The FSU College of Coummunication & Information

Archive for the ‘CCI Research News’ Category

Raney keynotes international conference

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Dr. Arthur A. Raney, associate professor of communication, was invited to be one of five keynote speakers at an international conference on entertainment theory and effects in Benasque, Spain, Nov. 15-21.

It was the first in a series of communication congresses being organized under the auspices of the Centro de Ciencias de Benasque Pedro Pascual, with a goal of gathering top scholars and promising junior scholars for open and wide-ranging discussion. Raney lectured on “Entertainment and Morality” and a junior scholar from the Free University of Amsterdam served as respondent, offering an alternate explanation or theory. The exchange led to a daylong discussion of the topic, followed by proposals for continuing research. A different topic was featured each day.

Raney’s presentation will be published in the European-based “Journal of Media Psychology.”

Focus on Research 2009: October 26-30

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

Join members of our three schools in celebrating the first research week of the newly-merged College of Communication & Information, highlighted by faculty and doctoral research presentations and culminating in a celebratory reception. Wednesday through Friday events will be Webcast; find a link to the Webcasts at the College Web site (http://cci.fsu.edu).

Monday – Faculty publications on display in Goldstein
Time – ALL WEEK
Location – Goldstein

Tuesday – Doctoral Poster Session
Time: 12:00 – 1:00
Location – Goldstein

Wednesday – Colloquia
Speaker: Dr. Michelle Kazmer
Topic: Crossing Boundaries in the iField: Life-cycle Formation & Long-term Scientific Collaboration
Time: 1:00 – 2:00
Location – LSB 206

Thursday – Brown Bag Lunch
Speaker: Dr. Charles McClure
Title: Pulling together and submitting Broadband Technology Opportunity Program (BTOP) proposals: Worse than herding cats!
Time: 12:00 – 1:00
Location – LSB 206

Friday – Research Colloquia & Reception
Speaker: Leonard LaPointe
Title: Competition, Interference and Distraction in Neurological Diseases: Contributions to Injurious Falls
Time: 12:00-2:00
Location – LSB 006

Researchers to model the life cycles of successful virtual teams

Monday, October 19th, 2009

By Audrey Post
College of Communication & Information

Each year, hundreds of scientists from all over the world come to the Florida State University campus to conduct research at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory. Starting in January, the researchers themselves will become the subject of study as a team from the College of Communication and Information explores patterns of collaboration in a diverse, interdisciplinary and increasingly virtual world.

The team, headed by principal investigator Kathleen Burnett, an associate professor in the college’s School of Library and Information Studies, was recently awarded a $380,226 National Science Foundation grant to study virtual scientific teams: how they form, disband and re-form and what factors affect team membership. The goal of the two-year project is to create a model for diverse interdisciplinary virtual teams that will increase efficiency and innovation, and turn short-term collaborations into long-term partnerships.

“The Mag Lab is diverse, it’s multidisciplinary, and the scientists who work there have to figure out how to get things done without being face to face all the time,” Burnett said. “These are complex systems and they use complex tools.”

An estimated 900 scientists and engineers spend time at the magnet lab every year, using the powerful magnets in a wide variety of applications from medicine to technology. The scientists work in different fields, come from different countries and often speak different languages. To make sure their limited time is well spent, a great deal of preparation and coordination is done to build relationships before they arrive; the College of Communication and Information team will be tracking these relationships.

“It will be a very interesting experience for me personally and for the many Mag Lab scientists who take part,” said Greg Boebinger, director of the magnet laboratory. “Scientists are not accustomed to studying their own research practices, and I’ll bet a few of them will not have thought of the possibility of ‘researching research’ as a strategy for improving research.”

The researchers plan to conduct unobtrusive observations, interview scientists, observe planning meetings, review collaborative publications and analyze communication artifacts. Those artifacts could include online communications, minutes of meetings, video conferences and other documentation, physical and virtual.

“A lot of people are looking at how teams form,” said Michelle Kazmer, an associate professor in the School of Library and Information Studies and a co-principal investigator. “But does scientific collaboration lead to another scientific collaboration, or not? What leads scientists to want to work together again, and what prevents it?”

All the co-principal investigators, each a faculty member in the School of Library and Information Studies, contribute areas of expertise to the project. Gary Burnett, associate professor, brings expertise in the theory of information worlds; Kazmer, life cycles of virtual teams; Besiki Stvilia, assistant professor, computational modeling; and Paul Marty, associate professor, the role of technology in life cycle dynamics.

