Just a head’s up, next week we’ll be running the 2014 RHSU Edu-Scholar Public Influence Rankings. We’ll be honoring and ranking the 200 edu-scholars who had the biggest influence on the nation’s education discourse last year. The exercise is designed to balance the academy’s unfortunate tendency to discount scholars that make real, relevant contributions to vital public policy debates.
The Public Influence Rankings aim to recognize university-based education scholars, of any discipline or bent, for their contributions to the public square. Edu-scholar influence encompasses both the corpus of one’s scholarly work and one’s centrality to public discussion in the past year. After all, a scholar’s influence is a product of several factors, including their body of scholarship, the degree to which their work has influenced today’s researchers, their willingness to wade into public discourse, and the energy and effectiveness with which they write for and speak to popular audiences.
The rankings will include 200 leading education scholars. The ranked scholars include the top 150 finishers from this past year, augmented by 50 “at-large” additions named by a selection committee of about two dozen accomplished and disciplinarily, intellectually, and geographically diverse scholars. Bottom line: regardless of just where they rank, each of the scholars named deserves a lot of credit just for doing what it takes to crack the top 200. And, since that credit isn’t always forthcoming in academe, I’m hoping we can help correct for that--if only a little.