![]() ![]() Who? A blog providing open access to information about corrections to and retractions of journal articles, and scholarly publications. ![]() Proposed rule: Only those who read pp29-31 of CSLS study allowed to tweet this article. Why follow? Insight into Conference Board reports, as well as science and innovation policy issues. Munro is a principal research associate in public policy at the Conference Board of Canada as well as a faculty member at the University of Ottawa. Hope they sort this out before releasing a policy on it Why follow? Blunt talk about Canadian higher ed policies, as well as daily insight on the sector in his One Thought blog (currently on hiatus until mid-August).Ĭdn govt seems to think “innovation” is synonym for “groovy tech/science-y things”. Who? Alex Usher is president of Higher Education Strategy Associates in Toronto. “Men get the research money” by /pgxP8qE2rc Why follow? A scholar engaged in equity and social justice causes, she regularly calls attention to (and calls out) bias, diversity failures and civil rights issues. Smith is a political science professor at the University of Alberta. Teaching students to write stuff that will get them hired, not just essaysģ. Why follow? He founded #ScholarSunday on Twitter and examines public policy and environmental policy. Pacheco-Vega is an assistant professor in the public administration division of the Centre for Economic Teaching and Research (Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, CIDE) in Aguascalientes, Mexico. Want to explore/unpack the “violence inherent in the (grading) system” WITH my students, who are also teachers. Stewart offers insight into course methodology, as well as best practices for other online profs. ![]() Why follow? An online teaching pioneer, Dr. She describes herself as an educator, writer and social media fortune teller. Stewart is an adult teaching coordinator at the University of Prince Edward Island as well an online teacher. Please note that number of tweets and followers per user were as of the publication date of this article. Let us know of other great academic Twitter accounts you follow in the comments. While it’s impossible to create a definitive short list of the best accounts to follow for academic news and research, insightful commentary and some of the best memes on the internet, here are a few of our favourites. Of course, you should already be following University Affairs and our bloggers from The Black Hole, Speculative Diction, From PhD to Life and Careers Café, but we assume you have that covered. The vast and varied world of academic Twitter accounts provides much to the community: a quick laugh, a source of information and/or procrastination (sometimes both simultaneously) and often rich networking and learning opportunities. ![]()
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