Research produces more questions than answers. (Liz Gloyn calls these “academic otters“. Her strategies reflect her position as an early career research in the humanities.) The successful researchers I know have far more questions and projects they could be working on than they could possibly pursue in their lifetimes, even if they had fewer service […]
Read More »supporting graduate students
Collaboration, co-authoring, and such
If you are in the humanities or some social science disciplines, co-authorship is much less common and may even be frowned upon. Some humanities researchers have been heard to doubt the existence of co-authorship, “Two people cannot hold the pen.”*
If you are in this kind of discipline, writing with others can feel odd. And it raises some interesting issues about how it will be evaluated.
Why co-author? … get more written … share expertise … mentor students
How will peers view it? … separating you from your co-authors … getting collaborative grants
Read More »On the topic of teaching experience…
The University of Windsor is working on a project supporting Graduate and Teaching Assistants. They are collecting information about what is happening elsewhere. Here’s the intro from their site: … a team working with Graduate Studies in collaboration with the Centre for Teaching and Learning at the University of Windsor in Ontario, Canada. We’re building […]
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