2026 Summer Scholars Progam

As the world continues grappling with ethical questions around the use of emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence, this course will centralize how community organizations and publics collaborate to design tools and technologies to meet their goals and purposes.

This intensive one-week course is a rare opportunity to learn from a scholar whose ideas are actively reshaping how we think about technology, communication and justice. We hope you'll join us!

2026 Program Flyer

Course #/Title: Engl 790: Community Engagement and Technology Design

In-Person Dates: May 18–22 | 9am - 4pm | Daily

Summer Scholar: Dr. Laura Gonzales, University of Florida

The summer session runs May 19 through June 12, with required in-person meetings held May 18–22. The course is coordinated by Dr. Alison Bertolini. The drop/add deadline is May 20.

For questions, please contact Dr. Alison Bertolini.

Dr. Laura Gonzales is the author of 5 books and over 30 articles related to community engagement, translation and technology design. She has experience practicing multilingual user experience in academic, industry and community settings. She is President of the Association of Teachers of Technical Writing and Editor-in-Chief of Reflections: A Journal of Community-Engaged Writing and Rhetoric.

2025 Summer Scholars Program

In this course, we'll examine the world of scholarly publishing, focusing on three key forms of infrastructure that support and direct the work of developing and circulating new knowledge--the scholarly, the social, and the technical.

Scholarship

You're likely already familiar with the scholarly infrastructures: the genre expectations in your field, the preferred citation schema, appropriate methods, aligning the work with publication venue and its audiences. The practices of peer-review (which vary by publication and by discipline) and choices about what to cite (not just how to cite it) also fall into this category. Ethical considerations in this category are very broad, so we’ll primarily focus on questions of plagiarism and collaboration.

Actors and Social Networks

All of these choices take place in specific contexts, and they are carried out by people - and it is the relationships among these people that constitute the social dimension. People bring their lived experiences into the processes of authoring, editing, and reviewing, and their connections to each other in the networks of publication also impact the whole enterprise of knowledge-making. We love to scorn 'reviewer two' ... but behind that review is a real person, and understanding the social aspects of scholarly publishing can help both the author who wishes to be published and the editor managing the publication process. From an ethical standpoint, we’ll focus on developing guidelines for practicing and responding to peer review.

Technical Infrastructure

Many of the constraints of publishing in the past were set by the limitations of the media and the technologies available - printing with ink on paper is far more expensive than digital publication, and circulation is also more difficult. However, print is more likely to last longer in an archive, and there are advantages to the materiality of books and print journal that still make them attractive repositories of knowledge. In digital publishing, the technical infrastructures include everything from file formats to domain names, from tools for supporting the work of peer review to the social media we use to announce new work. Digital formats also come with specific ethical challenges, from predatory journals, to paper mills, to wholesale theft of publishing venues.

The Specter of AI

All three of these components are now being impacted by the rise of generative AI, which has potential roles to play in authoring, editing, and reviewing. We'll explore the practicalities of using (or resisting) AI in the context of scholarly publishing and look at the policies that editors and publishers are developing in response.

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Our focus will be primarily on publishing in humanities fields, although the sciences have been very active in seeking innovation in peer review (and, more recently, in the response to AI), so we'll also draw on scholarly-publishing related work in other disciplinary spaces as well.

Each student in the course will focus their work on this topic through the lens of working on a publication project of their own, with the aim of applying what we learn to increase the likelihood of publication--understanding how these systems work can have a positive impact on your own process of publishing an article, webtext, or book chapter.

I'll be bringing my own experience as editor (since 1996) of publisher of Kairos, alongside my experiences as author, reviewer, editorial board member of other journals and book series, as well as the research I've done on editing and publishing, but we'll also draw on the experiences of colleagues and scholars whose scholarship focuses specifically on publishing and scholarly communications.