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Abstract: Results of the survey

Dear Critters,

Many thanks to all for responding to the survey, for the two (or three
weeks), I had 361 responses, which is great!

***SUMMARY***

(1) No to separating the list.

(2) no need for moderator, people need to self-censor or self-moderate.

(3) the list of very beneficial because of the announcements, the
discussions, and the ability of the list to connect us to a like-minded
community.

(4) There are concerns over dominance of some posters, the need for perhaps
a forum etiquette or guidelines on unacceptable behaviour. Perhaps
moderating when the need arises, such as when people act inappropriately.

(5) A small minority (I sound like a politician) expressed bullying and
being "terrified" of posting.

(6) For detailed analysis, read on.

*** ANALYSIS***

Finally I had the chance to analyse some of the results from the survey. I
know there were a lot of mistakes in the questionnaire (sorry about that),
with some people unable to answer the ranking question – it might have been
a browser problem. Also I do apologise for the questions on gender and age,
which people argued to be irrelevant to the purposes of the survey. I am
sorry for the ‘British-ness’ of the job type and the lack of some options,
including for example the rank ‘Professor’, “Research in non-academic
institution”, etc.

I was curious as to who posts on the forum and thought I might want to
compare this to some generic demographic data, although mainly I would like
to compare it to job position. For those who are interested, I can share
these results by sending to their emails personally rather than the list as
a whole (once I get R working, that is).

Also, the data (excel or CSV sheet) is available to whoever wants it, just
let me know by sending me an email to [log in to unmask] and I will send it
to your email.

The first question was an open-ended one, and a content analysis of the
answers shows the useful aspects of the forum pertain to the announcements
on the list (80% of the answers mentioning that), the discussions and
debates (28%), many answers cited ‘information’ and the function of the
forum in providing knowledge to what else is going on the field regardless
of the nature of the post (28%), others noted to the importance of the
posts in contributing to teaching material (7%), political activism (7%),
and a small minority of answers citing the ability to gain access to
articles online (5%).


The most interesting, however, was that I found around 26% of the answers
appealed to a more, shall we say, tacit benefit that the forum provides,
aptly captured in a reference to “the sense of an evolving community of
Critical Geographers -- whatever that might mean”. Others mentioned that
the forum serves to draw their attention to things they might not come
across otherwise, and hence “feeling the pulse of the time through many
different forms of communication”. The list, it should be mentioned, gives
a sense of community to many of us, particularly to those who feel isolated
in their working environments, whether that is because they work in a
department that mostly does not link to their field, are geographically
isolated, or have left academia and wish to remain attached in some way.
This was strongly expressed in some cases, with a member stating “this
forum changed my life. I have and continue to have a lack of support for my
work [in my university].  However, I have found collegiality outside of [my
state] and the United States”.



On whether the list should change/improve, there was a remark that change
does not always have to be for the better, but hopefully the intentions of
the respondents on the survey and the discussion on the forum that prompted
this would want that type of change. Results were split, with 46% saying it
should not change, 45% saying it should change, and 9% saying they ‘don’t
know’ [338 answer, 23 skipped].  The comments on this question mirrored a
lot of the discussion we had earlier, with suggestions such as forum
etiquette, or a list of guidelines or a mission statement indicating what
the forum is about and what is expected of members and posters. Other
suggestions called for more incremental changes such as sign-posting in the
subject heading or in the first few lines to indicate what the post is
about, thus allowing members to delete it if it is outside their interest
areas, self-censorship or self-moderating, and the option of deleting
emails that do not correspond to academic or academic related interests.

Others suggested a limit on the number of posts a week (not really sure how
workable is that as people might forget that they had posted, or whether a
response counts as a post, etc.). I cannot ignore that quite a few
statements implied the dominance of two particular members in posting and
the general annoyance that has caused to them, and in their view many
others too. These issues, as mentioned earlier, have been expressed in
discussions on the forum last month. I’ll end on question 1 with a quote
that pretty much sums it up: “Well it can always improve, but [the] issue
is whether it needs technical improvements or just people should use it
more thoughtfully. I tack latter view.”

For question 3, on whether the list should be moderated, the majority (65%)
believe that it should not be moderated, compared to 23% who do, and 12%
answered with ‘don’t know’. Comments on that matter related to what type of
moderation, with a suggestion for a “light touch” style, a moderation of
the discussion – but not announcements, or limited to when certain list
members act (post, share) inappropriately. On the other hand, the majority
commented that self-moderation should be key, with the option of deleting
unwanted emails always there, and for that matter, not really requiring a
moderator. Some comments touched on the practicality of the issue, with a
moderators’ job being an impossible task, or very time-consuming.
Interesting suggestions confirm that whilst the forum does not favour a
moderator who would approve every post, a moderator (with a small m?) would
‘have a word’ (or an email, really) with those who abuse the list. A curve
ball to these very good suggestions is of course, as one respondent put it,
“who decides over the criteria the moderator will have to apply?”

On the matter of a separate list of announcements, jobs postings, etc., the
overwhelming majority believe that no separation should be made [358
answered this question, 83% do not want to separate the list, 11% yes, and
6% don’t know] citing that the problem is not with these types of posts and
that many people find them useful, in addition to the impractical aspect of
being subscribed to an additional list.

Regarding the two questions that ask respondents to rank, I’m aware that
they didn’t work and the cascading nature of the results seems to suggest
that indeed this was the case with many of you. However, there is a
majority who ranked a moderator to the list and a separate announcements
list as the least favourable ways of changing the Forum, which mirror then
answers to questions 2 and 3 discussed earlier, so on some level, the
answers to the question on ranking different suggested solutions seem to
work.

***Matters of Concern***

Many sentiments expressed in the survey referred to weariness and patience
wearing thin with some types of posts and some posters, with a few
expressing a reluctance to read anything or post their ideas or views, with
a worry that it is only creating more posts and spam that people would find
annoying. Others referred to ‘bullying’ types on the forum, with some early
career geographers or PhDs being terrified of posting. Though very few
(only 4) reported the latter, I still would like to voice this concern
given the necessarily open nature of this forum.


So, from me, thanks again for answering the questionnaire, and again, if
you want the actual data, I’m happy to send it to you personally (as
attachment by email, of course).

Best wishes,

Dana (who is actually a *qualitative* researcher)