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Jo VanEvery

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Developing a Practice: Writing

Writing is central to your scholarly work and identity. And yet, you struggle to find time and motivation to do it. Posts in this category focus on the process of writing as a whole. They will help you establish an effective writing practice that enables you to pursue your curiosity, create knowledge, and communicate that knowledge through publications.

You Need a Writing Practice is a good place to start.

Using all 3 types of writing time will help you imagine how you can fit writing in even when you are also juggling teaching, meetings, and so on. It also helps you understand how your writing practice may shift with the seasons of the academic year.

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Developing A New Practice: How I Do It

Posted on January 8, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · Developing A New Practice: How I Do It You are probably worried about being able to write high quality academic prose, to get it published, to write and publish enough of it, and so on. You may look at my advice to write for 15 minutes a day and […]

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Developing A New Practice: Getting Started

Posted on January 6, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · Developing A New Practice: Getting Started Do you want to be an academic who writes regularly? In December, 2014, I decided that I wanted to be someone who practices yoga regularly. I’ve done enough yoga to know that it is good for me to do it regularly. I have […]

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What counts as “writing”?

Posted on January 2, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · What counts as writing? I have a theory about writer’s block. It’s a theory that involves gremlins. You sit down to write. And then this gremlin turns up. Just as you are about to type something the gremlin says something from this list. What do you mean, you don’t […]

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Setting effective goals

Posted on December 8, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

My approach to planning is very process focused. I encourage you to make time to do the important work and to notice how your projects are moving forward. I do this because what I see happening when people set goals increases stress, leads to overwork, and doesn’t actually support their best work. Things like: negative self-talk […]

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Process vs Product

Posted on December 4, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

I have an ambivalent relationship with goals. I know they are important but I find setting specific goals with an output and a deadline stalls my work rather than motivating it. I see that a lot of you struggle with similar issues in your writing. This post uses a long analogy to my own process […]

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When another project is distracting you from this one

Posted on October 27, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

This post is part of a series on Optimizing Focus. Finding it hard to focus is normal. Self-flagellation does not work to improve your focus. Furthermore it takes time and energy that takes you away from your writing; it is another distraction. I firmly believe that you can approach your work compassionately rather than violently. […]

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Communicating manuscript edits

Posted on September 29, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · Communicating manuscript edits I received a Tweet asking whether I had written anything about managing manuscript edits. I have a class available that helps with the emotional aspects of that process, and leads you through the process of making decisions (Dealing with Reviewer Comments, available in January for purchase, […]

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Managing Manuscript Edits

Posted on September 29, 2014 by Jo VanEvery 2 Comments

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · Managing manuscript edits I received a Tweet asking whether I had written anything about managing manuscript edits. You need to figure out how to manage the work involved in revising the manuscript once you’ve made those decisions. And you’ll need to write a letter to the editor when you […]

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Are you resisting routine?

Posted on September 2, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

During last Thursday’s Meeting, one participant commented that she’d noticed an interesting benefit of A Meeting With Your Writing. Like so many of us, J is prone to changing her schedule a lot. This means making decisions about whether to write now or to do some other thing on the big list of important stuff. A Meeting […]

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Turn Summer Writing Plans into Autumn Writing Plans

Posted on August 13, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

In the post about Summer Writing Plans I suggested that you don’t necessarily want to finish things in the summer, but rather get them to the point where what remains can be done during a busy term. One of my objectives in writing that post was to help you set yourself up for writing in term time, something […]

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Are you tempted to binge write for the last few weeks of the break?

Posted on July 29, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

I’ve written before about the mis-use of the term “binge writing”. I don’t just mean writing for long periods of time, which is what you’ve probably been doing all summer. I mean binging: Are you tempted to push yourself beyond what you know from experience is the optimum amount of writing you can do well […]

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Are you taking long weekends?

Posted on June 30, 2014 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

We all get long weekends sometimes, though for different reasons. It seems that a lot of holidays that used to float are now observed on a Monday in order to make it a long weekend. I know a lot of academics have a hard time regularly taking 2-day weekends. I’m betting long weekends are even […]

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