Tuesday, May 3
12:00-2:15pm
Webcast Event; the live webcast of this event will be available at
the following URL: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/interactive/webcast at
12pm on 5/3
Co-sponsored by the Office
of Faculty Development & Diversity at Harvard and the Harvard Office of News and
Public Affairs
Social media — from blogs to wikis to tweets — have become academic
media, new means by which scholars communicate, collaborate, and teach. Hear from a distinguished faculty panel, moderated
by John Palfrey, about how they are adopting and adapting to new
communication and networking tools, following a keynote by social media
thought leader danah boyd.
12:00PM Introductory remarks, John Palfrey,
Henry N. Ess III
Professor of Law; Vice Dean for Library and Information Resources at
Harvard Law School; Faculty co-director of the Berkman Center for
Internet & Society
12:10PM: Keynote: Embracing a Culture of Connectivity, danah boyd,
Social Media Researcher at Microsoft Research New England and affiliate
of the Harvard University's Berkman Center for Internet and Society
Many young adults have incorporated social media into their daily
practices, both academically and personally. They use these tools to
connect, collaborate, communicate and create. This talk will examine
the different social media practices common among young adults,
clarifying both the cultural logic behind these everyday practices, and
the role of social media in academia.
1:00PM Faculty Panel: Academic Uses of Social Media, moderated by John
Palfrey
Michael Sandel,
Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government at Harvard
University
Professor Sandel's course "Justice" is the first Harvard course to be
made freely available online and on public television. A website
including lecture videos, discussion guides, poll questions, and other
resources has generated discussion among students and other viewers
around the world. The website is currently being updated to make
greater use of social media tools.
Nancy Koehn,
James E. Robison Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business
School
So much of the information we receive and send on the overflowing river
ways of social media is immediate and detached from a historical frame
or often, from any kind of larger frame or context whatsoever. What
does it mean for a society to increasingly default into reliance on
immediacy and brevity and widespread access as the ne plus ultra in
knowledge creation? Knowledge is more than access to information, and
wisdom is more than knowledge accumulation. How can we use social
networks to create strong foundations for right action and sound
choices?
N. Gregory
Mankiw, Professor of Economics, Harvard University
Over the past several years, Professor Mankiw has maintained a blog,
originally aimed at students in his undergraduate course Ec 10, but
eventually reaching a much larger audience. He will talk about the
pros and cons of such academic blogging.
Harry R. Lewis,
Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science,
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University
2:00PM Social media resources at Harvard, Perry Hewitt, Director,
Digital Communications and Communications Services at Harvard
University
Last updated May 18, 2011