history didacticians lead pretty much sheltered existences, forming a public of their own, they are not recognised as experts by journalists covering the field. As a result, the specific rationality potentials developed meanwhile by history didactics over a period of scientific research spanning 60 years remain untapped.

A Paradoxical Solution

What to do? Establish a new journal after all? If so, then this needs to be a journal that provides a solution to the problems commonly besetting journals in the field of historico-political education (publication frequency, hermeticism, and marginality). Over the past months, we have developed a format that enables a lively, almost real-time scientific exchange and renders effective and visible the rationality potentials of the didactics of history and civics education for a wider public and in a shape and form compatible with present-day mass-media formats. Beyond the scientific community mentioned above, the target audiences envisaged for this new journal are above all teachers, journalists, and interested members of the general public, that is to say, groups which thus far have had no access to the ongoing debates on the didactics of history and civics education and that were hardly within reach even for didacticians publishing in established journals.

History Didactics 2.0

Attaining this objective calls for an online medium, because nowadays those seeking information, not least also teachers, do so primarily online. A further requirement is an interactive but low-threshold application so as to involve those colleagues who are not digital natives in lively, non-verbal discourses. At the same time, the planned format strengthens the online presence of history and political education didacticians as well as promotes the necessary adjustment to the digital transformation of everyday life among our students, history teachers, and published opinion. Thus, this online format could lead to satisfying the desiderata for wider and more diversified participation in the current debates on didactics—since it greatly lowers the participation threshold. Nurturing these debates while also continually satisfying professional curiosity will involve harnessing an element of surprise and predictability. While recognised experts with proven research records should be expected to voice their opinions on a regular basis, the contents of their contributions should not be predictable. Accordingly, 12 professors from Austria, Switzerland, and Germany will support the new venture as a team of regular contributors. These authors have been granted absolute freedom to what write what they like within our thematic scope. Every Thursday at 8 a.m. will see the publication of a new and hopefully easily readable and stimulating initial contribution. Comments are welcome on all published contributions—and should not exceed the length of the initial texts.  The outcome will be a blog journal, an entirely new publication format within the landscape of history didactics journals. This format, we believe, may suitably complement existing journals in the field.

Postscriptum

- Some may wonder why our blog journal’s online presence and title are in English. Believe it or not, this is by no means a matter of newfangled self-importance but a decision taken with a view to—from 2014—expanding our team of (German-speaking) regular contributors to English-speaking colleagues and to publishing the entire journal in German and English. Prospective bilingual publication reflects our aim to promote debate and exchange beyond any self-limiting perspective. As such this initial step graphically anticipates the next stage of development.

- The envisaged format is new—also for our contributors. Writing History Didactics 2.0 must be learned anew. So please bear with us during the first couple of months.

- “Public History” is a wide field. Our blog journal seeks to bring into view individual and specifically didactic perspectives. It lays no claim whatsoever to being exclusive, nor to possessing the truth, nor indeed to prescribing the thematic agenda. Fear not, we are not aspiring to “Imperial Overstretch.”

 

Image credit 
(c) Photograph by Jens Märker / Pixelio

Translation (from German)
by Kyburz&Peck, English Language Projects (www.englishprojects.ch)

Recommended Citation
Demantowsky, Marko: Editorial. Yet another journal? In: Public History Weekly 1 (2013) 1, DOI: dx.doi.org/10.1515/phw-2013-599.

Copyright (c) 2013 by Oldenbourg Verlag and the author, all rights reserved. This work may be copied and redistributed for non-commercial, educational purposes, if permission is granted by the author and usage right holders. For permission please contact: julia.schreiner (at) degruyter.com.

The post Editorial. Yet Another Journal? appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: http://public-history-weekly.oldenbourg-verlag.de/1-2013-1/editorial/

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