RhetNet Cafe
A cafe. Ordinary. Beige.
Obvious exits: out to The TechnoRhetoricians' Bar and Grill
You see Stoogeway Grand Piano, Burke,
and Projectorator here.
The text below is the raw version, the stuff that came tumbling forth from the collected fingers of those present. We make no claims about eloquence or veracity above what can best be claimed by spontaneous expressions generally. This serves, at least, as a reference and a record.
But then the question is (and this question comes up below) what next? What do we do with conversations like this that are generated at a particular speed (90 mph) once the engines have cooled? There's potentially valuable stuff here, but how do we put it in accessible form?
Glance through the text. If you have ideas about what is worth bringing into the foreground and how to go about featuring it, use the form at the end to pass along your suggestions.
--Eric Crump
wleric@showme.missouri.edu
co-facilitator (with Mick Doherty, Editor of Kairos)
Guest is here.
sandyet materializes out of thin air.
Mick materializes out of thin air.
Eric [GPC] has arrived.
sandyet eaves
Mick says, "Eric! My old chum and cyberchief!"
PeteS materializes out of thin air.
PeteS waves
Jade_Guest materializes out of thin air.
Mick harrumphs PeteS. [to sandye] he'll leave as soon as he notices me, just
watch
Red_Guest materializes out of thin air.
sandyet laughs
PeteS suspects mick of crashing the maine system server last night. by sheer
power of will.
Eric says, "howdy mick!"
Mick says, "{eric} we all set? you need anything? or do i just play vanna
tonight?"
booboo materializes out of thin air.
Mick says, "Jane! Hey!"
booboo says, "Hi all!"
Eric says, "let's see, with a little more makeup, a longer dress... yeah, you
could do it!"
Eric grins
Mick laughs at Eric. I'd need to shave, too.
Eric says, "nah. Vanna with an 8 oclock shadow: sounds like a sight I'd like
to see"
Mick says, "nice crowd gathering already."
Mick says, "I would be vanna with a goatee, Eric."
Mick bows to Eric [Pat Sajakish]
Guest hello
Eric says, "sure 'nuff. I got a note from David Stodolsky, who wrote a piece
that was published in print in _The Information Society_ called: Consensus
Journals: Invitational Journals Based on Peer Review_"
cath [Doreen of the Spamketeers] materializes out of thin air.
Eric says, "which sounds right up our alley here. but dunnno if he'll be able
to attend or not. he didn't say"
Camille materializes out of thin air.
sandyet waves to cath and camille
cath waves to all
Camille waves
Guest wave
Mick says, "Cam! hearty-howdy-hey."
@linelength 65
Line length is now 65. Word wrapping is on.
Camille says, "Mick! Ca va?"
Mick invited Andrea Lunsford but will bet the student loan she
not gonna come. :<)
booboo laughs; Andrea's not big on MOOs yet.
JanetC joins ya.
Mick says, "yeah,Jane, but she' been invoked like 800 times in
the e-mail discussion."
Eric says, "well, re: yr comment on rhetnt-l, maybe we ought to
go out of our way more to invite the luminaries of the world. I
think they tend not to show up a) because they don't frequent
the same places on the net we do and b) they may not feel like
they are really invited, really part of the gang."
JanetC waves to all
booboo says, "She has? When?"
Mick says, "invoked or addressed. I can't remember which.
"
JanetC . o O ( I am not luminary?? )
JanetC sulks.
booboo says, "She didn't tell me that."
Eric [to JanetC]: nah, your just luminous
JanetC dons a light bulb
JanetC laughs at Eric [GPC].
Mick says, "no, she's just been mentioned, Jane. I'm teasing
you."
PeteS invited the entire society for utopian studies in
expectation of the annual fight over taking the journal online
at this year's conference.
Mick says, "Eric, we got a log ready to go?"
booboo blushes
PeteS says, "but nobody responded ... not even the online folks
in the society!"
Mick ignores PeteS, too.
booboo says, "I shoulda knowed that...she's always being
mentioned."
Eric [to PeteS]: wow
Eric hrumphs
Mick says, "why hrumps?"
booboo forgets Andrea's famous.
Eric [to Mick]: because nobody responded to pete's invite
PeteS says, "its okay ... it just means i get to foam at the
mouth during the luncheon at the confab this year."
JanetC says to PeteS, "Appetizing"
Claudine [Bonni of the Spamketeers] slips in quietly, waves to
all who are here.
Eric says, "I reckon we should get this show officially going
(even though it's actually already going :)"
PeteS says, "and the journal has funding for *one more year ...*"
PeteS nods janetc "thanks!"
sandyet waves to claudine
Amber_Guest materializes out of thin air.
Claudine waves to sandyet
JanetC grins at PeteS and says, "Anytime"
booboo waves to Claudine and reminds her to subscribe
Eric shows slide #1.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Welcome to RhetNet Cafe!
Like RhetNet's other venues, the point of RhetNet Cafe
to capture and continue conversations. The conversations
that happen here will become part of the RhetNet collection
of texts on the web (http://www.missouri.edu/rhetnet/).
And, depending on the subject & all, these conversations
might be appropriate for other publishing venues, print or
net. Efforts to publish these things elsewhere, though, will
happen in consultation and cooperation with the folks doing the
talking. So it's important to take a minute to introduce ourselves
here, and for guests to include their email addresses as well as
their names.
So, who are we?
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Eric is eric crump, university of missouri
booboo is Jane Lasarenko, WTAMU, aka jane@wtamu.edu
PeteS is Pete Sands, U Maine at Presque Isle
Mick is Mick Doherty, Editor, Kairos -- and tonight, Vanna to
Eric's Pat.
sandyet is sandye thompson, tx woman's u
JanetC is Janet Cross outta Northridge...CAl Stat that is
cath
cath is catherine spann, univ. of arkansas at little rock
Amber_Guest says, "I am David Ross; I teach English as a Second
Language at Houston Community College: ross_d@hccs.cc.tx.us"
JanetC snickers at Mick.
Camille is Camille Langston @Texas Woman's U
JanetC eyes Mick's wardrobe warily.
MikeS [Kairic] just barges in, no pomp, no circumstance.
MikeS waves
sandyet waves to MikeS
JanetC pomps MikeS
Mick [Vanna] introduces Mike Salvo, Texas Tech
PeteS gives mikes some circumstances
Claudine has disconnected.
JanetC laughs at PeteS.
MikeS scares claudia away
PeteS bows to janetc
JanetC boes slightly in PeteS' direction.
Mick welcomes everyone to Wheel ... of ... Rhetoric!
Eric waves to David Ross
JanetC asks for a Z, please.
MikeS apparently brought the rain to the parched south plains
and is being hailed as MikeS, Rainmaker
PeteS buys two vowels, in case he needs to share.
cath appplauds mike's accomplishments
Eric shows slide #2.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
On 23 June 1996, EduPage published the following item...
PEER REVIEW and THE INTERNET
Scientists attending a conference in Denmark sponsored by
the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) were almost unanimous in dismissing electronic challenges
to the tradition of peer review for scientific publications,
although there was also wide agreement about the benefits
of the Internet for the exchange of scientific information
(through the speeding up of peer review and the developing use of
the Internet for distribution of 'preprints' that allow 'open
peer commentary'). (The Economist 22 Jun 96)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Mick gives Pete an A and a sometimes-Y
Amber_Guest says, "OK, OK already, what's all this about Kuhn's
legacy?"
beckster [Aglow] has arrived.
Eric [to david]: janet's gonna shed light on that one :)
douglas materializes out of thin air.
MikeS [Kairic] hugs beckster [Aglow] warmly.
Mick says, "[Amber] the concept of paradigm shift is becoming
very important to online publishers. paradigms can shift
without actually disappaering ... but perhaps we'll get into
that in detail later."
Eric shows slide #3.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Some questions come immediately to mind:
What do these scientists mean by 'peer review'?
How is it different in practice and function from 'peer
commentary'?
What do we mean by 'peer review'?
How do our interpretations compare with traditional
assumptions?
What difference does the medium for scholarly work make?
How will scholarship and peer review be transformed by the
net?
If those are overriding concerns for this discussion, some
comments made this week on Rhetnt-L might serve as catalysts
for the conversation...
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
MikeS hi5s douglas.
sandyet waves to beckster and douglas
Mick hugs douglas and pats beckster's tummy
douglas lo6s MikeS (I just gotta be me)
beckster grins
traci materializes out of thin air.
douglas hugs beckster and pats Mick's tummy
PeteS says, "and what is the difference between the "challenge"
posed by e-communication, versus the speeding up of the peer
review process, which i take to be a good thing?"
beckster giggles and waves to traci
booboo says, "Does anyone know about peer review practices in
the sciences?"
Mick says, "hey! quit shifting my paradigm, dougie"
Eric [to david]: for my part, i have a hunch scholarship's most
jarring shift in the move from print to net publishing is going
to come with the effects on peer review
traci waves
JanetC ponders major chunky style lag.
Mick says, "I do, Jane ... my whole family is in academia and
I'm the only non-scientist. We compare notes allatime."
Eric waves traci beck & douglas
beckster says, "no, but they can be brutal in humanities...got
to see three colleague's review...yikes, they were *mean*"
douglas greets all.
sandyet waves to traci
booboo [to Mick]: is it analogous to the humanities' process?
mean-ness is next to godliness?
