Recently in Doctoral Students Category

Staging Women's Lives in Academia

| No Comments | No TrackBacks
We are putting together an edited collection, tentatively titled Staging Women's Lives in Academia.  The subtitle, yet to be figured out, will indicate that our focus is upon women in literature and languages.  The book, under serious consideration at Rutgers University Press for its new Higher Education Studies series, will focus upon nodal points of professional (graduate school, pre- and post- tenure, mid- and later- career, and retirement) and personal life for women in academia.  We have two key premises:  that choosing not to continue down the traditional path of academic life stages is as significant as following it, and that the usual conflation of academic and age-specific life stages is deeply gendered.  

 

Our design for the collection outlines professional life stages.  These range from:

 

*                     finishing the degree  (who chooses to write or not write the dissertation);

*                     seeking academic or other employment post-Ph.D.;

*                     beginning and then remaining in the profession (publishing, promotions, moving into administration or not);

*                     leaving academia once employed (whether in a full-time or part-time, pre-tenure or post-tenure position);

*                     deciding to retire or to continue working.

 

We welcome essays from women who have followed a traditional career path, but also from those who've travelled other roads.  We can readily see a graduate student writing about the decision to get the Ph.D. but not pursue academic employment, for example, an adjunct writing about mid-career parenting decisions, an administrator writing about being "stuck," an associate professor talking about the decision not to seek promotion to full professor, etc. Parenting, elder-care issues, and general assessment of "professionalization" values can also lead to priorities other than those usually counseled through professional advice venues.  

 

Although we of course want contributors to draw upon personal experience, we will be asking that they both theorize and concretize their essays.  As you think about this call, we'd like to ask that you also think about some very basic questions that could help others, such as: "Do/did you discover that your experience was typical, but nonetheless didn't expect it?"  "What would you point out as the key features of this stage to a colleague just beginning it?" "How do you think your experiences were shaped by the kind of school you worked at and where your school was situated?" and, everyone's favorite, "What would you do differently if you had it to do again?"  

 

Besides these basic questions, there are many others that you might consider, such as: What is gendered about your career path, your career experience?  How did race/ethnicity, age, class, sexuality, and culture affect your academic experience at each stage?  How did your academic work feed into, enhance, or distract from other parts of your life?  Or how much of your personal life intersects with or clashes with your work life?  Has your work changed over time?  Have you changed over time in terms of your enthusiasm for, and interest in, your work?  

 

We want contributors to be frank, but we also want these essays to encourage "best practice" discussion and also to serve as references for other women.  Because responding fully to some of these topics may be difficult, we are willing to accept proposals or essays by authors writing under a pseudonym or anonymously.  We also invite proposals written by several people in dialogue with each other.  

 

Please consider sending in a proposal for this collection, but also think about students and colleagues who fall under the "did not choose to" rubrics who may not be receiving notes such as this.  Please forward this call to them.  We would like to receive proposals by June 1, 2012.  Proposal packets should include a 500-word abstract (or a full essay, if appropriate) and a brief c.v.  Final essays should be around 6250 words, including notes and Works Cited, although we will consider shorter pieces.  They should be sent to both of us:  

 

Michelle Massé at mmasse@lsu.edu

Nan Bauer-Maglin at nbauer-maglin@gc.cuny.edu

 
The Journal of Web Librarianship is pleased to announce an upcoming special issue on the topic of data curation, edited by Susan Sharpless Smith.

Data curation, "the active and on-going management of data through its lifecycle of interest and usefulness to scholarly and educational activities across the sciences, social sciences, and the humanities," is an emerging field that brings new opportunities and challenges for libraries. The growing movement to effectively manage, archive, preserve, retrieve and reuse research data is one that compliments traditional library missions to preserve and access information. This special issue will explore issues surrounding this new arena. The issue's scope includes but is not limited to:
  • Data curation theory and practice
  • Roles for research libraries and librarians
  • Data storage infrastructures
  • Libraries as partners in data curation strategies
  • Data stewardship
  • Sustainability of long term data management programs
  • Ontologies for data integration
  • Realizing goals for reuse and combination of datasets
  • Education and skills required for data curators
  • Discovery and retrieval systems
  • Data repositories
  • Looking to the future
Susan Smith is  Director of Research, Instruction & Technology Services / Senior Librarian at Z. Smith Reynolds Library, Wake Forest University.  She recently completed the third edition of Web-based instruction: A guide for libraries (Chicago: American Library Association) and has published numerous articles and book chapters.

