Interesting Laura. I like this proposal. Regarding the Journal objective, have you considered my suggestions for running a journal? I'm wondering if your project might not be the seed for a UCNISS journal generally, run along the lines I suggest, and including your proposal of including Wikipedia and Books work too. UCNISS has been aiming to get a journal up and running for a while now, and we recently met to try and coordinate and capture our research more.. which will be reflected in the UCNISS/Research and Development. Women and children in sport would become a regular theme in this journal, I'm thinking Leighblackall 04:00, 31 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
- I wouldn't necessarily have a problem with it being part of a journal produced by UCNISS. It might make it easier in some ways, in terms of getting academic reviewers by doing that. (And who those reviewers will be would have a huge potential impact on trying to get other academics involved to help bring some credibility to it.) We might have to go outside that pool though if we say get people looking to submit from outside Australia. I'd like some form of assessment similar to A+ class assessment that can be actually be seen on Wikipedia articles, possibly trying to set up an article assessment process that could be mirrored on Wikiversity for any original work done here. I'm not really keen on using the University of Canberra webspace as what I have seen of it doesn't seem to really work for what I'd like to do. (Hence, I'd like the space to actually be hosted on Wikimedia Australia's space.) And I don't really have a problem with the process being open to anyone, just so long as we have what are the "officially acceptable" kind of standards involved, including double blind peer review… and this is not always nice if you want openness but it needs to be there. :/
- I don't know how broad it would b. How would what you are proposing be different than the Bulletin of Sport and Culture and a few other journals that already exist? --LauraHale 04:33, 31 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
- Regarding the difference to Bulletin, our process would be a lot more open I imagine. Employing the principles of these wikis for example.. indeed the wider Internet. Inviting anyone to submit, and refining our review processes - similar to how Wikinews does their thing, but people are free to write wherever they think is best for them. Decentralised, but recentralised via the review process.
- Regarding that review process.. specifically double blind review, open authoring is a problem for blind review, and significant journals are dropping it - Inside Higher Ed Rejecting Double Blind May 31, 2011. Leighblackall 10:58, 31 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
- On the double blind issue and openess: There needs to be some way of doing something recognisably similar just in terms of making sure enough academy practices are followed to get legitimacy. The publications you're talking about have that credibility already. The isn't necessarily the submission process. That should be easy enough to address. The problem is more the who will the reviewers be, making sure that is clear to anyone potentially submitting, etc. --LauraHale 11:52, 31 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
- The Bulletin tends to be very footy code centric, lacking a lot of female content outside of the context of popular men's sports. In the context of what UCNISS does well (and how it differs from Victoria University) is that it misses a lot of the sport science thing. I wouldn't mind being like the Bulletin, with a more female centric content approach… but if the major difference is just submitting process and not content, not sure the point. --LauraHale 11:52, 31 May 2011 (UTC)Reply
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