tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post368637859758885960..comments2024-03-28T18:38:59.308-07:00Comments on The Adventures of Notorious Ph.D., Girl Scholar: Welcome to Week Three!Notorious Ph.D.http://www.blogger.com/profile/08700875559325201086noreply@blogger.comBlogger42125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-53672834877274820832011-06-21T02:28:38.041-07:002011-06-21T02:28:38.041-07:00I will check in on Friday next time, Midsummer wee...I will check in on Friday next time, Midsummer weekend or not. Apologies again!<br /><br />I'm finally on holiday from the other job, so I'll have a glorious five weeks without that distraction. I have been working on the key concepts (as set out in the outline) of the chapter and what I need to say about them. This could be seen as fleshing out the outline still, so I'm behind my schedule, alas. It takes me a good while to distance myself from the sources and run my own argumentation, to find the right level of meta. I think this is partly lack of experience and partly a self-confidence issue.<br /><br />Reading everyone's word counts has me quivering in my sandals, and I've been pondering whether or not it would be realistic to have a word count goal for each week. I'm not sure how else to go about dividing the work into goals, but knowing that I write in efficient spurts with a lot of hand-wringing in between I might be setting myself up for failure.<br /><br />So, my goal for (what's left of this week) is to figure out how to organize the rest of the writing into manageable goals while I continue working on those key concepts.Kitnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-7921340775940264282011-06-20T08:49:23.668-07:002011-06-20T08:49:23.668-07:00Sorry for the delay, was in a wedding this weekend...Sorry for the delay, was in a wedding this weekend.<br /><br />I am slugging along, added many more words, edited some of those words, met with my dissertation advisor and am waiting for feedback on the pages I gave him.<br /><br />I didn't get everything into one document (my explicit goal for the week), but I did get a handle on the first 37 pages. I also realized that this is going to need a fair amount of trimming the fat once I have the whole thing in one place.<br /><br />My goal for this week is to have the legal section of ch. 2 re-written, and to have an initial round of edits on the pop culture section done.<br /><br />This should put me in a decent place to finish out a draft of this chapter by the end of the month.Tigsnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-74680297773057999912011-06-19T22:24:51.365-07:002011-06-19T22:24:51.365-07:00Dear Notorious,
Thank you very much for your comm...Dear Notorious, <br />Thank you very much for your comment. Reading your comment, I calmed myself down, and thought what I could do. I remembered that my supervisor used to say to me, 'Do not think you can't this or that, think what you can'. Now I am revising my argument again, somewhat narrowing my topic. <br /><br />It is all too common to have several deadlines at a time, yes. I will stop complaining my situation, but think different. After these deadlines, I will have several works done in such a short time anyway! What a great achievement!<br /><br />I have tried the way you recommended to Sara. I went to bed with my children, and woke up very early in the morning, then opened my computer, and just started. I am really slow in writing especially when it is English, though, it worked well. What I like most is that you can start your day with feeling of success. At 7o'clock in the morning, you have already done something for the day! <br /><br />I really enjoy this group. I am relieved to know some other people also have difficulty in writing, and also felt encouraged to know how they deal with the problems in various ways. Thank you again for hosting this. We have still 8 weeks to go. Happy writing!Matildahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02496807875444414179noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-46864856458430402552011-06-19T10:58:22.589-07:002011-06-19T10:58:22.589-07:00hmm, once again I didn't meet my goals. I didn...hmm, once again I didn't meet my goals. I didn't organise my sources in the way I wanted to, but that's because I discovered there were a lot more of them than I thought. So, I'm going to look at this as a good thing: I have much more to say now! <br /><br />I also found a rhythm of work that is much better and I'm being a lot more productive. This is basically to have a late lunch to give me a long morning's work, while my brain is still functioning! And now term has finished so lots of uninterrupted time. This is the first time I've researched something that requires me to read almost exclusively in Latin and French, with no helpful English commentaries, and so everything is taking me considerably longer than usual.<br /><br />Next week I'm on holiday. My goal is to read my one long narrative source while I'm away and take notes as I go so that I can write my ideas about it more formally when I get back.Godivahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15383056500388378757noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-62193587628027397572011-06-19T09:45:10.090-07:002011-06-19T09:45:10.090-07:00Ok, I’m having a hell of a time posting. This is m...Ok, I’m having a hell of a time posting. This is my third post – something keeps happening after I hit “post” and then my post is lost. Third time in, now I’m typing in word to keep track and not have to retype again when it is all lost in the nether.