Query letters and preliminary proposals are welcome any time if potential authors would like to discuss their ideas with the issue editor. Please submit queries and manuscripts to guest editor Susan Smith at jwl.curation@gmail.com. Please refer to the JWL web site, http://www.lib.jmu.edu/org/jwl for Instructions for Authors.

Issue Timeline:
Initial Manuscript Submission deadline: January 1, 2012
Notices to authors: April, 2012
Final Acceptance: June, 2012
Issue Publication: October, 2012

The Journal of Web Librarianship
Susan Smith, Special Issue Editor
Jody Condit Fagan, Editor
Email:     jwl.curation@gmail.com

2012 Methodology Paper Competition

| No Comments | No TrackBacks

The Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) is now accepting proposals for its 2012 Methodology Paper Competition, sponsored by Dialog. The purpose of this award is to stimulate communication on research methodologies at ALISE annual conferences.

 

The competition is open to all types of methodology. Papers must be limited to description and discussion of a research method or a technique associated with a particular research method. (For example, papers may address such areas as sampling, grounded theory, historical methods, or statistical methods.) Papers must explain the particular method/technique, including methodological implications for library and information science. Examples to illustrate its value can come from LIS-related published studies, proposed studies, and works in progress. Papers that stress findings are not eligible for this competition.

 

One winning paper will be selected. An honorarium of $500 will be awarded to the author(s). In cases of joint authorship, one honorarium will be awarded for the paper. Methodology papers prepared by joint authors are eligible for entry but at least one author must be a personal member of ALISE as of the deadline date.

 

Only one methodology paper per entrant will be considered; multiple entries from the same author will not be accepted. Authors may submit papers for other ALISE competitions; however, the same paper cannot be submitted for more than one category.

 

Authors may not submit papers that have been published or have been accepted for publication. Authors who have won this award within the past five years are ineligible for this competition.

 

Papers submitted to this competition can originate from a variety of different sources and applicants are encouraged to develop such papers from their research. Methodology papers completed in pursuit of master's and doctoral studies (e.g. thesis, seminars, dissertation, course work paper) are eligible, as are papers generated as a result of a research grant or other source of funding.

 

Submission Requirements

Papers, including the abstract and references, must not exceed 25 double-spaced pages (6,000 words), should have one inch margins and be in 12 point font.Two title pages must be sent: One with, and one without, author name(s) and institution. Both title pages must carry the name of the competition for which the paper is being submitted.

 

Judging

The papers will be judged by the ALISE Research Committee with the assistance of additional ALISE members in those cases where the methodology warrants. All reviewing is "blind." Methodology papers will be judged on the following criteria:

 

-Description of the method or technique

                -Explanation of methodological implications of the method/technique for LIS

                -Examples of actual or potential applications to library and information science research or studies in related fields (i.e., from published studies, proposed studies, and work in progress)

-Appropriateness of the examples to the paper's focus on method/technique

-Clarity in the writing and in the paper's organization

 

Proposals will be disqualified if they exhibit one or more of the following:

-Lack of adherence to submission requirements

 -Submission of paper for the wrong award

 -Poor quality of the writing

 -Poor organization of material

 -Lack of attention to study design

 

The committee reserves the right to select no winning paper if, in its judgment, none of the papers is considered satisfactory.

 

The winners of the awards are expected to present a summary of their papers at the 2012 ALISE Annual Conference.

