Carpenter co-authors research on challenges of social media use for educators

Jeffrey Carpenter, associate professor of education and director of the Teaching Fellows program, published the article in the peer-reviewed journal Teaching and Teacher Education. 

Jeffrey Carpenter, associate professor of education and director of the Teaching Fellows, has co-authored an article in the journal Teaching and Teacher Education along with Stephen Harvey of Ohio University.

Jeffrey Carpenter, associate professor of education and director of the Teaching Fellows
The article, titled "'There's no referee on social media': Challenges in educator professional social media use " is available online here. The abstract reads as follows:

Social media have become venues for self-directed professional activity for many educators. Although these activities are generally voluntary in nature and thus likely provide some benefits, professional social media use also features some drawbacks. We present challenges described by educators (N = 48) who had all actively utilized social media professionally over an extended period of time. Data were collected via semi-structured individual and focus group interviews. Four general types of challenges were experienced by the participants: intrapersonal, interpersonal, school community, and online educator community. Finally, we discuss the implications of these findings for educators, teacher educators, and education researchers.

The article reference is: Carpenter, J.P., & Harvey, S. (2019). “There’s no referee on social media”: Challenges in educator professional social media use. Teaching and Teacher Education, 86. doi: 10.1016/j.tate.2019.102904