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Reminder: CARMA Webcast Program advanced registration deadline August 1

  • 1.  Reminder: CARMA Webcast Program advanced registration deadline August 1

    Posted 07-27-2011 10:31
    With apologies for cross-postings:

    Colleagues: A reminder that the extended deadline for Advanced Registration for the 2011-2012 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program is next Monday August 1. Join the 70+ universties that have already signed up.

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    Greetings from CARMA!

    We are happy to report that membership registration for our 2011-2012 CARMA Consortium Webcast Program is now open! Our scheduled presenters include Michael Hitt, John Van Maanen, Lawrence James, Herman Aguinis, Kevin Carlson, Richard Gonzalez, Rick Hoyle, Ron Landis, Fred Oswald, and Anne Smith. Moreover, we have extended our early registration deadline to August 1, 2011. The early registration price is $850. After August 1, 2011, the full price for our program is $975. To see if your school has signed up for our 2011-2012 program click here http://carma.wayne.edu/CurrentConsortiumMembers.asp?pid=36&lpid=35

    More information about CARMA and our program is provided below, and additional details can be found on the CARMA website by clicking here http://carma.wayne.edu/Webcasts.asp

    What Is CARMA?
    The Center for the Advancement of Research Methods and Analysis (CARMA) is a non-profit unit of the School of Business Administration at Wayne State University, located in Detroit, Michigan. CARMA was established in 1997 by Dr. Larry J. Williams (former Chairperson of the Research Methods Division of the Academy of Management and Founding Editor of Organizational Research Methods) and was located at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia from 1997-2009.

    What Is the Purpose of the CARMA Consortium Webcast Program?
    The main purpose of this Program is to allow faculty and students the opportunity to hear the latest methodological developments relevant to their research. For many faculty and students, learning about research methods is challenging, and watching and listening to an expert who can present current information in an understandable form is a valuable learning aid. Our Webcasts emphasize the substantive application of methodological developments and can supplement the education that occurs in traditional courses. Membership in the Program occurs at the institutional level, and viewing the live Webcasts as a group can be an important community building activity for department faculty and/or graduate students.

    We provide training on research methods and data analysis that can benefit the doctoral students and faculty at your institution. This training includes extensive topics in quantitative and qualitative methods. Through our Program, faculty and students from participating universities have access to live Webcasts and an extensive Video Library that address a wide range of topics in research methods used in organizational and social science disciplines.

    What Does Membership Include?
    • Unlimited access to 78 hours of recorded lectures in our Video Library, which is available to all faculty and students (at no charge to them as individuals);
    • Access to 10 live lectures (group viewing), which become part of our Video Library, throughout the academic year; and
    • A 50% discount on our Short Courses.

    How Can the CARMA Consortium Webcast Program Advance Faculty and Graduate Students’ Research Methods Learning?
    • Useful for research within a wide variety of disciplines, including management and other business-related disciplines, psychology, sociology, education, nursing, social work and public health among many other disciplines;
    • Live webcasts as a doctoral program event (i.e. an electronic multimedia colloquium)
    • Excellent resource for faculty development to help faculty with their research;
    • Use in class by instructors looking for a way to compliment their teaching syllabus interactively;
    • Use by faculty to raise points of discussion and to engage students in class;
    • Helps to promote the quality of research;
    • Recognizes and supports various methodologies and approaches for younger researchers, doctoral students and faculty members;
    • Videos can be used to clarify doubts, learn more about issues with certain types of methodologies and to introduce doctoral students to various types of quantitative and qualitative methodologies;
    • Help doctoral students and faculty in their research and publications; and
    • Great resource for distance learning programs!

    What Has CARMA’s Impact Been So Far?
    • In 2010-2011, 161 universities from throughout the United States and abroad participated;
    • More than 10,259 faculty and students from 57 countries are CARMA Website Users;
    • More than 250 universities have participated in the CARMA Consortium Webcast Program since 2005;
    • More than 2,253 faculty and students have made more than 16,987 requests to watch recordings of CARMA Webcast lectures since the fall of 2004; and
    • More than 1,000 faculty and students from universities throughout the world have attended CARMA Short Courses at VCU since the summer of 2004.

    2011-2012 Consortium Webcast Program Tentative Topics & Presenters

    “Debunking Myths and Urban Legends About Meta-Analysis”
    Dr. Herman Aguinis, Indiana University

    “Control Variables and Multicollinearity: Things We Thought We Knew”
    Dr. Kevin Carlson, Virginia Tech University

    “Experimental Designs”
    Dr. Richard Gonzalez, University of Michigan

    “Using Secondary Data to do Quality Research”
    Dr. Michael Hitt, Texas A & M University

    “Modeling Longitudinal Data Using Structural Equation Methods”
    Dr. Rick Hoyle, Duke University

    “Meta Analysis and Structural Equation Modeling”
    Dr. Ron Landis, University of Memphis

    “Practical Scale Development Issues”
    Dr. Fred Oswald, Rice University

    “Photo Elicitation as a Data Source”
    Dr. Anne Smith, University of Tennessee

    “Ethnographic Writing”
    Dr. John Van Maanen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    “Conditional Reasoning and the Measurement of Power”
    Dr. Lawrence James, Georgia Institute of Technology

    The dates of these webcasts will be announced in the next few weeks.

    We hope the faculty and students at your school will be interested in our Program planned for the upcoming year. Please forward this email to the faculty and doctoral students in your program so they can learn about the programs CARMA is hosting in the upcoming weeks. I would also like to encourage you to initiate discussions with your program, department, school administrators, and/or your library administrators, about having your university register its membership for our Consortium Webcast Program.

    If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact us. We hope to hear from you soon, and thanks in advance for sharing this email with colleagues at your school!

    Sincerely,