Updates academia
– Master´s degrees should be more publicly visible, thinks Anne Aaby, the editor for the recently established Masterbloggen.
2010-01-27 På norskMaster students from all the universities in the country can present their Master theses in a blog, which to start with is open for submissions of theses from the humanities and the social sciences.
- The blog format is a new way to approach both the general public and the media at the same time. We have made an interdisciplinary blog with the purpose of narrowing the gap between academia, the media and the public, says Anne Aaby, editor of Masterbloggen. The blog was launched last Monday.
New expression on a new arena
Behind the blog is the recently established and independent Organization for the Impartment of Master´s Degrees (MaFo), who work on an independent idealistic level to bring academia and knowledge from Master´s theses out to society and the public exchange of views. The new editor thinks blogging represents a completely new way to present theses.
– We´re creating a new expression. The arena that we make is different than the daily press, both in form and content. Master graduates can present their theses in contributions they themselves choose the form of. The blog form enables the graduates to express themselves with new methods, and the contributors are challenged to use other ways to express themselves than the traditional text, like video interviews and pod casts. Textually, a blog is completely different, says Aaby, who has a Master´s degree in Human Geography from the University of Oslo.
Wants to put theses on the agenda
The editorial staff consists of Aaby and nine other women with different profession backgrounds in the humanities and social studies. They will all function as profession editors within their specific fields. Aaby hopes that they and the contributors can put the results presented in the theses on the agenda.
– Master theses are produced at a large scale, but they tend to be passed over in the public debate. This might be because the academic form is hard to translate or update to the daily news´ language. Or, maybe the theses aren’t recognized as the piece of serious research that they actually are, and therefore their content fails to be presented seriously.
Snowball effect
Masterbloggen has during it’s first weeks found contributions to the blog through databases and acquaintances of the editorial staff. Aaby and the other girls hope that people will contact them to have their theses published, after the blog has become better known. For starters, three contributions a week will be published, but the goal is to publish one new contribution every day. MaFo hopes that by giving the writers freer reins concerning form and room, the content will also be more interesting.
– New Internet research shows that people nowadays read longer texts online than before, Aaby adds.
Line Krauss, Master student of literature impartment by the University of Oslo, is positive towards the attempt at presenting Master theses in a blog.
– This sounds like a really good initiative. It will be exciting to see if a blog about Master theses gets other people than students.
Ingen kommentarer
10 siste saker i news
Eleven years of water leaks
The Department of Musicology at the University of Oslo has been struck by several destructive water leaks during the last eleven years. Still nothing gets done, claim employees at the department.
Wants to be entertainment hurricane
Oslo Student-TV wants to meet the students where they are at. Social media such as Facebook and Twitter is therefore used to tempt potential viewers of the new and online-based TV channel.
Investigation committee on higher education:
Too much control in detail
The title above is the judgment on the universities and university colleges in Norway. The sector wants more free money to fix the problems. Tora Aasland promises nothing.
Shapes the student housing´s future
Design student Alice Andreoli wants to help the Foundation for Student Life in Oslo make your everyday life better.
Grants found after all:
Temporarily saved
After numerous ifs and buts the University of Oslo has decided not to stop the enrolment to the study of sign language and interpretation this fall.
University under attack
Every single day, the University of Oslo receives several millions of e-mails. 85 to 90 percent of these are junk mail.
1 000 000 kroner in library fines
Book loaning students at the libraries at the University of Oslo paid more than one million kroner in fees in 2009. The board of the libraries hopes that an increase of fees will make the students less forgetful.
Rages against possible dismantling of subject
Next fall, no new students will be enrolled at the only study for sign language and interpreting in the eastern part of Norway. Students of sign language and also deaf people fear a lack of interpreters and more isolation among the deaf.
More and more pass their exams:
Percent of flunking grades hits record low
The percent of flunking grades at the University of Oslo has gradually dropped since the quality reform of 2003 was introduced. Is better follow-up the reason or has it become easier to pass the exams?
Promises a music bonanza
Half of the concert group at Betong has been exchanged since last semester. All the same they promise a spring semester filled with exciting concerts, including styles such as afrobeats, electronica and metal.
Annonse
Siste news
2010-03-10 2010-03-03 2010-02-24 2010-02-17- University under attack
- 1 000 000 kroner in library fines
- File sharing free for all
- Shorter loan periods at BI





