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Jo VanEvery

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writing

Cover of The Scholarly Writing Process (A Short Guide)

Writing as process and product

Posted on November 1, 2016 by Jo VanEvery

This is an excerpt from my book: The Scholarly Writing Process (A Short Guide). Designed to refer to whenever you get stuck, it breaks down the scholarly writing process into stages and provides both a description of that stage and writing prompts to help you get unstuck. Here’s the introduction and table of contents. Introduction […]

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a large collection of wooden grandfather clocks in varying tones of wood and painted wood, as well as shapes and sizes. They all face the camera and fill the image.

The frustrations of peer review: why is it taking so long?

Posted on June 28, 2016 by Jo VanEvery

 Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · The frustrations of peer review: Why is it taking so long? This is part of a short series addressing the frustration with how long peer review takes. Other posts in this series include How you, as a peer reviewer, can contribute to a better process and The Role of Journal […]

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A story from… A Meeting With Your Writing

Posted on May 23, 2016 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · A Story from A Meeting With Your Writing If you’re a long-time member or someone new researching how you can add some accountability to your writing goals, here is a story from A Meeting With Your Writing – my weekly series of virtual writing groups to help you learn […]

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A wooden table next to a full height window with an open notebook and pen keeping the pages apart, a laptop, a white coffee mug on a coaster and a small transparent glass vase of hand-picked flowers to the right-hand side

Writing is NOT a reward for getting your grading done

Posted on April 27, 2016 by Jo VanEvery

Jo VanEvery, Academic Career Guide · Writing is not a reward for getting your grading done Grading is dispiriting at the best of times. There is too much of it to do, to a very tight deadline. And despite the occasional brilliant paper or clear demonstration that students are getting it, there are too many […]

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The dangers of counting words

Posted on March 7, 2016 by Jo VanEvery 2 Comments

A lot of people count words as a way of measuring their writing progress. Although there are stages of the writing process where this is helpful, there are also points in the process where counting words could actually be damaging. What you measure, affects your process If you measure the number of words, you are going […]

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A person standing and looking at a dark blue wall filled with yellow post-it notes stuck to the wall in an overwhelming cluster. The notes indicate a place on a mindmap which is drawn in black marker underneath.

One thing at a time?

Posted on February 4, 2016 by Jo VanEvery 1 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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A photo of a person holding an open notebook of notes in their lap with a pen poised over the pages. They are seated in a crowded lecture room where only the back of their arm and legs are visible.

What does advice for readers mean for you as a writer?

Posted on October 12, 2015 by Jo VanEvery 2 Comments

These 2 pieces of advice for (student) readers came across my virtual desk: How to read a book, v5.0 by Paul N. Edwards, School of Information, University of Michigan Reading with purpose by Michael Newman, Associate Professor of Media Studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, writing in University Affairs. Both are making similar points. Student readers of […]

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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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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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A photo of 4 people working at computers on desks facing each other into the middle. The photo composition is busy and the desks are busier, creating a slightly overwhelming image of people and wires and concentration.

It IS possible to write during term time

Posted on February 12, 2015 by Jo VanEvery Leave a Comment

The academic year has cycles. There are periods, like the summer, when there are more opportunities to make writing your priority, even dedicating full days to intensively work on a writing project. Most academics look forward to those parts of the cycle. And there is something really important about the kind of work that sort […]

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Developing A New Practice: How I Do It

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

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 think that is never going to help you with that. What useful writing can […]

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A wooden sign made from a flat slice of tree trunk held up by a big branch each side and stuck int the ground of a forest setting. On the flat part, the word "START" is painted in white which signals the beginning of a cycling route, with little cycling illustrations either side of the word.

Developing A New Practice: Getting Started

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

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 a teacher locally that I really like. But I had fallen out […]

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