464 research outputs found
What can we learn from a peer review?
The quality assurance of research articles is based on a widespread reliance on peer review, which has gradually become black boxed, as the way to do it. By opening the black box, it turns out that this form of quality assurance varies a great deal. This article looks at the comments offered by peer reviewers and treats them as an important but overlooked element of the methodological circle and science production. Based on an auto-ethnographical study of one manuscript that undergoes peer reviewing in three different journals the article examines how the review comments affect the author and hence promote/inhibit the becoming of a research article. The article offers a transmethodological look at peer review by employing concepts from actor-network theory. This allows for a theoretical move from notions of single authorship to notions of writing as a performance of relations between heterogeneous actors. The analysis aims to identify the connections that are established between the manuscript and other actors such as scientific standards for good research, journalsâ aim and scope, universitiesâ requirements for staff publication, peer reviewerâs personal academic interests etc. which all become part of a peer review network. In conclusion, the article suggests acknowledging the relational and co-productive aspect of peer reviewing as an important part of quality assurance of scientific knowledge
En styringsteknologi bliver til
Hos Michel Foucault og Nikolas Rose er magt ikke noget, man besid-Ââder, men noget der skal udføres og derfor betinget af handlinger og intentioner hos de, som søges styret. Alligevel fremstilles styringstek-Âânologier i governmentality litteraturen ofte som mere eller mindre direkte afledt af beskrivelser i policy-Ââpapirer. De interesserer sig først og fremmest for at studere, hvordan fĂŚrdige styringsteknologier gri-Ââber ind i menneskers liv og medvirker til, at subjekter bliver til pĂĽ be-Ââstemte mĂĽder. En styringsteknologi har en tilblivelseshistorie, der er vĂŚrd at beskrive. Denne artikel viser gennem en Latourinspireret ana-Ââlyse af en implementeringsproces, hvordan en lov udfoldes som trans-Ââlationer i et netvĂŚrk. Analysen følger implementeringen af loven om pĂŚdagogiske lĂŚreplaner i dagtilbud med henblik pĂĽ at identificere koblinger mellem viden, magt og subjektivitet og andre aktanter, der danner grundlag for, at loven kan fungere som en styringsteknologi for arbejdet i dagtilbud. Analysen bidrager til en nuancering af vores forstĂĽelse af policy som flydende og med et element af uforudsigelig-Ââhed, som ikke indfanges af governmentalitystudier, der studerer lov-Ââgivningsprocesser ud fra et styringseffektperspektiv
Eva Gulløv: Betydningsdannelse blandt børn.
Anmeldes af Jesper Olesen
 
Learning to Become a Science Talent
The article focuses on the concept of talent and its enactment in a science talent program. The article investigates how students become a particular kind of knowing subject through their participation in a science talent program at the MĂŚrsk McKinney Science Centre in Denmark. Drawing on concepts from new materialist studies (Latour 1993; Blok & Ellgaard Jensen 2009; Fox & Alldred 2017) the article explores the relationship between the possibilities for distribution that are offered to the participants, and the ways in which the participants respond by centering and decentering within the talent network (Mialet 2008, 2012). The study contributes to our understanding of, how the increased focus on talent development in many national educational systems influences basic preconceptions of what a science student is and how the knowing subject in society should treat science, by looking into the micro-politics of talent development.     Â
- âŚ