editorial28-2.pdf Australasian Journal of Educational Technology Volume 28, Number 2, 2012 ISSN 1449-5554 (online) Contents Editorial 28(2): Bibliometrics revisited ..................................................................................................... iii-vi Tertiary sector Drivers of learning management system use in a South African open and distance learning institution .................................................................................................................... 183-198 Peet Venter, Mari Jansen van Rensburg and Annemarie Davis The impact of online lecture recordings on student performance ................................................ 199-213 Andrew Williams, Elisa Birch and Phil Hancock ICT-supported, scenario-based learning in preclinical veterinary science education: Quantifying learning outcomes and facilitating the novice-expert transition ........................ 214-231 Jennifer M. Seddon, Brenda McDonald and Adele L. Schmidt Collaborative e-learning course design: Impacts on instructors in the Open University of Tanzania ................................................................................................................. 232-248 Kassimu A. Nihuka and Joke Voogt Four scenarios for determining the size and reusability of learning objects ........................... 249-265 Judith Schoonenboom Setting up a low-cost lab management system for a multi-purpose computing laboratory using virtualisation technology ....................................................................................... 266-278 Heng Ngee Mok, Yeow Leong Lee and Wee Kiat Tan Pathways for improving support for the electronic management and marking of assignments .............................................................................................................................. 279-294 Eva Heinrich, John Milne and Bruce Granshaw Critical discourse analysis of collaborative engagement in Facebook postings ...................... 295-314 Patient Rambe Schools sector Implementing a self-regulated WebQuest learning system for Chinese elementary schools ...................................................................................................................................... 315-340 Hsien-Sheng Hsiao, Chung-Chieh Tsai, Chien-Yu Lin and Chih-Cheng Lin Digital immigrant teacher perceptions of an extended Cyberhunt strategy ............................. 341-363 André du Plessis and Paul Webb Using dynamic geometry software to improve eight grade students’ understanding of transformation geometry ......................................................................................... 364-382 Bulent Guven The Australasian Journal of Educational Technology (AJET) is a refereed research journal published 8 times per year by the Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education (ascilite). AJET retired its printed version (ISSN 1449-3098) at the end of Volume 23, 2007, and from Volume 24, 2008, the journal is open access, online only (ISSN 1449-5554), and does not have paid subscriptions. © 2012 Authors retain copyright in their individual articles, whilst copyright in AJET as a compilation is retained by the publisher. Except for authors reproducing i i Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2012, 28(2) their own articles, no part of this journal may be reprinted or reproduced without permission. For further details, and for details on submission of manuscripts and open access to all issues of AJET published since the journal's foundation in 1985, please see http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ For editorial inquiries, contact the Editor (retirement pending), Assoc Prof Catherine McLoughlin, School of Education (ACT), Australian Catholic University, PO Box 256, Dickson ACT 2602, Australia. Email: Catherine.McLoughlin@acu.edu.au, Tel: +61 2 6209 1100 Fax +61 2 6209 1185. For review process, production, website and business matters, contact the Production Editor (retirement pending), Dr Roger Atkinson, 5/202 Coode Street, Como WA 6152, Australia. Email: rjatkinson@bigpond.com, Tel: +61 8 9367 1133. Desktop publishing (PDF versions) and HTML by Roger Atkinson. AJET is managed by a Committee comprising ASCILITE Executive nominees, the convenors or nominees from previous ascilite Conferences, and AJET's previous editors and current senior editorial staff (to be reconstituted in 2012-13). The current 2012 Management Committee members are: Dr Caroline Steel, The University of Queensland, ASCILITE President Dr Iain Doherty, The University of Hong Kong, ASCILITE Executive Professor Geoffrey Crisp, RMIT University, ASCILITE 2003 