The housekeeper arrives to cart Claudine off to bed.
beckster says, "sort of like the blind review gives folks a
license to be slopppy and brutal. I sure wasn't impressed"
Pinstriped_Guest has arrived.
douglas has seen "peer reviews" of grant proposals, but not of
manuscripts (in the sciences)...
booboo [to beckster]: I know...I've received from pretty nasty
ones...worthless too in terms of constructive advice.
PeteS says, "but that's not always the case ... sometimes you
get good reviews ... helpful suggestions and all."
Mick says, "Not really, Jane -- my father is on the edboard of 7
or 8 journals and he says what he's looking for is mostly data
to test. we seem much more interested in stylistic comments,
which makes sense, I guess."
booboo [to Mick]: that's what I figured.
douglas says, "Query: why _is_ the peer review process blind? "
Mick got a brutal "nyahh nyahh, you suck" from Rhetocric Review
yesterday.
Eric says, "so is that what peer review has become: brutal
filtering? is that what print-based scholars are trying to
protect? I bet they wouldn't put it those terms :)"
beckster nods to booboo...I was familiar w/ one colleague's
work, and the reviewer only read first and last chunk....made
suggestions about info *included* in middle!!
Eric [to douglas]: objectivity (which folks still seem to
believe in)
booboo got a comment that she didn't include recent enough
criticism--her sources were only two years prior!
Mick says, "Douglas, it isn't always."
MikeS says, "but pete, doesn't the blind part of blind review
encourage unnecessarily harsh critique? i know the interactive
model *kairos* has developed drives some reviewers crazy ...
but no one has been (obviously) mean "
Camille says, "Maybe our peer review seems more brutal because
we focus on style (as Mick mentioned), which makes our writing
more personal than the sciences' search for data"
beckster [to Eric]: I used to think blind reviews made it easier
for folks to get good quality feedback...but I'm really
questioning that now
Mick says, "[MikeS] yet our editorial board is begging for
changes."
booboo feels bad...she never got any stylistic criticism.
MikeS [to Mick]: 2/16ths
Mick likes camille's point a LOT.
PeteS says, "i didn't say it didn't mike. just saying "don't
totalize." i've gotten really helpful blind review before ...
and awful reviews from people who werent doing it blind."
beckster nods to mikes....thinks that the "dialogic" review
Kairos uses is MUCH more beneficial....both sides feel a
responsibility
Pinstriped_Guest has left.
douglas doesn't grace traci's comment with a response. And says
to Eric, I know it isn't always (as I've experienced with
_Kairos_!) but what I'm asking is what is the rational for
_any_ peer review to be blind?
MikeS nods to petes, advocate o' satan
Mick says, "[MikeS] so suddenly your a fan of majority rules?
:<) acutally, 3/9. Er, 1/3."
MikeS [Kairic] grins.
beckster [to Camille]: but a lot of the critiques I've seen are
also about content
booboo says, "Strikes me that most peer review constitutes
opportunities for reviewers to blow their own horns and
critical positions...rarely have I seen review comments that
help the writer improve her position."
Camille says, "Doesn't blind peer review remove subjectivity?"
beckster nodsnodsnods booboo
Red_Guest has left.
Mick aaaaughs Camille
traci has disconnected.
Mick says, "remove subjectivity?"
Camille agrees with beckster's comment on content
JanetC asks Camille, "Can anything remove subjectivity...and if
so....would that be a good thing?"
Eric says, "i think the problem with blind review--and with any
review in which reviewers remain uncredited--is that writers
and reviewers are put in oppositional relation to each other. "
MikeS says, "devil's advocate -- advocate o' satan -- was trying
to be flip and apparently failed ;-}"
booboo says, "Well, Mick, I wonder how many negative reviews
Andrea's gotten if the reviewer knows she's the author."
Mick says, "making reviews blind *allows* for MORE subjectivity,
I'd think."
traci has connected.
beckster [to Camille]: NOTHING removes subjectivity. But I
think that's what the aim was. we were just naive enough to
buy into that
booboo nods Eric
PeteS says, "i know mike, that's why the*page*"
Eric says, "they might both hope for quality, but it seems (my
impression anyway) that reviewers are loyal to the Discipline
and writers are loyal to the topic at hand and to the audience
Out There"
MikeS [Kairic] grins.
douglas [to booboo]: but if the peer-review process was made
available, perhaps some of those reviewers would find it in
their own best interests to do a good job (available to the
end-readers, that is).
Mick says, "{jane} oh, you know, i was thinking double-blind
--the author no t knowing who the reviewers are. which allows
for more leeway to be harsh."
beckster [to Eric]: I think reviewers are loyal to their OWN
subjective viewpoints more than the discipline!
Mick oohs Eric "Out There" ... tres positivist!
PeteS likes eric's phrasing there.
Eric can't remember which slide was which now, so just for the
sake of healthy randomness...
Camille says, "Well, let's see, who has a better chance of being
positivly reviewed? Camille Nobody or Great God of Rhetoric?"
Eric says, "I'm going to pitch em out there now and again just
to see what happens"
beckster giggles at camille
JanetC chuckles at Eric [GPC].
Mick votes for Cam.
booboo says, "I *thought*, obviously mistakenly, that the
reviewers were "blind"
PaulaP materializes out of thin air.
Eric [to beckster]: so the Protection of the Discipline ploy is
just that, a ploy?
JanetC laughs at booboo.
Mick says, "That depends, booboo. Sometimes it's single-blind,
sometimes it's double-blind. I'm not sure which is worse."
Eric says, "hi paula"
booboo says, "I also think it's a way of ensuring that certain
authors continue to get published while others are silenced."
MikeS wonders why print journals are so derned nervous if
on-line peer review can (ostensibly) be so easily rebuked and
invalidated? methinks (s)he doth protest too much.
JanetC wonders at a discipline which needs protextion...hmmm...mu
st not be very strong on its own merit
PaulaP says, "hey Cath Hello Eric "
Eric shows slide #4.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Suzanne Cherry:
The question then becomes, how do we convince colleagues of
the quality of our communities and communication? How do we
prove ourselves? How do we receive validation? Those are harder
questions and ones I'm not sure I can answer.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
beckster [to Eric]: Based on my limited experience, I'd say so.
and it's a function of how specialized folks are, as well as
the pressure for them to publish, etc. as individuals rather
than members of a community
Mick says, "Ah, validations. What *Counts*???"
Eric says, "oh. btw, the rest of the slides are from notes
grabbed off rhetnt-l by mr mick"
douglas [to booboo]: it seems that most often both sides are
blind-but why not (aside from logistics) have both a blind and
interactive peer review process, one following the other? That
way there are no immediate judgements made based on the
author'sethos, and then the reviewers will be more likely to
contribute constructive criticism in the following phase...
Claudine [Bonni of the Spamketeers] slips in quietly, waves to
all who are here.
Eric says, "oh. that worked out good. take mick's last comment
as one answer to suzanne"
Mick bows gracefully and reveals the last letter of the puzzle
... _Crumpean_Methodologies_
MikeS has disconnected.
Eric laughs
booboo [to douglas]: I agree...I'm proposing that process now
for an online journal.
beckster nods to douglas...at least as a starting point. But
I'm unconvinced as to the consistency of blind reviews.....
Eric figures with RhetNet, we simply say that *conversations we
find interesting count* and if traditional scholars don't
agree, they don't have to play
sandyet has disconnected.
sandyet has connected.
MikeS has connected.
MikeS [Kairic] sighs.
MikeS got disconnected
Eric says, "that is, *participation in conversations* counts (in
terms of professional development, if not advance)"
booboo says, "I also think we need to present more papers at
traditional conferences...inform our colleagues of the work
that's being done on the net."
Claudine sympathizes with Sandye and Mike
beckster nods to booboo
Mick says, "Okay, Eric, I will Play Grumpy Old Traditionalist
..."
booboo says, "Drag em in to take a look."
PaulaP nod
Eric [to booboo]: yeah, like the Kairoi did so nicely at C&W in
logan!
beckster says, "and advertise our e-publications in other ways,
too"
booboo grins
Eric [to Mick]: fire away !
beckster grins at mick
JanetC pokes the grumpy ole trad
Mick says, "[to Eric] "Conversations" COnversations? What's this
mean on your vitae? You hazve a plae called conversations?
Tenure ... DENIED!"
douglas says, "Interactive pee-review seems like a good idea
(and this goes on to address Suzane's auery as well) if the
reviewers are recognised as "experts" in the fields and
subjects they review, then they will be more likely to protect
their reputations as such by giving constructive criticism, and
the resultant paper will be percieved as being validated by the
veritable seal of approval from those reviewers."
Eric puts up his dukes
PeteS says, "of course, there *are* books and papers out there
in trad forums calling for more electronic scholarship
already...."
Eric [to Mick]: fine. don't want no stinkin tenure anyway if
it's going to be that way about it
Mick .oO(pee-review?)