<br /><br />A pretty good week, considering my daughter and I have pneumonia. I wrote an abstract for the paper and found it really helpful. I’ve never written one before and it helped me to focus the thesis and argument very quickly. A long-time writing partner visited at the beginning of the week (yes! We had pneumonia, daddy out of the state, houseguests, and a deck remodel – it’s been a great summer!) and she read and commented on the abstract, read and commented on the conference paper, and we discussed the argument in more detail. This conversation and these comments will sustain me for weeks to come – having someone to talk with and hash things out with is so important to me. I miss having her closer!<br /><br />Plan for next week: read Abelard’s Logica Ingredientibus and Historia Calamitatum. Last week’s readings revealed a large hole in my argument and decided dearth of evidence. I’m hoping that going back to my two main lines of evidence with help shore up the argument and suggest new avenues of evidence. We are on a family vacation to Tampa next week, so I am not planning on doing any writing, just notetaking. My partner has 10 days off this summer (he’s working the Alaskan pipeline) so we are taking 6 to go to a beach. I do great reading and thinking outdoors and am looking forward to naptime, when I can be working!<br /><br />Now, to see if this finally posts…Scholasticamamahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14544234528709189124noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-55851080654710462782011-06-19T05:54:45.508-07:002011-06-19T05:54:45.508-07:00Aargh! I forgot to post *my* progress. I had rea...Aargh! I forgot to post *my* progress. I had really small goals this week, and am glad, because I could barely meet one of them. I got back from conferencing and had found that there were some new things on my plate that, since I am going to be gone for a month, I needed to deal with before going. I did manage to set up a visit with a colleague at Cambridge to talk about the Leeds paper, and may even get some books ordered for Tuesday's BL trip. I had planned on starting in tomorrow, but a friend has taken the day off to meet me at the airport, so no go there. <br /><br />As for actually working on the Leeds paper? I read an article and took a few notes, but am probably going to have to re-do that, since the software is not capable of doing what I wanted -- including exporting the things I did do this week. Boo, Sente!Another Damned Medievalisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05231085915472400163noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-5541245403360842952011-06-18T23:23:38.162-07:002011-06-18T23:23:38.162-07:00Travelia, I just looked at the blog post you wrote...Travelia, I just looked at the blog post you wrote, and I'm much the same way. When I'm first beginning to work on a chapter, I need to sit with the documents and ideas for several weeks before an argument heaves into view. This caused problems with a faculty member who decided I was lazy and who didn't want to listen to my explanations. But I've found that I'm wasting time (and sacrificing quality) trying to write a chapter if I don't have that critical mass that you refer to. Once I reach that point, I'm about a week away from having a preliminary draft, two weeks away from having a draft that I'd show people.<br /><br />As for the "write x number of words" per day, I've generally never done that. I work almost daily, but again in the first several weeks, I'm not "writing" per se. But I'm honest with myself. I know if I'm making steady enough progress or if I'm just procrastinating. And I've also become good about moving quickly into full-on writing mode once the argument begins to materialize. Sure, I do some more reading in the documents but I eliminate the idea that I'll read all of them.<br /><br />Also, I do three kinds of notetaking. 1) Direct quotations. Even though it's tedious, I've found that the only way to deal with sources is to type in full relevent sections from the photographs I took in the archives. 2) short notes to myself--things to find, things to track down, 2ndary lit that springs to mind. 3) whole paragraphs that explore in freewriting ideas or arguments that I'm thinking about in relation to whatever document I'm reading. <br /><br />I call all three "writing": I take Paul Silva's definition to heart where he calls writing time the time in which you do whatever needs to be done: writing, notetaking, statistics, etc. But the last one I count as legit writing and often those paragraphs appear almost untouched in drafts.thefrogprincesshttp://thefrogprincess.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-74985096853502458632011-06-18T22:34:15.174-07:002011-06-18T22:34:15.174-07:00Notorious,