Convenor Dr Rob Phillips, Murdoch University, ASCILITE 2004 Convenor Professor Peter Goodyear, University of Sydney, ASCILITE 2006 Convenor Dr Dale Holt, Deakin University, ASCILITE 2008 Convenor Professor Ron Oliver, Edith Cowan University, AJET Editor 1997-2001 Assoc Prof Catherine McLoughlin (Editor - retirement pending), Australian Catholic Uni Dr Roger Atkinson (Production Editor - retirement pending) AJET's Editorial Board (see http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/about/editorial- board.html) reflects the journal's commitment to academic excellence in educational technology and related areas of research and professional practice, our vision of an international journal with an Australasian regional emphasis, and our origins as a professional and learned society publication. Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education http://www.ascilite.org.au/ Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2012, 28(2) iii Editorial 28(2) Bibliometrics revisited A number of previous Editorials have reported upon bibliometric data for AJET and its peer journals. In earlier times, the emphasis was upon getting AJET into important bibliometrics, especially the Thomson Reuters Impact Factor [1], and into important databases, especially ERIC [2]. More recently, it became important to inform readers and authors about bibliometric data that challenged the ARC's 'Four Tiers' ranking of AJET as merely a 'Tier B' journal [3]. Going forward (to borrow a hackneyed phrase from the business world) after Tiers [4], it is now important to monitor all of t h e bibliometrics available to us, to help fade the collective memory of Tiers, and avoid the scenario identified in Editorial 27(6): "Is AJET forever locked into an 'underground' Tier B?" [5]. Table 1 contributes to this monitoring. Table 1: SJR rankings for some educational technology journals Rank order by SJR (covering 525 education journals). Data retrieval: 15 March 2012 [6]. Rank Title SJR Hindex Total docs. (2011) Total docs. (3yrs) Total refs. Total cites (3yrs) Citable docs. (3yrs) Cites/ doc. (2yrs) Ref./ doc. 21 Computers & Education 0.056 46 224 723 9,651 1.538 717 1.93 43.08 27 Journal of Computer Assisted Learning 0.051 33 56 132 2,170 173 127 1.27 38.75 44 British Journal of Educational Technology 0.045 29 96 300 2,740 334 285 1.05 28.54 52 Educational Technology Research and Devt. 0.043 37 45 122 2,349 139 114 0.87 52.20 55 Instructional Science 0.042 30 56 105 3,137 102 91 1.12 56.02 64 Australasian Journal of Educational Technology 0.041 9 36 173 1,360 153 158 0.83 37.78 84 Educational Technology and Society 0.038 25 43 258 1,633 207 252 0.66 37.98 211 Technology, Pedagogy and Education 0.030 4 16 77 547 25 68 0.33 34.19 - Journal of Technology & Teacher Education No SJR calculated in 2012 - Research in Learning Technology No SJR calculated in 2012 http://www.ascilite.org.au/index.php?p=conference iv Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2012, 28(2) SJR (SCImago Journal Rank) rankings [7], produced by Scimago Lab, are calculated from citation data contained in Elsevier's Scopus database [8]. The key feature of SJR is summarised as follows by its originators, González-Pereira, Guerrero-Bote and Moya-Anegón (2009) [9]: The essential idea ... is to assign weights to bibliographic citations based on the importance of the journals that issued them, so that citations issued by more important journals will be more valuable than those issued by less important ones. This "importance" will be computed recursively, i.e., the important journals will be those which in turn receive many citations from other important journals. [9] Comparing AJET with its major peers as ranked by SJR (Table 1 above), by Thomson Reuters Impact Factor [3] and by Tiers [3] shows only relatively minor differences, except in the case of the Tiers rankings for AJET and Research in Learning Technology [10]. AJET, though relatively well ranked according to Impact Factor and SJR, was B ranked in Tiers, whilst Research in Learning Technology, unranked in Impact Factor and SJR, was A ranked in Tiers. Interestingly, recent issues of Research in Learning Technology show a remarkably high proportion of Australian and New Zealand papers, 50%! [based on counts of country of first author, for regular issues 19(2), 19(3), 20(1) and 20(2) (as at 29 March 2012)]. There is a particular preponderance of Australian authors in Research in Learning Technology 20(1) and 20(2), raising t h e possibility that as a Tier A journal it quite recently became especially attractive to Australian authors. To explore SJR a little further, consider the first seven journals listed