Eric says, "no wait. I can do better than that..."
beckster nods to douglas...THERE's the *ethos* that blind
reviewed articles seem to have
MikeS decides to be juvenile and laffs at silly typos
beckster says, "seems to me if these folks are experts, they'll
be responsible enough to give good advice whether blind or
dialogic"
Eric says, "I think what we're valuing is really the *same
thing* that scholars have always valued. They don't call it
conversation, they call it publication, but *that's what
publication IS*"
JanetC says to Mick, "Welp. Good that you be upfromt cause who
would want to work for you, you ole GRUMP"
Mick says, "you better do better than that eric -- lots of
people in this room probably DO want tenure someday, i bet."
booboo nods to Eric
douglas sends mikeS his "sample bottle" for expert pee-review.
PeteS says, "but they *do* call it conversation ... its one of
the most popular metaphors around for scholarship, eric."
douglas agrees with Eric 100%
JanetC says to Mick, "Actually the admins I know and have met
simply aren't like that....times *are* changing...somewhat"
booboo says, "Ah, but there's the crunch, they call it that and
nod their heads until we who engage try to call it that too."
MikeS says, "long, drawn out, impenetrable, unbearable print
based conversation ;-)"
Mick says, "But this, Pete -- this here, this MOO right now --
this really is formatted like a conversation, juvenile
pee-=review jokes and all. This, I the Traditionalist Saith,
Doth Not Counteth."
PaulaP says, "i know that the new technical writing grad prof
here was not only hired for her Contributions to the dialogues
but also for "
Eric says, "so what we can argue is that--as different as they
may appear at first--scholarly conversations on the net are
actually strongly rooted in scholarly conversations in print.
they differ in speed, in convention, in citation, but they are,
at heart, the same thing"
PeteS says, "taylor and erbin ... though ... even call MUDing
and other e-forms a *responsibility* for scholars today."
booboo [to Eric]: right.
PaulaP says, "her ability to work between academia and the "real
world""
JanetC says to Mick, "Try to refute a more foraml "traditional"
paper built on this convo though"
PeteS says, "and they do that in a pretty traditional forum ...
a greenwood press book."
Mick auuuggghs "real world"
Camille says, "So, I'm getting that collaboration (positive peer
review) is to be equated with e-journals, whereas individualism
(negative peer review) is equated with print journals. I think
this is what everyone is saying, but I'm wondering how true
these bi-polar assertions hold."
Eric says, "so we create a conversational scholarly journal and
call conversation publication. now we're even speaking their
language :)"
beckster nods to eric
Eric [to PeteS]: good point they got there
JanetC says to Mick, "Look, you ole buffalo! You be way behind
the times, and the people in the dept are laughing at you"
MikeS [Kairic] nods at Camille.
Mick says, "Camille, I like the polarity you draw there, because
it really supports the idea Tari brought up in the e-mail
conversation ..."
booboo [to Eric]: right; we need to do some swift pr work
PeteS says, "[to eric] my point is that i think the pendulum has
already swung."
Mick says, "That we, in talking about this stuff, sound
*arrogant* -- like e-journals are *better* than print journals."
Claudine nods in agreement with booboo
booboo agrees with PeteS somewhat
Mick says, "[JanetC] ah,but i have tenure and you do not."
beckster [to Camille]: I'm sure there's a lot more grey area
than that....didn't mean to dichotomize. I was just wondering
why peer-reviewed pub. were so valued when the review process
can be downright shoddy
MikeS says, "each print convention is good at its own thing --
print is a slow moving, fairly dependable form. i'd like to
kep it for what it's good for."
douglas [to Mick]: but they are better!
Mick doesnt really have tenure -- his Old Grumpy Traditionalist
character got it back in '47 tho.
PeteS nods mikes ... sanity
beckster [to Mick]: don't you think that's a defensive reaction??
Mick says, "Doug! they are NOT!"
Camille thinks e-journals certaintly have the potential to be
better
booboo will get tenure but only cuz the Deans and admin are more
open to the scholarly work being done on the net than her
colleagues.
PeteS wonders why "better" instead of *different*
sandyet nods PeteS
Eric [to booboo]: yeah! traditionally the academy shuns
'marketing' but that's a big part of reputation and influence.
it's not just doing important things, but attracting attention
to those things too!
Jade_Guest says, "why should one be "better" than the other?"
douglas [to booboo]: actually interactive peeR review can be
instantiated in print journals--it just takes more work. And I
haven't seen it done in either the humanities or the sciences.
MikeS says, "print has a 1000 years of experince on e-jourals.
compaing them just ain't fair"
beckster cheers booboo and her deans!
Mick says, "they're different. they do different things. don't
introduce the word "better" or the converstation stops dead,
like at Victor's panel at the confernce last month."
Eric nods mick
beckster nods to mick
Mick says, "[beckster] BooBoo and teh Deans? Weren't the a
1950's Doo-wop group?"
booboo nods and adds they serve different purposes..both valid
and necessary
beckster rolls her eyes at mick
PeteS wonders if booboo means doowop or the deans
Claudine laughs at the juxtaposition of mick and booboo's last
two commnts
beckster says, "amen about them being different but equally
valuable"
Eric has to go wipe a certain little bottom. brb. but will leave
you with...
Mick says, "right, but still, in TPR committess, the one with
traditon is *valued* more ... for whatever reason. "
Eric shows slide #5.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Mark Gellis:
We can also use a little "blackmail." If any of them would
be willing, why not get some of the really big names in one of
the more conservative areas of English studies, to publish
'e-version only" articles...for anyone in that field, an
article by such a big name is a must, and it would force them to
use the technology to get a copy. It would also be a strong
argument in forcing them to accept e-publishing (via the credibility of
the big name...if they accept it, it must be okay).
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
beckster giggles at Eric's possible pee-review
Camille says, "But if e-jounals do not strive for improvement,
won't they be the same as print journals only electronic?"
Mick stands and applauds Mark Gellis (in absentia)
PeteS lol at beckster
booboo says, "Well, Kairos did that with Andrea, no?"
MikeS [Kairic] nods.
Mick nods vigorously. It's called Ethos-Leeching
douglas says, "comparing print and e-journals may or may not be
useful, but the peer-review questions we are addressing are
really germane to both venues."
booboo says, "I know...I use her for lots of stuff!"
MikeS says, "yeah -- it was the most-hit article. but i wonder
what that accomplished, really ..."
beckster says, "or guilt by association...:-)"
PeteS says, "there's a pedantic name for it already, mick? how
*traditional*"
Mick says, "it bought us some readers, Mike. That was the goal."
booboo says, "I think that accomplishes a lot."
JanetC waits for Andrea to MOO before she decides....
PeteS says, "as i recall from the time you were working on it
mike, that was what you set as your goal."
MikeS says, "but that wasn't the only goal -- borrowed ethos for
kairos, yes ... but also to change perceptions of on-line pub."
Mick admits that compared to Cousin Eric's RhetNet, Kairos is
pretty traditional ... but it's a spectrum
beckster says, "and, frankly, wasn't andrea pursued because of
her openness to this kind of forum?"
booboo says, "Marketing, unfortunately, is the key, and we need
to seriously address the kind(s) of review processes that will
gain us the most publicity, respect"
Claudine has disconnected.
JanetC notes that Lunsford is KNOWN for pushing boudaries...so?
Try getting..hmm...some ole goat like that grumpy trad dude on.
JanetC points at Mick-the-traditionalist.
Claudine has connected.
booboo says, "Well, you use what's available, no?"
douglas thinks one of the main benefits of e-journals is seeing
how *any* type of publishing may be different from the
traditional models currently in use (and I use the word
currently rather losely here).
MikeS agrees with janetc
PeteS says, "a lot of the grumpy ole goats are on listserv ...
why not Kairos?"
PaulaP says, "i never remember these things "
booboo says, "The grumpy goats won't get on until the Andreas
do."
beckster [to booboo]: do you think review process overshadows
big names? Or is the other way around? Just wondering....coul
d we establish ourselves as respectable despite our review
process??
Mick says, "[Grumpy Traditionalist] not a chance? Why shold I
learn technology I'm never gonna use?"
Jade_Guest says, "will good marketing help us to change the
tenure processes? or will it just get us known?"
Eric says, "mick's an interesting critter: a radical
traditionalist. or is that a traditional radicalist? "
Eric mulls that one for a bit
beckster wonders if the grumpy goats will *ever* get on
booboo says, "I want to establish ourselves as respectable
*because* of our review processes"
Mick laughs Eric. I like that.
booboo says, "However different from what currently exists that
they are."
JanetC thinks grumpy ole goats are on listservs so they can
flame....
beckster [to Jade_Guest]: my guess is that it'll get us known,
which can't hurt in tenure review
PeteS nods janetc
Eric says, "known is good"
traci says, "depends upon what you're known for"
Eric figures it's better to be notorious than ignored
booboo agrees with Eric
JanetC says, "They don't even seem to realize how many laugh at
what they say...but they get their...umm...jollies..."
beckster nods to eric....knows of some folks w/ tenure who
circumvented the "traditional" and still got tenure w/ no book,
etc.
douglas [to booboo]: I think that's a good idea--and I think an
interactive review process can add to the respectability
quotient if it is properly exploited.