 

The methodology paper, including an abstract of no more than 200 words, must be received no later than July 15, 2011. It should be

emailed as a Word attachment to:

 

Pam McKenzie pmckenzi@uwo.ca

The University of Western Ontario

Chair, Dialog/ALISE Methodology Paper Competition

 

For more details, please see http://www.alise.org/mc/page.do?sitePageId=55542

 

 

 

CALL FOR PAPERS

DOCTORAL CONSORTIUM
at the 11th IEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies
http://www.ask4research.info/icalt/2011/doctoral_consortium.php

Athens, Georgia, USA
July 6-8, 2011


***Extended Deadline for submissions: February 15, 2011***


What is the Doctoral Consortium?
********************************
The Doctoral Consortium is a workshop for Ph.D. students from all over the
world who are in the early phases of their dissertation work (i.e., in their
first or second year). The goal of the Doctoral Consortium is to help
students with their thesis and research plans by providing feedback and
general advice on using the research environment in a constructive and
international atmosphere. The Doctoral Consortium provides PhD students with
the opportunity to meet and discuss with experts in their area. Students
will present and discuss their thesis in the context of a well-known and
established international conference outside of their usual university
environment.

Up to 10 Ph.D. students will have the opportunity to participate. Students
will be required to pay the registration fees of the ICALT Conference
(student rates). 

The Doctoral Consortium will consist of 3 sessions. The first session aims
at giving students the chance to present their work to others and get
familiar with the work of other PhD students in their area. Each PhD student
will give a very brief presentation (about 3 minutes) about his/her work
with focus on motivation and research problem. These presentations are
followed by a poster exhibition where individual discussion about each
student's work will take place. The third session aims at giving students
feedback from an expert in their area and let them discuss their work with
him/her as well as with few other PhD students doing research in the
respective area. 

After the notification of acceptance/rejection, each PhD student with an
accepted paper will be assigned to a small group consisting of 3-4 PhD
students and one expert in their area. Each group will start to communicate
and exchange their papers so that all members of the group are familiar with
the papers of each group member. During the third session, each small group
will meet individually. PhD students will give a short presentation about
their work (about 10 minutes; 3 slides: Motivation/Background, what have
been done already, and what will be done in future). After each
presentation, group discussion will take place where each student can
discuss his/her work with the expert and with other PhD students. 


Call for Papers and Topics
**************************

Submissions relating to any aspect of Advanced Learning Technologies
research, development, and evaluation are welcomed, focusing on the main
themes of ICALT2011. To apply for participation at the Doctoral Consortium,
please submit a 2-page paper about your doctoral work using the
ASK-Conference System at:
http://www.ask4research.info/conference/upload.php. The paper should:
* Provide the title of the PhD Research, the name of the PhD Student and the
PhD Advisor and the Affiliated Organisation
* Provide a motivation for the research, explaining what the problem in the
respective field is and why it is a problem,
* Clearly formulate the research question,
* Sketch the research methodology that is to be applied,
* Describe the expected contributions of the applicant to the research area,
and describes how the research is innovative, novel or extends existing
approaches to a problem. 
* Appropriately acknowledge the possible contribution of non-student
advisors or collaborators

Submissions will be judged on originality, significance, correctness, and
clarity. Workshop participation is limited to 10 PhD students. 

Additionally, at the same time as the paper is submitted via the conference
system, an email from the main supervisor must be sent to
sabineg@athabascau.ca, karagian@uth.gr, and lockeebb@vt.edu to confirm that
the student is in his/her first or second year of PhD studies.


Eligibility
***********

The Doctoral Consortium is only for PhD students in their first or second
PhD year. Furthermore, the topic of the PhD thesis must be in the area of
Advanced Learning Technologies.


Proceedings
***********

Accepted papers will be publication in the IEEE proceedings of ICALT2011,
following the Author Guidelines.


Co-Organization
***************

The Doctoral Consortium is co-organized by the IEEE Technical Committee on
Learning Technology.


Important Dates
***************

February 15, 2011	      Deadline for submission of 2-page paper and
confirmation from PhD supervisor
February 28, 2011    	Notification of acceptance
March 15, 2011		Authors' Registration Deadline
April 15, 2011    	Camera-Ready 2-page paper for Conference Proceedings
July 6-8, 2011       	ICALT2009 Doctoral Consortium
     

Contact Address
***************

Requests for information should be e-mailed to sabineg@athabascau.ca,
karagian@uth.gr, and lockeebb@vt.edu.


Pages

Subscribe

Powered by Movable Type 4.38

About this Archive

This page is an archive of recent entries in the Doctoral Students category.

Diversity is the previous category.

Education is the next category.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.