Other School of Library and Information Studies faculty will play a role, as well. Charles C. Hinnant, assistant professor, will contribute expertise in organization theory and will assist with social network analysis. Kenneth Fleischman, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland, will serve as external evaluator, contributing formative and summative evaluation of the life cycle models and advising the team on how well they might generalize to other contexts.

Burnett, as principal investigator, will oversee all aspects of the project, including the students working on it. 

“Our ultimate goal is to try to inform the development of new tools to support people who need to work in distributed, virtual teams,” she said. “We want to find out how we can make this more successful so scientists can be more productive.”

White Paper: Media specialists key in effective use of broadband

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

By Dr. Nancy Everhart, director,
and Dr. Marcia Mardis, associate director,
The PALM Center

In a matter of days, the federal government will start handing out the first $4.5 billion from stimulus funds intended to spread high-speed Internet connections to more rural communities, underserved urban neighborhoods and other pockets of the country clamoring for better access.

School library media specialists are uniquely qualified to ensure that the upgraded technology is fully integrated into teaching and learning in schools, according to a White Paper, From District to Desktop:  Making the Most of Broadband in Florida Schools, released by the PALM Center, a research center devoted to the study of school libraries located at the School of Library and Information Studies in FSU’s College of Communication & Information. 

“In their roles as school leaders, school library media specialists provide tech coordination, support, and leadership necessary to address access issues from desktop to district. As one of the only faculty members who work across curriculum areas and grade levels, the school library media specialist has unique knowledge of classroom activities throughout the schools and places in which technology would enhance learning. Moreover, it is the school library media specialist who often provides desktop-level technology support and liaises with district-level technology staff to identify the needs of teachers and students,” said Dr. Marcia Mardis, associate director of the PALM Center.

The U.S Department of Education reports that 98 percent of U.S. schools are connected to the Internet but the speed and capacity of the connection is often problematic and insufficient.  In Florida, bandwith needs have been increasing 22-30 percent annually as digital technology has increasingly become a vital part of teaching and learning. From District to Desktop explores the current status and future broadband needs of students, teachers, administrators and parents in Florida, relating them to national research, state reports, and local examples and is being made public on the PALM Center website  www.palmcenter.fsu.edu.

 The White Paper’s title, From District to Desktop, refers to school library media specialist on-site support that can streamline and enable effective use of broadband-enabled technology. For most schools, they can expertly direct this “last mile” implementation, the report notes. 

“School library media specialists also use the principles of Standards for the 21st Century Learner, the new guidelines of the American Association of School Librarians (AASL), to facilitate high levels of student achievement,” added Dr. Nancy Everhart, PALM director and president-elect of AASL.  “Students see the school library as a digitally enriched place where information can be located and used, projects can be designed and created, and knowledge can be expressed within and beyond school walls.” 

Florida’s schools face challenges to the integration of broadband in teaching and learning in the areas of access, skills, policy, and motivation. While it is possible for a school to be connectivity-rich but integration-poor; conversely a school can experience the thwarting effect of inadequate connectivity on instructional innovation. School library media specialists have a vital role to play in helping broadband and school technology work together to maximize teaching and learning for all of Florida’s citizens.

About the PALM Center:  The PALM Center conducts nationally and internationally recognized interdisciplinary research on library media specialist leadership and technology integration and offers an array of services to support school library media specialists and other educators in Florida, throughout the United States, and internationally to improve their districts and schools. A wide range of research and evaluation services is available from large-scale surveys and evaluation of reliability and validity of program implementation, to individualized in-depth case studies of school libraries, technology implementation, and whole school change. For more information, contact Dr. Everhart at 850-644-8122 or Dr. Mardis at 850-644-3392.

Institute public library report highlights broadband needs

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Florida public library outlets and K-12 public schools reported inadequate connection speeds and insufficient workstations to serve patrons in a needs assessment report recently issued by the Information Use Management Policy Institute at The Florida State University College of Communication & Information. The research, funded by a contract from the State Library and Archives of Florida, found that broadband services in Florida public libraries were inadequate for E-government and emergency/disaster management needs of patrons because of current Internet connectivity costs and speeds. While current economic conditions are forcing more Florida residents to use libraries for completing online job applications, for undertaking tasks required by government agencies, and for assistance during emergencies and disasters, public libraries lack adequate broadband speeds and bandwidth, equipment, and technical staff.

The Information Institute report was used by State Library and Archives of Florida to produce a grant application submitted to the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) at the U.S. Department of Commerce.