MikeS prefers infamous -- you have to have critics if you're
going to stick your neck out
Mick wonders about this concept: Eric and I briefly discussed
teh idea of putting *this* MOO up for review with CCC or RR or
some such. Knowing that, do you suddenly change your tone of
contribution? (We would get permissions from all involved
first, of course -- but the question stands)
Jade_Guest says, "or will we just be known as that "on the
periphery" group?"
booboo nods to douglas
PeteS says, "why not Pre/text ... "
booboo agrees wholeheartedly if we take out references to booboo
and the Deans.
PeteS says, "challenge them to challenge another boundary ...
them? him."
Claudine [to Jade_Guest]: doubt that--numbers are growing, and
time is on our side here.
douglas [to Mick]: would you edit out the scatalogical comments
or leave them in?
MikeS would be *more* outrageous
traci says, "well, i wouldn't have said what i just said. i
woulda just stayed quiet"
Mick says, "See! That's exactly mypoint. I made a pee-review
joke. Do we edit that out?"
JanetC ponders traditional rattlesnakes-in-the-grass
booboo says, "NO~!"
beckster [to Mick]: undoubtedly, if we knew this was *destined*
for print, the tone would change.....hey, we're rhetoricians....
we understand about audience, purpose, etc.
Eric says, "and this can work to our advantage in more ways than
one. what if you become known as a scholar who risks publishing
in these weird e-journals. perhaps a department full of old
school scholars will sail your CV into the circular file, BUT:
would you want to work with that gang? wouldn't your interests
be thwarted at every turn? wouldn't you have to wait for them
all to retire before you could have fun? "
PeteS thinks it depends ... is it an article or a transcript?
JanetC exclaims to Mick, "NO WAY!"
Mick nods beck. I like that distinction
booboo [to beckster]: good point
MikeS [Kairic] nods at beckster [Aglow].
Eric says, "NOOOOO thanks. I *want* to be screen out of
situations where I would be screened out"
traci says, "i don't think i'd be able to write at all really"
Camille agrees with Eric
Eric [to beckster]: this is destined for print
MikeS says, "good point, eric"
Jade_Guest says, "if everyone knew this was going to print,
would the comments about andrea change??"
beckster grins at eric
Eric waits to see how beckster's tone changes :)
douglas agrees with beckster--at this point if we want something
like this published, then we'd have to really work on it. Maybe
in the future we could leave the banter in to a greater extent.
booboo [to Eric]: I agree, but I also feel that you can only
change the system from within...if you're out, you don't have a
say anymore.
Claudine [to Eric]: "so do you edit or not, if it's destined for
print?
beckster glows a safe, faint peach now
Mick says, "beck, that takes us nback to Cam's earlier point
though -- we think differntly about e-space if we know it may
be "destined" for print. The reverse is not true. E-journals
are the little sibling on the block in that regard."
Eric [to booboo]: I used to think that too. I'm no longer
convinced.
JanetC says, "Andrea would be sorely disappointed if that were
the case...."
PaulaP says, "PeteS it seems to me it would be more of a
transcript than an article...."
beckster nods to douglas....would imagine that, as these types
of snippets are more accepted in print, the tone won't change
as much
booboo [to Eric]: I'm not that convinced either...seems I don't
have much of a say regardless.
Mick says, "Leave the banter? Wouldn't that be *misrepresenting
* moospace to readers of the journal? (print journal) ... then
if they visit, they end up "this isn't what i thot ... i'm
outta here""
Eric [to booboo]: I'm beginning to think that institutions only
change in response to pressure from without. the people within
are put to work enacting those changes, but they don't provoke
them
PeteS says, "[to paulap] then you can't edit it all. period.
ever. nada edit."
JanetC says, "Ya gonna edit the life outta the conversation?
Where does it stop?"
Claudine noods to mick--good point
MikeS says, "well, in working with andrea, i sent her some
rather ... interesting ... and racy comments at times (the
nature of collaboration i guess) and since i didn't pretned to
be something i'm not when i *worked* with her, i wouldn't
change when talking about "her" -- talk about ethos, eh?"
beckster [to Eric]: we knew when we did the MOO for the history
of C&W book it was destined for print. folks were on their
toes, but we still had a great conversation
Eric [to PaulaP]: or a trascripticle
Claudine says, "not even spelling, eric?"
Eric says, "transcripticle"
Mick .o((my managing editor was racy with andrea lunsford?)
Eric says, "gotta add that to mick's interactive historiography
page, heh"
beckster giggles at transcripticle
beckster [to Mick]: like you wouldn't believe....:-)
PaulaP giggles
PeteS wonders if there is dangling transcripticle around here
somewhere ...
JanetC rolls her eyes at spillink pulice.
booboo says, "I think it would be a good idea to publish a MOO
transcript"
MikeS [to booboo]: see intermoo, k 1.1, k 1.2 ;-)
mday [The Cognomial] materializes out of thin air.
Camille thinks the MOO transcript is the "different" we were
talking about
Mick says, "I'm trying to picture "writing" this for CCC. Would
Eric's metniong of the interactive historigraphy need a
footnote which explained it>? O an URL in the footnote?"
beckster [to booboo]: they have been published here and
there.....but they are tougher to read in print than as they're
generated
mday waves. Is sposed to be cooking dinner. Sigh
Mick nods thoughtfully to MikeS
Jade_Guest says, "would those not used to this be interested in
this transcript? or would they find the "wading through" not
worth it?"
cath agrees w/beckster
booboo [to MikeS]: Where?
MikeS Agrees with beckster re: reading
Eric [to beckster]: yeah. but I think we kinda forgot about its
destination after a while. or at least that's how I remember
it. it's been a while
Eric waves mday
Amber_Guest says, "I don't know about publishing a MOO
transcript. What would the reader get out of ti that he/she
couldn't find in an editied transcript of a conversation?"
MikeS [to booboo]: kairos publishes moo-based interviews, called
intermoo
Eric shows slide #6.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Albert Rouzie:
Maybe the notion of competing with print doesn't get us
where we want to go. We keep talking about how conversational
genres like e-mail are different--hypertext too--from print.
Competiton levels those differences when in fact the new media
are valuable precisely because they accomplish new forms of
communication. Acceptance will be gradual, driven perhaps by citation,
participation, and maybe most of all, need for the knowledge
produced (and the process of production) by the new genres.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
beckster says, "my guess is that, if these types of things are
destined for print, they'll need to be edited so that they are
easier for non-MOOers to follow"
mday says, "the sense of freshness of the ideas as they happened
and intertwined with other ideas, for one."
Amber_Guest says, "I find MOO transcripts very hard to read, and
I don't think that the difficulty points out to anything
particularly profound about the nature of the text."
PaulaP says, "i've used parts of IRC transcripts for papers but
never my moo conversations "
booboo says, "Right, but it's still online, not in print"
Eric [to david]: I think moo sessions really have to be edited
down *some* and have to be accompanied by interpretive
commentary of some kind.
Jade_Guest says, "if we criticize the internet for trying to
push print classic on it, why are we trying to push print
digital on print??"
PaulaP agrees with Eric on that one
booboo [to Eric]: Right. I wasn't suggesting publishing a raw
MOO transcript alone.
beckster [to PaulaP]: we went crazy trying to edit IRc
transcripts...finally gave up
Mick says, "there's the point i was making above, in rouzie's
comment -- is it all about citation? so when we write for print
we cite e-journlas? and that will enact the legitimation?"
Eric [to david]: there's too much of the moment here. taken out
of its (real)time, the conversation is sapped of its native
energy, which informs its meaning
Camille thinks most who read print journals are used to a linear
style and would be confused by the MOO's circular nature
Amber_Guest says, "I think that the very fact that I am
responding to something that occurred perhaps a dozen lines
above in the transcript indicates that a "pure" MOO transcript
would be very maddening to read."
beckster Nods to eric re: added context
Mick applauds Jade
Eric says, "same for putting it on the web, which we plan to do.
still froze. still needs help."
mday says, "Amber you might want to look at http://english.ttu.ed
u/kairos/1.2/coverweb/dis.html"
cath says, "even rereading a MOO transcript you were present at
is harder than when it was happening"
MikeS [to Jade_Guest]: why should the two be separate? on-line,
we rfer to print publications all the time -- it's about time
digital was recognized
douglas says, "one way to help Albert's economy of knowledge
production along is to have all of us (and everyone we can get
to agree to it) sign a pact stating that we will all ONLY
publish online (of course, then we lose non-wired audiences and
that would be bad. so forget I suggested this.)"
PaulaP says, "beckster What I ended up doing was editing out all
the things like people leaving and joining.... but the content
of the conversation"
PeteS says, "when i cited an url in my diss. i was told it was
"cute"!"
booboo says, "Ugh! You're kidding! That's awful."
PaulaP says, "i was following was in the transcript which was
attached as an appendix"
Eric says, "I like albert's comment: value comes from need. when
the knowledge produced and stored online-only becomes worth
coming after, those in power will come after it and reward will
follow"
Jade_Guest says, "yes, mikes, but why try to put something in a
form not natural for it (moo transcripts) into a foreign place?"
Straight from the middle of the Pacific Ocean, here's Judi.