in Table 1. A l l announce their Thomson-Reuters Impact Factor on their home pages, but none mention SJR, not even Journal of Computer Assisted Learning which ranks higher with SJR than with Impact Factor. One factor that could attract editors and authors to use of SJR is that it is an open access service, whereas Impact Factor is provided through subscription. SJR may have some problems that could be due to imperfections in coverage by Scopus. For example, Table 2, showing changes in AJET's SJR, also shows that Scopus counts of AJET articles differ from the actual counts, especially for 2011, and that SJR lists 525 journals under "Education", whereas Tiers listed 1012. The reasons for this are not known, so further investigation is warranted. Table 2: SCImago data for AJET, 2008-2011 Year SJR Rank (out of 525) Scopus article count Actual article count 2011 0.041 6 4 3 6 8 6 2010 0.038 8 9 7 7 7 1 2009 0.032 1 3 4 4 9 4 5 2008* 0.000 3 6 2 4 7 4 2 * No SJR calculated for AJET in 2008 Moodlemoot au2012 Gold Coast, Queensland 1-4 July 2012 http://moodlemoot.org.au/ Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2012, 28(2) v Hobart, 2-5 July 2012. http://conference.herdsa.org.au/2012/ Nevertheless, AJET's "climb" during its years of SJR inclusion is an encouraging bibliometric. At the same time, we have to be sensitive to other performance criteria that are not necessarily well-correlated with citation based bibliometrics, such a s number of submissions per year, acceptance rates, numbers of issues and articles per year, measures of internationalisation, review process times, size of reviewer panel and average loads per reviewer. The identification of key peer journals for AJET, i . e . the journals that appear with AJET in ranking tables such as Table 1, is a moot point. If one chooses peer journals astutely, it is possible to always secure a position at t h e top of a rankings table! In 2011 AJET received 349 submissions (including 29 full papers for two special issues). This represents a 48% increase over the 236 submissions received in 2010, and an 82% increase over the 186 submissions received in 2009 [11]. More details will be available within about two months, when the retiring Production Editor completes review and author advice processes for 2011's submissions. Roger Atkinson AJET Production Editor (retirement pending) Endnotes 1. AJET Editorial 26(5). Idle Moment 40: Impact Factor revisited. http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet26/editorial26-5.html 2. AJET Editorial 25(1): ERIC indexing and abstracting. http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet25/editorial25-1.html 3. AJET Editorial 27(6): Impact Factor revisited: AJET ranking improved. http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet27/editorial27-6.html 4. AJET Editorial 27(3). Dawn of a new ERA? http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet27/editorial27-3.html 5. AJET Editorial 27(6): Draft ERA 2012 Journal List released. http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet27/editorial27-6.html 6. SCImago Journal & Country Rank. Search string http://www.scimagojr.com/journalrank. php?area=3300&category=3304&country=all&year=2011&order=sjr&min=0&min_type=cd 7. SCImago Journal & Country Rank. Home page. http://www.scimagojr.com/ 8. Scopus. http://www.scopus.com/ 9. González-Pereira, B., Guerrero-Bote, V. P. & Moya-Anegón, F. (2009). The SJR indicator: A new indicator of journals' scientific prestige. http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0912/0912.4141.pdf 10. Research in Learning Technology. http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/ 11. AJET Editorial 27(4). AJET review process outcomes: 2010 data. http://www.ascilite.org.au/ajet/ajet27/editorial27-4.html 10th International Conference of the Learning Sciences The Future of Learning International Society of the Learning Sciences (ISLS) and Centre for Research on Computer Supported Learning and Cognition (CoCo), University of Sydney, 2-6 July 2012 http://www.isls.org/icls2012/ vi Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2012, 28(2) 4th IEEE International Conference on Technology for Education IEEE Computer Society and IEEE Hyderabad, India, 18-20 July 2012 http://t4e.iiit.ac.in/ EAC2012: ePortfolios Australia Conference Australian Catholic University North Sydney, 27-28 September 2012 http://eportfoliosaustralia.wordpress.com/ conference/conference-eac2012/ ACEC 2012 Australian Council for Computers in Education and the Educational Computing Association of Western Australia Perth, 2-5 October 2012 http://acec2012.info/ Sydney, 4-7 February 2013. http://www.odlaasummit.org.au/