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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.

4 years of A Meeting With Your Writing

Posted on September 11, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

A long term participant in A Meeting With Your Writing recently mentioned that it has been 4 years. Wow, where does the time go? I remember when I came up with this idea. I wondered what I would do if no one signed up. Or, worse, if only 3 people signed up and then I […]

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Decisions take energy

Posted on August 6, 2015 by Jo VanEvery 1 Comment

making decisions is one of the most energy-intensive things we do as humans. Making a decision just plain takes a lot of calories. With a complex life, our brains are exhausted most days, too exhausted to make good decisions. Mark Silver A common scenario You have a sense that you should be writing regularly. You […]

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A photo of a person in red jumper and black leggings doing a kind of forward lunge pose in yoga on a green yoga mat.

The benefits of working small

Posted on August 3, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

In another post, I asked: “How could you experiment with working in a relaxed state?” — Is working at or just beyond your limits really effective? I proposed that the ways in which my yoga teacher has been encouraging us to work within the comfortable range of movement and not stretch our muscles to their limits, […]

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Is working at or just beyond your limits really effective?

Posted on July 9, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

We live in a culture in which we are often demanded to do more. How much writing can you do in a year/semester/week/hour? How many students can you teach effectively? This constant striving for more leaves many of us feeling inadequate a lot of the time. It also privileges an approach to work that is […]

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On a bright cyan green background, a circular wooden block displays the numbers of a clockface in black with tiny movable clock hands. To the right there is a mini white printed calendar with a red pencil resting lightly above it.

Thoughts on accountability, deadlines & goals

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

You want to write more. You want to finish and submit more of your writing. You may think that the only way to do that is to do one or more of the following: set concrete (product-oriented) goals give yourself deadlines for achieving those goals make yourself accountable to someone else for those goals and/or […]

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You don’t need accountability

Posted on June 22, 2015 by Jo VanEvery 1 Comment

Why do you want an accountability partner/coach/whatever for writing? The things you most dislike about your job, and that you would not do if an external body did not require them, have accountability to that external body built in. You do your grading. You do it by the institutional deadline. You set aside important work […]

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A white cup full of tea and saucer sits next to an open ring-bound notebook with a silver pen on top. Lay across the notebook is some pink flower cuttings with stems and leaves.

“Write all the things” is not a summer plan

Posted on May 25, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · Write All The Things! is not a summer plan As the semester got busier, chances are you started saying “I’ll get to that in the summer” about a lot of things, especially writing. At this point you’ve probably got a list that is roughly “Write all the things.” Of […]

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How to take the weekend off

Posted on May 18, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · How to take the weekend off Academic life is demanding. During term time you are juggling teaching, administrative and service work, graduate supervision, and your own research and writing. During the summer and your sabbatical, you feel like you need to devote as much time as possible to your […]

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A phone is turned face down on a circular marble table with a small child playing with colourful bricks in the background

Distraction: not the usual suspects

Posted on May 11, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · Distraction: not the usual suspects Distraction is the enemy of productivity. There’s all kinds of time management and productivity advice telling you to track what you are doing and get rid of all the meaningless tasks that don’t contribute to moving your project forward. There are apps and strategies […]

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When does Reading count as Writing?

Posted on April 23, 2015 by Jo VanEvery 1 Comment

In the intro to A Meeting With Your Writing I ask participants to list everything that comes to mind when they ask this question: “What does this writing project need to move forward?” I give them 30 – 60 seconds to write. Then I ask them to select the thing on that list that they […]

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A photo of a cylindrical tower of books piled on top of each other like bricks. Some of the height has been mirrored to seem taller than it actually is.

What it means to make a contribution to knowledge

Posted on April 20, 2015 by Jo VanEvery 1 Comment

The primary purpose of academic publishing is to communicate with other scholars. This form of communication is rather formal. The bar for acceptance into the conversation is high. This conversation is asynchronous and takes place over very long time periods. What happens once you’ve published your article? By publishing your article in a scholarly journal […]

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Making Writing Visible

Posted on April 9, 2015 by Jo VanEvery 1 Comment

One of the reasons people have trouble getting writing done is because if feels like “not work”. You know it’s real work and even the work that is going to be most valued when it comes to hiring, promotion, and whatnot. But even knowing that it feels like it’s not really work. You do it […]

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