JanetC finds MOO transcripts MUCh easier to read than most
critical theory thankyouverymuch
beckster [to PaulaP]: we were trying to chunk comments, and it
drove us nuts
Eric grins at pete & his cute cite
beckster nods to eric and albert
Claudine grins at janetc
booboo nods to beckster, eric, and albert
Mick tried chunking K's first intermoo and ending up screaming
at the computer screen. MikeS was there to see it.
MikeS [to Jade_Guest]: ahh, i see ... but isn't print classic
forced on digital pub. as "THE standard"?
traci says, "define chunking?"
Camille thinks chunking is destructive
beckster giggles at mick....woulda liked to have seen it
Eric wonders: so, is *this* valuable in terms of a broader
audience than us? does it need to be?
MikeS laffed and laffed
douglas [to Jade_Guest]: re mikes--why put print articles online
(albeit chopped up) and call it hypertext? or interactive text?
That sword is double-edged.
beckster [to traci]: for us it was grouping like ideas/comments/t
opics
Jade_Guest says, "yes, but can't we think of another way? why
is that the only option??"
PeteS says, "mike, weren't you just saying print *is* the
standard, based on thousands of years of experience?"
Mick says, "[traci] collecting relevant comments into more
manageable lexia or units ... collapsing one person's five
comments into one ... removing extraneous detail ... stuff like
that."
Jade_Guest says, "i agree, douglas"
booboo says, "I don't think *this* needs to be valuable to any
outside of us, but I do think it *can* be valuable."
beckster [to Eric]: not necessarily. This forum might be like
small group discussion vs. large group....one feeds into the
other, and neither is more important
MikeS says, "uh-huh ... is there an apparent contradiction? (i
contain multitudes ...)"
Mick is perplexed by booboo's comment
JanetC wonders what would happen if each one of us took this log
and did SOMETHING with it....then compared notes....
cath ponders janet's idea
PeteS thinks mike should can the whitman and sell it.
booboo says, "Interesting idea, Janet"
Claudine says, "wait a sec--as teachers, do any of you who teach
in the moo accept transcripts as finished work? I mean, isn't
this a starting place?"
Eric nods booboo and beck, notes that some print journals are
really just forums for narrow academic interests, too. small
groups.
Jade_Guest says, "if we're trying to "market" what we do to
benefit us, cramming it down their throats in a manner hard to
handle isn't the answer. packaging is important"
Mick is scared by Janet's idea. He would be known worldwide as
the Grumpy Old Traditionalist who favored pee-reivew
PaulaP would be the first to admit that she doesn't have the
time between working at IBM and working on her thesis
PeteS nods claudine.
JanetC nods vigorously in agreement with Claudine [Bonni of the
Spamketeers]'s ideas.
Eric would pay good money for some of mike's canned whitman!
Claudine says, "don't you expect revision *after* the ideas are
generated here?"
beckster [to Claudine]: I used to *require* collaborative final
exams on Interchange....similar to MOO disucssions
beckster giggles at mick...you're branded!
Eric [to Mick]: it's a done deal. we're going to refer to you as
that from now on :)
JanetC says to Claudine [Bonni of the Spamketeers], ""Ans so I
think we would all do some different stuff..."
PeteS is starting to worry about eric ... first my cute cite and
now mike's canned whitman....
Mick <-- grumpy old academic traditonalist (g.o.a.t.)
booboo [to Claudine]: not necessarily. I mean, I don't want to
limit the function of these discussions to brainstorming alone.
Claudine wants to hear more from beckster
mday rolls the log of this session up in a crepe and eats it.
douglas [to Claudine]: so if we view the moo as process, we
should nevertheless not lose sight of the creation of a
"product"...
PaulaP says, "CLaudine: BarryM accepts mooo transcripts as part
of papers "
beckster lol at mick
MikeS thinks there's a difference between on-line, hypertext
writing and MOO writing. MOO is more akin to conference
discussions. i don't know .... i don't know how much credit
can be given to MOO scripts. for instance, all the hours i've
spent on tuesday cafe ... how could i count *that*?
Mick nods vigorously at douglas
JanetC challenges ya all to find out the value of MOO
transcripts...
mday says, "Well you can count it as membership in a community,
and productive discussion."
Mick puts it in the "Professional Organizations" section of his
vitae, MikeS
beckster [to MikeS]: but haven't those hourse resulted in many,
many other types o' projects?
Eric [to Claudine]: I don't like the idea of revision as
refinement. I'd rather we thought in terms of continuing,
expanding, dissipating from here rather than turning around and
fiddling with this particular bunch of words. better, I think,
to keep after the ideas and let the words trail after us like a
wake
Claudine [to PaulaP]: Yes, as *part*--but the product notion is
what i guess i'm after here
booboo says, "I count it as active engagement with the issues
and movement of my field!"
Eric shows slide #7.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Do not seek to follow
in the footsteps of the
men of old; seek what they
sought.
Basho
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
traci says, "doesn't " MOO is more akin to conference
discussions." <-- that depend upon the moo discussion?"
beckster nods to booboo and mday
PaulaP says, "Cath hmmmm I wonder if we could get Barry to
accept that as part of our work?"
Mick did not do THAT slide!
booboo says, "Yeah basho!"
Eric chuckles
douglas [to MikeS]: I put "particpant in the Netoric Project on
my vita. I think it should count, ergo, for me it does.
beckster says, "I think we have to be careful NOT to claim it as
more valuable than it is"
Eric cheers douglas
Mick says, "Douglas, c'mon. The people hiring or promoting you
will decide if it counts. Not you."
MikeS says, "oh yeah, tuesday has been an ever-increasing source
of inspiration. and i know i'll have a special regard for
everyone i've worked with at tuesday ... but are we doing the
wrong thing by trying to get it recognized? i mean, won't such
acceptance just KILL the interaction?"
MikeS [Kairic] nods at traci.
Mick eyes Eric warily. This is where he and I part ways, bitterly
booboo says, "But, Beck, our time is very valuable as are our
ideas and our sharing and our collaborations. That's pretty
important."
Eric says, "what basho says: that's kind of what I'm trying to
get at by drawing the comparison between conversation and
publication"
beckster says, "but we have to inform those on the P/T
committees what these types of things are equivelant too"
cath [to PaulaP]: I've been thinking of including a moo
discussion fragment or 2 in my thesis - I'm sure he would
acceopt, just not sure if the various deans would ;-)
douglas [to Mick]: I have to decide that it's important first,
or it wouldn't appear on my vita. And it's not the *only* thing
on there--I just treat it as important.
Camille says, "Isn't the MOO conversation as valuable as the
wine parties in Dene's room at CWC?"
mday says, "some of what we learn here finds its way into other
projects. For me a lot does."
booboo says, "No, we have to convince committees of the worth of
whatever these things are, not establish equivalencies. We do,
however, you're right, have to speak their language somewhat."
Mick follows doug's logic. but *where* on your vita?
PaulaP says, "cath: yeah... I know he's working on Dean Hansen
to get them to accept hypertext theses"
Eric says, "in other words, we *must* break free of the shackles
of print *convention* but we don't need to (and probably
wouldn't want to) leave behind the broad social function of
scholarly interaction. "
beckster [to booboo]: so are conversations at conferences, but
no one claims those. I'm not saying this is equal exactly,
just that we shouldn't overstate it
Mick adds "Grigarian Wine-Tasting, Logan UT 1996" to his vita
mday says, "well, could be more valuable as it's all written
down. You can word process it and even run a search for key
words."
MikeS says, "but mick, a depatment isn't going to hire one of us
*because* we're cafe folk. but if it's there ... i don't know
what it woyuld do -- eric? douglas?"
beckster giggles
booboo [to Mick]: I put it in under scholarly activity.
Mick hopes everyone knows he is in his usual role as devil's
advocate.
Claudine checks eric's wrists for shackle-burns, finds none,
moves on
beckster says, "I think it shows we're active, productive
members of our field...IF it's included w/ other types of
things"
mday advocates devilishness
booboo says, "right."
JanetC grins at Claudine [Bonni of the Spamketeers].
beckster [to Mick]: you protest too much, me thinks...
Camille shows her horns
mday says, "Yes, good to have this as part of a wied range of
activities, Beck."
PeteS suspects mick doesn't have a paper copy of his vita
Eric grins at claudine
Mick {as Grumpy Old Traditionalist] Bah! I don't put "Had good
conversation in Milwaukee with people over beer" on my vitae!
traci [to MikeS]: some depts would hire you because of internet
activities such as the cafe
JanetC says to beckster [Aglow], "I don't know about overvaluing
MOO...I think the value will vary for everyone here."
PeteS says, "shoulda had more beer."
mday can't update them vitae fast enough.
douglas [to Mick]: where on my vita? I don't remember. But you
can look it up at http://localsonly.wilmington.net/~eymand/vita.
htm (and I put that on every print copy of my vita as well.
Mick ooohs PeteS ... good call!!!
Mick blushes
booboo [to Mick,]: true, but you don't converse at a convention
every week either.
MikeS still sees folks who use WP5.1 putting down "CAI pedagogy"
on vitaes -- i think that mis-representation is something we
should think about asa well
JanetC says to beckster [Aglow], "And my thesis committee ok-ed
my web page and DaMOO as part of my thesis."
beckster says, "right, and you can actually give a url for the
MOO conversations for your vita"
mday says, "well. these MOO sessions are archived too. there's
proof that it happened, who was there, and what was said."
