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[xmca] Mentoring



Mike, I appreciate your efforts to mobilise clever people to get this system working on a proper basis. But everyone is always too busy. Would it be possible to ask Tammy to set up one of her Google/Excel shared spreadsheets with two lists: one of aspiring mentees and the other of volunteering mentors, with keywords, and a Google group listserv for messages between mentors, so that we can work together and allocate people. Very lo-tech, a little taxing, but I think it could be implemented by Tammy in 24 hours. It is just a matter of hooking up couples.

Andy

mike cole wrote:
With respect to dis-establishing MCA and going back to a newsletter:

I did not want to start MCA in the first place. Yrjo urged its formation as a means to
legitimate cultural-historical research, broadly conceived. To dis-establish it would
mean that no longer could contributors use anything they published there as a warrant for getting promotions-- the situation in this regard has become markedly
worse in the interim, but I would be perfectly contented to see such a devolution.
And in the process, shift media and go purely electronic.

That reverses the long push for respectibility, reached this year through a lot of Michael's effort focused primarily on getting materials in on time (!!). Now people
can site all the ratings they need for their academic files and MCA is just fine. Part of the establishment.

Is this situation peculiar in some way to MCA or is it a part of that increased acceptance and appropriation? Those who are present at ISCAR might convey
the feel of that meeting. Maybe the entire push for cultural historical approaches
that "take context seriously" by using the cultural-historical tradition of understanding "activity" is itself passe? (I personally do not think so, but, then, I would be the last to know!).

Or maybe its brightest adherents have re-deployed into such ventures as "learning sciences" or "developmental science" (two movements I am familiar with)? Or maybe we miss opportunities for self-development when we see them?

Personally, I was disappointed by the discussion of the special issue on Action Research and CHAT. What my colleagues at LCHC and I do as research is seen by some as action research, some as CHAT intervention research. To us, the issue of theory/practice relations is really important. Seth Chaiklin's article posed
some issues in this regard that really never seemed to get discussed, let along answered. In this case the authors engaged, XMCA did not engage back.

Perhaps we can return to it. Again, personally, there are articles in the current issue of MCA that seem worth discussing. Perhaps not. I have read none of them, and like you, have to depend upon the abstracts to make my bets.

With respect to discussing articles of people from XMCA itself.

This is really a matter that goes to the membership of XMCA. The webpage
has not gone away

                            http://lchc.ucsd.edu/MCA/Paper/index.html

Use it or lose it. Or, help us develop a new practice that the group finds valuable.

With respect to getting modern and more multi-modal digital to enrich the discourse

I am all for it. With the resources at its disposal, LCHC is seeking to propose a kind
of portal that would include a variety of modes of experssion. We thought we had
this problem solved a year ago. We were wrong. Lets hope we have not been
wrong again.

I also always worry about the disenfranchised when those with lots of bytes at their disposal free start using higher end technologies that make their discourse richer. Who is being left out?

Once open a time, it was a big deal to us that we could get a free, electronic, version of one article so that those far away who cannot afford MCA can participate in the discourse. Then it was free for a while. But now, guess what?  Payment is back again and none the cheaper. Going electronic would solve that, but would it solve the ISI problems?

As I see, the finances, the ideology, and the actual organization of the activities are all interconnected. Makes me very wishy washy.

To end by repeating what I wrote in the note to Jaki: We are doing the best we can. If you can help, just up and offer. We all stand to learn from such collaboration.
 
mike

On Sat, Jul 9, 2011 at 2:21 AM, Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net> wrote:
I can't say too much David, but I will just that it is only about now that we will begin to publish material in any way reflecting the new editorship as we inherited a couple of years of backlog. Secondly, our reviewers really are demanding a high standard from our authors. Since becoming an editor at the beginning of October I have overseen only one manuscript that made it through to acceptance, after revisions, though I think I am now close to my second. Aware of this, the editors are taking action to attract a good quality of mss and we just have to see if our work is successful.

Peer review is like democracy: it is a terrible system, but its the best we've got.

It may well be that if we want to do some genre bending then the lchc website is the best way of doing it. Personally, I would like to see web publication the norm and peer review used as a rating but not as a means of refusing publication. But it takes time. Many of our community rely on MCA publication for academic status and thus jobs and promotion, and this places an obligation on us work like any other academic journal.

