Follow the Twitter* accounts of scholars or organizations important to your research. Your peers will be good sources for identifying useful social media options in your discipline, and you can make recommendations to your graduate students.
Mark Carrigan's LSE Higher Education Blog post, Where now for academics on social media, post Twitter? (July 27, 2023) discusses strategies academics could consider in the rapidly changing social media environment following the 2022 change in ownership of Twitter / X. Those seeking to follow scholars (as well as establish their own social media presence) may find this helpful.
This page provides more general academic social media resources that will address higher education topics such as news, pedagogy, technology, employment, and more.
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* Alternatives to Twitter are available. For more information see:
To find blogs on topics of interest, consult with faculty, peers, explore professional association websites, and be creative! Google searches that combine keywords for your discipline with the term 'blog' can be a way to identify useful and interesting blogs.
Blogs can be monitored individually, using web browser bookmarks, or aggregated via an RSS newsreader service.
My thanks to Lorrie Pellack, Iowa State University Library,
whose work informed this guide.
Scholars often share pre-publication versions of their research through online repositories that seek to build communication networks among participants. Some pre-print repositories are sponsored by scholarly organizations, others by publishers. Very selective examples include:
Don't see a relevant option? Check these more complete lists of pre-publication repositories:
Many tools are being developed as applications of machine learning and generative-AI large-language models. Each application addresses a particular challenge experienced in the research process. Just a few of these tools are linked here. Some of these are free, some offer a free trial period, others are fee-based. Each varies in how explicit they are about the sources of their citation data, how frequently it is updated, or any biases of subject coverage or content.
If you work with a tool not listed below, please share it and your experience!
Click on the 3 horizontal lines in the top left corner of the screen to bring up this menu. Select Advanced Search.
The Advanced Search screen provides several self-explanatory field options to increase the precision of your search results. Highlighted in this image is the option to specify a publication title.
Ensuring that your literature review incorporates a wide range of views by diverse scholars in your discipline is an ongoing challenge. Neither the publishing industry, nor the peer review process itself, is free of the biases of systemic racism, or the societal biases oppressing those of non-majority gender or sexual identities, or those with differing physical abilities. One strategy is to use library databases that specifically incorporate publications serving diverse communities when searching for literature. Examples include Ethnic Newswatch and the Gender Studies Database. These databases and more are linked from:
Additional strategies discussed elsewhere on this guide can help reduce this bias including:
There are efforts to highlight the expertise or published work of diverse scholars such as:
And efforts to improve the visibility, accessibility, and quality of journals published outside the dominant Western, often English-language, channels of scholarship.
Please share your successful strategies and helpful resources so they can be added to this guide to help others!!
My thanks to Brie Baumert, Gould Library, Carleton College, whose work on
Inclusive Searching identified many of the resources linked here.