Eric says, "there are differences, mick. these conversations are
regular/professionally oriented/ and RECORDED! "
Claudine groans at that, MikeS
PeteS says, "mike aren't you confusing a particular software
tool w/the pedagogy itself?"
Mick hmmms Eric.
mday has MOO URLs linked
Amber_Guest says, "Well, folks, I gott a go tend to a colicky
baby - but I enjoyed the discussion, and I applaud you for
judiciously not misapplying Thomas Kuhn (I assume that was the
Kuhn whose legacy you referred to!)"
beckster [to MikeS]: that's a dif. cafe...:-)
JanetC says to beckster [Aglow], "If I hadn't valued my work
there...and insisted, I wouildn't have been able to make it
count."
beckster feels for amber
Eric [to mday]: and that makes a HUGE difference in terms of
scholarly value
PaulaP says, "JanetC Congrats.... The UALR OWL is my thesis well
part of it "
Mick says, "So it's recorded. and people can go look. i'm not
sure that's an issue. i mean, i think it should be -- but agian
the PTR folk don't *go* look."
Amber_Guest has disconnected.
The housekeeper arrives to remove Amber_Guest.
Claudine says, "isn't there one more disadvantage to referring
folks to these archives, mday? isn't this an "in" crowd with
"inside lines" e.g. Tari..."
beckster [to Mick]: they don't? I'll be SOME do
MikeS says, "i think we're stuck in the hybrid moment -- we have
to publish in print and on-line to get anything respected"
beckster nods to mikes
Mick can't write linearly very well any more after two years of
hypertext only.
Eric says, "that was an early impetus for rhetnet: to capture
network conversations that otherwise are scattered around in
archives here & there: their value eroded not by lack of
quality but by inaccessibility. thus, rhetnet's *archival
intent*"
booboo says, "But publishing in print will potentially bring
more and more scholars online as well."
MikeS [Kairic] nods at booboo.
cath [Doreen of the Spamketeers] . o O ( our fate is to straddle
the paradigm shift\ )
beckster doesn't believe mick
douglas [to Mick]: but maybe if we edit this and publish in CCC
or RR, then the PTR people may be shown its professional value
and perhaps a few will start going (if you virtually build it
-- and physically bill it-- they will come)
beckster nods to booboo
MikeS wants to plug his new spot at C&C again ... hybridity
PaulaP is getting better at writing linearly again.... IBM
doesn't like on-line help that doesn't make Linear sense
Jade_Guest says, "doesn't this urge to archive everything tend
to go against the spirit of hypertext?"
Mick favors archiving, sure. That was the impetus for Kairos a
year ago. But htat brings us back to peer-review ... the K
stuff is peer reivewed and archived. This stuff isn't
peer-reviewed ... and it's archived. a weird juxtaposing.
beckster says, "yes.....I agree, douglas. We need to spout
about/quote from these things in trad. print, too"
PeteS says, "i think books like the cyberreader will do more to
bring people online than a straight transcript."
JanetC nods to beckster [Aglow] and says, "No doubt..."
Mick nods douglas. That's *exactly* what NickC said on list two
days ago.
booboo says, "Then we need to collaborate on more cyberreaders."
Eric [to Jade_Guest]: I don't think so. hypertext doesn't mean
never looking back. but I think there is a strong inclination
not to dwell on what's back there
PeteS agrees vigorously with booboo
Mick says, "[to Eric} hypertext means never having to say you're
sorry."
douglas [to MikeS]: so how does that editorship work? Can I send
you email and see it in print? Do you pull stuff from lists?
(portions of MOO transcripts???)
Eric says, "this stuff isn't peer reviewed???????????????????????
"
Eric says, "back to our original question"
JanetC finds it as hard to go back to "trad" writing.
______________________
| |
Eric holds up a BIG sign: | what IS peer review? |
|______________________|
JanetC laughs at Mick.
JanetC peers at Eric's review.
mday as your peer, reviews it for you
Guest has disconnected.
The housekeeper arrives to remove Guest.
Mick didn't do well in 7th grade peer review, nah.
MikeS [to douglas]: for the first few issues, i'm going to look
at what has already been done, spontaeously. then i want to
visit out-of-the-way lists ... i think of it as a "best of"
which requires me to troll and find the best...
Eric says, "I think everybody here is reviewing just as fast as
they can, and since we're all peers...."
booboo says, "I'd like to define peer review or see it evolve
into ongoing expansions of ideas (just like print) in different
forms."
mday says, "Claudine, will it always be an in-crowd?"
traci says, "this stuff IS peer reviewed, probably in a way
closer to the meaning of peer review than blind reviews. there
is a giving and taking, feedback on ideas, requests for
clarification and support. this thing does a better job at
peer review than many peer review seem to"
beckster [to Eric]: but we're not making evaluative comments
that will result in textual changes
mday says, "Sorry, I keep running off to tend to the hot/sour
soup"
Claudine shrugs to mday--I wonder? It's growing, but...
Eric says, "yeah, booboo: ongoing expansion of ideas. "
cath agrees w/traci
Eric cheers traci
Mick disagrees w/traci
mday says, "neat traci! In a way, we're reviewing each other as
we go!"
Eric [to mday]: yeah!
MikeS [to traci]: i agree -- but there's no easy formula.
that's what's problematic for TPR committees, no?
douglas says, "as we are all technorhetoricians, we could
workshop the transcript into a written and peer-revied essay
(simultaneously accomplished) thus collapsing 2 steps into one)"
PaulaP says, "I think the next question is is a blind review
truly blind????? "
mday advocates Mick's devilishness
booboo says, "Peer review will always involve evaluation...ought
to, also. But it's how that evaluation is given/taken/shared/
etc. that might change. "
Mick says, "I'm talking about peer review in the manner which
the Old Trads will understand the term."
JanetC asks beckster [Aglow], "But we are tlaking out ideas, no?"
Eric says, "this is different that print in terms of
conventions, not function"
JanetC . o O ( talking )
booboo nods ERic
mday says, "And I'm talking about reinventing notions of peer
review and collaborative scholarship"
traci says, "we do evaluate. we don't respond to comments which
aren't 'valued'; we respond at length to those that we do value"
Mick wonders if douglas has ever collaborated on one text with
15 technorhets before ... :<)
booboo says, "Some ideas on MOO and off aren't worth
pursuing/expanding "
booboo says, "And the review process will take care of those."
traci says, "and it seems to me a nod is an agreeable evaluation"
mday says, "I'm talking about having a transcript that
demonstrates the way, or at least one way, ideas are built"
JanetC nods Traci
Eric says, "the text doesn't sit still, so we can't rip into
style and grammar and organization. we keep ideas in play.
everything gets challenged or consented to. everything is
negotiated. that's what peer review ought to be. a group
working together to negotiate toward qualiity"
traci says, "i am not saying this is the same as traditional
peer review"
MikeS [to Eric]: but it may be a long time before mainstream
academia ets over its paper fetish
Mick says, "traci, you know i agree with that. but grumpy old
traditionalist laffs in your face. if we start caliming *this*
is peer-reviewed, we DEVALUE the term overall as we apply it
other places."
douglas [to Mick]: well, no, but there's no time like the
present to start trying.
MikeS [to Mick]: he will
Eric [to Mick]: maybe we gotta re-teach them what peer review is
really about
traci says, "what i am saying is that there is an evaluation and
feedback going on"
mday says, "it grows and changes, we discard what doesn't work.
Or nobody responds to it."
Camille says, "Of course this peer review is not blind"
beckster says, "again, though, the point of THIS kind of peer
dialogue/review is NOT to alter existing text"
cath [to Mick]: maybe not devalue, maybe revalue
JanetC lifts her right brow at Mick and say, "OR perhaps we are
redefining it in ways you grumps are uncomfortable with"
mday puts on a blindfold for Camille
Eric says, "i hate to see us bow to the print conventions that
have been misshapen by long habit"
mday says, "Yes, I like that Cath. Revalue"
mday says, "or redefining, as JanetC says"
booboo says, "That's why I think we need to seriously consider
what we want peer review to be/look like."
Eric [to Mick]: thing is, it's not even a matter of medium.
*this* is what peer review could and should look like in print,
too!
Mick reviews the blindfolded mday and edits him harshly
mday gropes about for the keyboard &575&%*&%&%*&%c58757537
Camille takes off mday's blindfold and thinks open reviews are
better
JanetC nods vigorously in agreement with Eric [GPC]'s ideas.
booboo says, "If our deans decide to grant me (in their
inimitable wisdom) the editorship of their new to be online
press, I want to establish the best system of review I can."
beckster [to Eric]: but I wonder about the logistics/viability
of this type of peer reveiw in print. Yes, it might result in
better end product, but it would simply take too long
douglas [to Eric]: I agree--but this medium is allowing us to
experiment with what peer review *could* be in ways that we
couldn't get away with in print (plus we get to make pee jokes)
MikeS [to Eric]: but i want to be able to read something, gt it
over with, move on, and read something else. transcripts such
as this are *not* kind to readers. what about just wanting to
read a bit and move on? is that readerly text eliminated?
Mick says, "I think we gotta choose our battles REAL carefully.