That is a personal view.

Andy


David Kellogg wrote:
Your creaky memory serves you (and all the rest of us) excellently well, Bruce. Actually, we kept discussing papers on the LCHC site as recently as last year (I uploaded some stuff on the Psychology of Art, and there have been wonderful papers from Andy and many others).
 I recently downloaded the whole backlog of journals, and I am really distressed by how DULL and TEPID the writing has become. It's not surprising that the discussions we have often peter out after only a few exchanges.
 I'm not over-impressed by the abstracts on offer in this issue, either. Normally I would go ahead and vote for the article on second language teaching. But the abstract reads suspiciously like a washing-powder style methodological comparison, with "SCT-CHAT" on one side and a caricature of "SLA" on the other.
 Andy is right. Going outside the system of free articles for discussion is a good answer for the discussion list, but it does nothing to address the main problem, which is the quality of articles that appear in the journal.
 I guess I think that the editors need to be a little more interested in genre bending, the reviewers a little more open to "revise and resubmit" instead of outright rejection, and we writers need to be thick skinned and persistent.  Contrary to what Andy says, rejections are not that bad. I think I'd much rather have a rejection than to have to put my name over some of the articles I've read lately. But then, that includes some of the drafts I submitted mysefl!
 David Kellogg
Seoul National University of Education


--- On Fri, 7/8/11, Bruce Robinson <bruce@brucerob.eu> wrote:


From: Bruce Robinson <bruce@brucerob.eu>
Subject: Re: [xmca] The Polls are OPEN!!
To: ablunden@mira.net, "eXtended Mind, Culture,Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
Date: Friday, July 8, 2011, 2:14 AM


If my creaky memory serves, we did discuss non-MCA articles suggested and mainly written by list members for a long period in the late 90s / early 00s. There are or were indications of this somewhere on the MCA website. Not sure why or how it stopped.

Bruce Robinson


From: "Andy Blunden" <ablunden@mira.net>
To: "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
Sent: Friday, July 08, 2011 2:28 AM
Subject: Re: [xmca] The Polls are OPEN!!


 
David, I think there is a LOT of merit to taking articles posted on the LCHC for discussion as the focus of XMCA discussion. We should not do that *instead* of the one MCA article per quarter though. There is plenty of time between the quarterly publication of MCA to discuss an article on the website. We should do more of that, for the reasons you give.

Andy

David Kellogg wrote:
   
Mike:
 I wonder if there is any way we could include "write-ins" on the ballot. People could upload manuscripts to the "Papers for Discussion" at LCHC and then these could be included in the vote.
 This might address several problems which seem to be dogging our quarterly discussions.
 a) It often happens that the articles on offer have almost nothing to do with what people have on their minds and what is being discussed on the list.
 b) It sometimes happens that the authors chosen for publication in the journal turn out to be more interested in being published than in being discussed and do not take part.

c) It occasionally happens that people like myself clutter up the list with long posts which really ought to be articles but which have no chance of publication, at least not in their current form.
 It may also be a good way of getting the writing mentorship project off the ground, and it might even return us, one small but much appreciated step, towards that pre-MCA tradition of an unrefereed and unreviewed newsletter, with writing that is unafraid to walk on the wild side.
 David Kellogg
Seoul National University of Education
--- On Wed, 7/6/11, mike cole <lchcmike@gmail.com> wrote:


From: mike cole <lchcmike@gmail.com>
Subject: [xmca] The Polls are OPEN!!
To: "eXtended Mind, Culture,Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
Date: Wednesday, July 6, 2011, 3:45 PM


A wide range of articles to choose from for XMCA discussion and private
musings.

http://lchc.ucsd.edu/mca/Journal/poll.html

mike
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-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Andy Blunden*
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Home Page: http://home.mira.net/~andy/
Book: http://www.brill.nl/default.aspx?partid=227&pid=34857
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--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Andy Blunden*
Joint Editor MCA: http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g932564744
Home Page: http://home.mira.net/~andy/
Book: http://www.brill.nl/default.aspx?partid=227&pid=34857
MIA: http://www.marxists.org

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