"Internet, social sciences and humanities"@en . . "RIV/75081431:_____/14:00000408" . . "internet; social sciences; academic policy; impact factor; economics; history; generation gap"@en . "22491" . "Stellner, Franti\u0161ek" . "[98A4597345D5]" . "Internet, social sciences and humanities" . "RIV/75081431:_____/14:00000408!RIV15-MSM-75081431" . . "10.2478/s13374-014-0244-7" . "Internet, social sciences and humanities"@en . . . . . . . . . "19"^^ . "AT - Rakousk\u00E1 republika" . "V" . . "1210-3055" . . "Human Affairs: Postdisciplinary Humanities & Social Sciences Quarterly" . "2"^^ . "Internet, social sciences and humanities" . . "The paper deals with the state of the social sciences after the boom of internet services in the Czech Republic in the 1990s. The results of our survey, based on 512 responses from the economics and history departments of major Czech public universities, show that internet services are considered a quality factor for academic output; however, the issues of plagiarism, a lack of resource criticism, inadequacy of impact factor-based evaluations, poor academic training for the new generation of social scientists, the failure of state academic policy, and the generation gap make further development in the Czech social sciences rather problematic. As a result we recommend creating a better communication link between policy makers and scholars, reforming the current state policy which encourages lower quality academic output, and improving academic training, which requires a more individual approach, and also placing higher demands on social scientists"@en . "4" . "vol. 24" . . . "Vokoun, Marek" . . "2"^^ . "The paper deals with the state of the social sciences after the boom of internet services in the Czech Republic in the 1990s. The results of our survey, based on 512 responses from the economics and history departments of major Czech public universities, show that internet services are considered a quality factor for academic output; however, the issues of plagiarism, a lack of resource criticism, inadequacy of impact factor-based evaluations, poor academic training for the new generation of social scientists, the failure of state academic policy, and the generation gap make further development in the Czech social sciences rather problematic. As a result we recommend creating a better communication link between policy makers and scholars, reforming the current state policy which encourages lower quality academic output, and improving academic training, which requires a more individual approach, and also placing higher demands on social scientists" . . .