Re-defining-re-valuaing a term like "peer reivew" is unwinnable
if we're worried about seeing something "count""
mday says, "Maybe we needn't call it peer-review, however."
JanetC says to Mick, "We all pick our emphasis..."
Eric notes that in the item from EduPage, the science scholars
dismissed electronic threats to peer review, but allowed as how
'open peer commentary' was ok withthem
booboo suspects Mick is right and sighs . . . .
Eric says, "so, mick, they may be closer to coming around that
you might think :)"
Mick feels a kludge in the room somewheres
JanetC grins at Mick.
Mick says, "Peer e-view?"
MikeS steps over the kludge
Mick ughs hisself
PeteS says, "hey!"
JanetC groans at Mick.
booboo says, "I really like the pee-review"
douglas [to beckster]: the peer review process can be held
electronically! wouldn't take long--and email is becoming a
more acceptable method of sending text between individuals...
JanetC nods to booboo and says, "Yeppers..."
mday says, "Why does it have to be "review"?"
MikeS says, "peer view?"
Mick ooohs! Peer E-value-ation!
booboo says, "Ooh"
PaulaP wishes Mark Gellis was here.... then he could at least
talk about how peer review shaped his paper
beckster [to douglas]: only if everyone involved were equally
savvy and had equal equipment, etc.
JanetC hasta go see some horses bout a dinner review. Night all.
It's been swell.
Eric shows slide #8.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Tari Fanderclai:
I find it kind of amusing that we're talking about print
snobbery and elitism among the traditionalists. Don't we do
a lot of the same thing--suggesting that what they're doing is
outmoded and inferior and everyone should get online and learn
the skills we already developed? Heck, a lot of electronic
publications have more gadgetry than content, and a lot of them
are all but inaccessible with the equipment found on the desks of
so many academics, particularly in the humanities.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
booboo waves to JanetC
MikeS [Kairic] waves at JanetC.
JanetC says, "Viva la paradigm"
douglas [to Eric]: based on what I've seen in print, I suspect
that the science scholars dismiss electronic peer review
(especially open peer review) because it would ultimately
devolve into flame wars!
JanetC goes home.
mday is Mark's colleague. Doubts Mark could ever make it at
this hour
booboo says, "I don't put them down...how many of "us" do?"
PeteS says, ""
Mick thinks Tari is talking about a publication he is familiar
with ...
_____________________________________________
| |
| tari, btw, sent her regrets. she wanted to |
Eric holds up a BIG sign: | be here. but not bad enough to miss a trip |
| to an island off maine |
|_____________________________________________|
Mick says, "Maybe she can do a peer review of the transcript."
PaulaP says, "mday cool... I first met mark on IRC.... He seems
pretty cool though I have yet to meet him RL "
douglas wonders if Tari would do a pee-review....
beckster rolls her eyes
cath laughs out loud.
Mick says, "Really, though, she makes an incredibly important
point ..."
Camille says, "My students using InterCahnge feel less inhibited
in their comments about their peer's writing, wouldn't that
happen with online journal reviews as well? Flamming? Red-pen
stabbing?"
Mick says, "E-journals are often critiqued for valuing style
over substance. THAT is a battle worth fighting."
Eric [to douglas]: I wonder, though, to what extent the tendency
toward viciousness is a product of the current system? I
suspect it is, myself
booboo has got to go back to another kind of work...print-based
writing. Thanks for the good ideas, all.
booboo waves
PeteS says, "but look at something like PMC ... that's pretty
substantive."
beckster [to Camille]: or responsibility
traci [to Camille]: i think it has a lot to do with the readers,
the writers, and the atmospher
Eric [to Camille]: maybe. if the review was of a discreet text
that had value in terms of reputations and credentials. yes.
likely.
MikeS thanks you all for this discussion -- it is directly
relevent to the work i'm starting for computers and
composition. i'll keep everyone updated, but right now, i've
got to go get some dinner
MikeS [Kairic] waves.
traci says, "when paula talks to writers in the UALR OWL, she is
doing a kind of review, but not like those students"
MikeS goes home.
douglas waves to MikeS
Eric [to Camille]: but what if review remains focused on ideas
rather than texts, on continuing conversations and extending
knowledge *together* rather than competing for 'scarce'
recognition resources
PaulaP nods.."traci is right.... how we would edit something
would be a different
booboo has disconnected.
Eric says, "I think that would take the starch out of the
vicious inclinations"
traci says, "and I think if we were to have eric, becky, and
mick peer review anonymous_guest's paper, I don['t think there
would be a flamewar of red ink"
Mick says, "Eric are you separating ideas and texts? how?"
Mick flames becky's and eric's reviews
PaulaP says, "than how other's would edit."
Camille says, "Yes, Eric, moving to collaboration"
beckster nods to traci
traci says, "now if the goat were to peer review anonymous
guest, things would be diff"
Scott materializes out of thin air.
Mick says, "the goat wouldn't know how to review a text like
this, trac."
traci says, "or if the technology got in the way of the
feedback, there could be waht might seem like stabbing ink"
beckster giggles at traci
Eric [to Mick]: yes. 'emphasis' is my knife. if the purpose of a
text is to further a conversation, to keep an idea in play,
that's different than if the text itself is the focus of
attention
PaulaP says, "traci the owl is not up an running yet.... but How
i have edited papers as a "
beckster nodsnodsnods to teric
beckster says, "er, Eric"
Mick will have to think hard about that Eric.
douglas [to Camille]: it depends on how well we keep in mind the
idea that we are engaged in a profession and thus should be
"professional" and contribute constructively to that "ongoing
conversation" rather then hijacking the dialogue with flames
(carnival, however, is not the same as flames, so I think the
banter we engage in, when not destructive, is acceptable --and
Bakhtin would love it.)
Eric says, "in print, too much weight lands on the text. space
is so precious in terms of money and recognition that every
text has to be as perfect as possible. "
PaulaP says, "cybertutor is definitely different than how I edit
the papers I read for "
mday votes for keeping ideas in play, not letting them stagnate.
Print allows stagnation
Mick oohs beck's hybrid Tari-Eric ... teric!
traci [to PaulaP]: the owls on collegetown and daedalus, as far
as i know, still exist and lots of students have been run thru
them
cath [to PaulaP]: in what way?
Eric says, "in print, the text takes over the ideas. just like
in the classroom, where grades take over for learning"
Eric says, "the comparison is no accident!"
PaulaP says, "traci: I'm setting upa web owl for UALR "
Eric shows slide #9.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Nick Carbone:
As we work in both print and pixels, if we cite the pixels
in the print, then attention will be paid. When someof us are
up for tenure, if that still exists down the line, and we
point to how often our e-journal work has been cited, that'll
build validity.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
beckster [to Eric]: you're denying any "poem" then, at least in
the rosenblattian sense
Mick says, "eric, help me -- Text:Grades as Ideas:???"
cath says, "brb"
cath has disconnected.
Scott sighs.
Eric says, "I'm not familiar with the rosenblattian sense, but
poems can exist in dynamic convesational environments. see
CREWRT-L."
beckster thinks they can exist in the connection between a
reader and a text, too
PaulaP says, "cath: well for one thing I find I am much more
careful about how I word"
PaulaP says, "my comments because on the OWL they can't see me
and I don't want anything "
traci says, "has anyone considered a citation index for online
work? i know those exist for print journals and such...why not
for online work? i mean you choose the sources when you have a
citation index (you don't try to archive the world)."
Eric says, "not text:grades exactly. publish-or-perish:grades as
ideas:learning"
cath has connected.
cath disappears suddenly for parts unknown.
cath materializes out of thin air.
beckster nods to Paulap and they require you to be more specific
and text-referential
The housekeeper arrives to cart booboo off to bed.
Eric [to traci]: good idea! that's something ACW might ought to
provide!
PaulaP says, "I also don't get a chance to conference F2F"
douglas [to traci]: I think Nancy Kaplan and Stuart M. are
finishing one now.
Mick hmms eric's analogy which equates publich-or-perish with
ideas. I thot one was positive and one was antiquted
traci [to douglas]: what are they reviewing cits of?
Eric says, "I think I got that backwards mick"
Mick eyes The Daedalean Citation Index created and maintained by
Saint Traci Gardner
Eric says, "should be: pub-or-die:ideas as grades:learning"
PaulaP says, "beckster not only that but because I have to turn
a log into BarryM and Fur I'm doubly careful because I know it
can be my head "
douglas [to traci]: I didn't get the specs--she just said (at
CCCC) that this citation engine would be (I gather) like a bot
that looks for citations of your work anywhere on the web.
traci [to Mick]: hardly.
Mick thanks Eric. Was confused! I love the pub-or-die line
PaulaP says, "with the Personal Expository class I was within a
group of my peers.... "
beckster grins at PaulaP....double audience!
Eric [to douglas]: alta vista practically does that now. sort of.
Mick thinks we lost Tari's point earlier about e-journals
apparently valuing style over substance. Anyone have any
thoughta bout this?
PaulaP high fives Beckster exactly
PeteS says, "well ... mick, i said before ... look at something
like PMC, where it is all substance, no style. just like in
print."
douglas [to Eric]: yeah but they're specifically working on a
citation index for computer-assisted comp. (which I think they
want to be official).
Claudine nods petes
beckster [to Mick]: uh, I do. I'm afraid online journals are
sometimes too tough to read because of the "I'm linking because
I can" mentality
Mick says, "I missed that earlier, Pete, Sorry. But PMC woud be
the exception, don't you tink?"
Camille says, "delivery is an important part of all
rhetoric--electronic or print"
Eric wonders if that isn't conflating expansive rhetoric with
style (not that they're unrelated): expansive substance
Mick likes that Eric. say more!
PeteS says, "not necessarily .. look at Tikkun online ... or
Critical Inquiry ... or c and c "
beckster nods to camille....and delivery must take into
consideration audience, medium, purpose, etc.
douglas agrees with beckster, but that is where interactive peer
review could help!
Claudine [to beckster]: and ability to link?
beckster says, "but I don't think all online journals do that"
PeteS says, "they're hybrids ... trying to maintain their print
identity while acknowledging that they can't."
Mick notes that the two journal editors here {Pat and Vanna}
both represent publications that have been resoudnigly accused
of valuing style far too much.
beckster [to Claudine]: 's the medium part...:-)
Claudine nods to beckster
PeteS thinks that may say more about the editors than the medium
....
mday says, "Style far too much? How so?"
Mick hugs PeteS warmly
Camille says, "Maybe it is not valuing style too mcuh but just
presenting a new style"
PeteS hi5s Mick "a stylin' guy if i ever saw one."
Mick says, "go, camille! go, camille! "
Eric [to Mick]: in print, ideas are compressed. the treatment
seeks depth over superficiality. pack as much into those pages
as possible. on the net, people negotiate, meander, follow
tangents, return, refigure, talk about movies & pets, then get
back to the point. lots of words. copious words. the substance
remains, but is dissipated.
Mick cheers for Camille.
Claudine [to Camille]: i think the criticism was that they wanna
"privilege" style somehow, right?
douglas [to PeteS]: but e-journals don't have to be hypertextual
(particularly if they don't claim to be) some can just use the
net as a distribution mechanism, while somewill push the
envelop of what can (or should) be done in an e-journal.
beckster says, "I think peer reviewers can help de-toxify an
overly hyper text, but we have to remember that dif. audiences
w/ dif. experiences will be reading it.....which really
complicates things"
mday says, "dissipated, or massaged?"
PeteS says, "[to doug] that's my point. the more substantive
ejournals are pretty much avoiding a lot of hypertext"
Mick .oO("an overly hyper text"?)
Eric [to PeteS]: substantive?
PeteS regrets his choice of words
mday says, "Do we have to say that it's diluted?"
Eric grins
Mick says, "[to PeteS} substantive?"
Camille says, "And what Eric said is the expected style of a
print journal whereas the electroinc journal is to have a style
which appeals to a different audience (I'm not going to attempt
to define)"
PaulaP says, "doesn't it come down to having an understanding
that sometimes things can't be the orginal idea of hypertext --
several small pieces linked together as one big piece?"
Eric says, "not diluted. dissipative."
douglas [to PeteS]: but I see _Kairos_ as a substantive
journal--and they ain't avoiding hypertext!
PeteS decides he likes his choice of words
Eric might be using the terms wrong but HE knows what he means :)
Mick pays Douglas
mday says, "Meaning, like evanescent?"
Claudine agrees with douglas
douglas says I mean WE ain't avoiding hypertext!
Eric reaches for his (print) dictionary
PeteS says, "[to doug] granted ... but many of the more ...
shall we say less style-conscious journals *do* avoid
hypertext. Sheesh. i'm just agreeing w/you."
mday thinks it's mutating, growing, changing...
Mick wrote his thesis about that kind of audience camille --
using lunsofrd/ede's aduinece addressed/invoked, i talked about
"audience accessed
douglas pocket's Mick's cash
beckster [to PeteS]: you mean the journals that are imitating
print?
mday says, "exploring, examining, agglomerating as it sloughs
off"
Camille says, "I guess I should read Mick's thesis!"
PeteS says, "[to beckster] most of those are print journals that
have established a web presence, rather than native to the web,
like kairos."
Eric says, "american heritage has evanescent as vaporous,
disappearing, fleeting. so I guess I'd lean away from that term"
cath [to Mick]: is it online?
PeteS says, "which goes to my earlier point ... not better, but
*different*"
douglas [to Mick]: is your thesis available on-line (whether
hypertext or no)?
beckster nods to petes....so the term e-journal is used loosely
there, eh?
Camille says, "Mick, does it value style?"
Eric agrees with petes
Mick says, "[cath] not yet. tto lazy to put it up there. also
embarrassed to put 130 pages of linear text onthe www"
Mick nods to camille.
beckster grins at mick
Eric shows slide #10.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Michael J. Salvo:
*my* personal feelings are that through publishing _kairos_
as best we can, looking at and maybe even influencing
(positively, or negatively -- ie, 'we're not going to do
*that*') other on-line publications, and then joining
debates such as this, we will begin to develop some mores and
traditions for on-line publication. and a big part of that
process is making mistakes, recognizing them as such, and then
adjusting the process accordingly. it's a long, tiring, labor-
intensive process -- and the end can't even be fathomed let alone
seen. there may be no light at the end of this tunnel -- a
publication of becoming (?).
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Mick grins that Mikey is gone
douglas [to Mick]: don't be embarassed--I did it and it's the
only way it will ever get read (instead of sitting on a shelf
in the dept. library)
Mick says, "I think Mike's comment is brilliant, btw. I can say
that because he's not here to hear it. A publication of
becoming -- that's what RhetNet is and that's what "kairos"
*means* ... but "becoming" don't help us a lot in the immediate
PTR meetings"
traci wonders if eric's kids get to stay out of bed till the moo
is over
Mick wonders what chapter of the Hobbit Eric is on
PeteS wonders if eric's kids read the hobbit to him, as they
should.
Eric [to traci]: yep. they're getting pretty insistent about
getting them their bedtime snacks, tooo
Mick wants a twinkie, unca eris
Mick says, "eric"
beckster wants a bedtime snack!
Eric [to PeteS]: the 5 yr old does, which is fun!
Claudine thanks you all for the excellent conversation, er,
text, whatever.
Claudine says, "G'night folks!"
traci [to Mick]: depends upon what you become
_______________________________________________
| |
| Just to remind everyone: This session is |
Eric holds up a BIG sign: | publishable and will be published in RhetNet |
|_______________________________________________|
beckster just got kicked BIG TIME
PeteS waves to claudine
Claudine hugs beckster and dilbert
______________________________________________
| |
| If anyone is interested in attempting to |
Eric holds up a BIG sign: | shape it for print or for other net venues, |
| we can... |
|______________________________________________|
Claudine felt that kick, too :)
cath waves to claudine
Mick cheers! "Dilbert" is catching on elsewhere!
Claudine waves all
douglas [to Eric]: I'd like to play with it--where will the log
be available?
Claudine has disconnected.
cath waves g'nite too
beckster sighs.....and REFUSES to name this baby Dilbert
_______________________________________________
| |
| http://www.missouri.edu/rhetnet/pr_27june96. |
Eric holds up a BIG sign: | txt |
|_______________________________________________|
cath grins at beckster
PeteS says, "how about eggbert?"
Mick says, "Yeah, Beck, that don't mean we won't all call him
that."
beckster says, "not even bert and ernie"
Eric says, "well, they're starting to bounce off the walls.
better dash..."
cath goes home.
beckster [to Mick]: you won't if you want to come visit.....>:-)
Mick plays Trivia Time -- where did the Sesame Street characters
Bert and Ernie get their names?
traci says, "the police officier and taxi driver on it's a
wonderful life"
Mick thinks he gonna find his way down to Texas anyway, beck.
_____________________________________________
| |
| Me & Mick would like to thank you all very |
Eric holds up a BIG sign: | much for coming along tonight totalk about |
| this stuff! |
|_____________________________________________|
douglas waves goodnight to all!
beckster grins at mick and nods
PeteS cheers eric and mick
Eric waves
Eric goes home.
Mick awards Traci Forty Million Trivia Points
douglas thanks Mick and Eric
Scott goes home.
Mick [Vanna] waves bye-bye!
douglas has disconnected.
beckster waves to all
Camille waves night
PaulaP laughs... I have some great post it notes..... St.
Dogbert has drive all the stupidity out of this document.
(oops) he miss4ed some
PeteS waves to all ... see you in two weeks for tuesday cafe.
PaulaP goes to work on her thesis.... laters
Camille has disconnected.
traci waves
traci goes home.
beckster has turned on "conquest of the planet of the apes"
PaulaP grins I have coffee going and listening to Starwars on
the radio
PeteS page mick i'll pass it on to claudine ... i'm going to a
wedding sat. what time?
The housekeeper arrives to cart Claudine off to bed.
PeteS says, "bye folks..."
PeteS has disconnected.
The housekeeper arrives to cart douglas off to bed.
mday says, "Boo!"
The housekeeper arrives to cart Camille off to bed.
beckster goes home.
The housekeeper arrives to cart PeteS off to bed.
Mick needs to switch computer labs. Bye all ...
Mick will be back in ten.
sandyet is relocating
sandyet goes home.
Mick disappears suddenly for parts unknown.
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