Thanks for your comment: I couldn'...Notorious,<br /><br />Thanks for your comment: I couldn't agree more. The change in argument 2 or 3 weeks in is not failure. Indeed, I expect it! I've written about this topic in more detail on my nascent blog. I have a theory of <b>critical mass</b>. It might be magical thinking, but it works for me.<br /><br />http://subtlethiefofyouth.blogspot.com/Traveliahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12960808534599164879noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-51421525055311844312011-06-18T05:33:35.146-07:002011-06-18T05:33:35.146-07:00Notorious, it's awful that you've been sco...Notorious, it's awful that you've been scooped not just once but twice in the past four years ... but it does make me feel better, not in a "misery loves company" sort of way but in a "clearly one moves on and can thrive despite these circumstances" sort of way. I'll look forward to your blog post on the subject.What Now?https://www.blogger.com/profile/04017629066466055668noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-51778427216854463732011-06-18T04:44:26.783-07:002011-06-18T04:44:26.783-07:00Thanks for the advice, Notorious! I was up at 5am ...Thanks for the advice, Notorious! I was up at 5am this morning, and wrote three new pages (longhand, so not sure how many words) before 6. <br /><br />I'll be sleeping on my mother's couch tonight, so probably won't make such an early morning of it, but I'll try to repeat this tomorrow.Sarahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00357902086583000382noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-90091174876237972082011-06-18T03:30:11.221-07:002011-06-18T03:30:11.221-07:00Finally, a couple of miscellaneous points:
Dame E...Finally, a couple of miscellaneous points:<br /><br />Dame Eleanor: So sorry to hear about the food poisoning! Ew! Never had it myself, but I've seen it in action (mussels were the culprit both times), and it ain't pretty. So I'm glad you've recovered.<br /><br />Firstmute: As a hot mess myself, I fully endorse your current draft, sight unseen. And never "cut"; always "file." Sure, five years later you may go through your "orphan sections" file and toss everything, but you never know what may be handy for filling out a conference paper at some future date.Notorious Ph.D.https://www.blogger.com/profile/08700875559325201086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-51841858828890400472011-06-18T03:29:51.724-07:002011-06-18T03:29:51.724-07:00Lots of people have been running into roadblocks. ...Lots of people have been running into roadblocks. One thing that's important to learn is flexibility. We learn to expect the unexpected. Don't set goals that require everything to go according to plan, because that never happens. More specifically:<br /><br />Matilda: "Don't panic" is good advice (though it's advice I have trouble taking). One thing to remember: there will always be another book, another article, another document. You will never read them all. Of course, you need enough to make your argument, but at some point, you just have to stop, and go with what you've got. You probably do need to do a bit more reading, but probably much less than you think. Jason has a nice way of putting it in his comment: "I have to watch out for the abyss of 'but I haven’t read enough / don’t fully understand this topic / may, in fact, be talking out of my *$$.' "<br /><br />(And Jason, we're all talking out of that particular orfice, most of the time. The trick is to learn to do it with authority and panache.)<br /> <br />Travelia's bump in the road has a lot in common with Matilda's: you start out the semester with a good plan, then either someone comes along and says, "Hey, I need you to do this other project, and it needs to be done by August 1", or you yourself see that the place you thought you were going isn't going to work. My friends, <b>this is not "failure."</b> It's a change of plans, that's all. So you adjust your goals at week three/four, so what? If the argument wasn't working, you would have figured this out sooner or later. Say it along with me, everyone: <i>Adjustments are part of the process.</i> The trick is not to let them discourage you. <br /><br />What Now's bump in the road is a bit more significant – I've had this happen to me now twice in the past four years – both for major projects – and I dealt with it differently each time. I think it's going to be the subject of a full blog post next week, but for now, let me advise What Now to go ahead and take that week off, but about halfway through the week, you might start randomly journaling/freewriting, or blogging, or talking your way into how to move forward. Once I've got that full blog post up, we can get a real correspondence going on this.<br /><br />One more comment to go...Notorious Ph.D.https://www.blogger.com/profile/08700875559325201086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-81896242172184305442011-06-18T03:28:40.802-07:002011-06-18T03:28:40.802-07:00Hi All!
Okay, this will likely be my last check-i...Hi All!<br /><br />Okay, this will likely be my last check-in before going dark for the weekend, so I'll check back in late Sunday night, North American time. As usual, I'm addressing only a few comments/check-ins/themes, but I do read them all, so please don't feel neglected. What I'm really commenting on are themes that are emerging – common problems that we all may be facing. These reflect my opinions, and not necessarily ADM's. So, here goes (broken down into three comments, so blogger can digest them):<br /><br />The issue of consistency comes up. This is tough for anything – exercise, diet, daily writing, flossing… whatever. So, here's a thought, utterly anecdotal, that I heard somewhere: it takes three weeks to form a habit. Can you commit to writing every day (or maybe 6 days out of 7 – even the god of Moses took a day off!) for three weeks? You may find that it becomes addictive.<br /><br />The question of how to tackle multiple projects & multiple deadlines does keep coming up in this group. I've asked ADM if she'd address it in next week's post, since she's dealing with multiple projects herself, but if she can't (like many people, she's got a big conference coming up), we'll put it on the roster of themes and one of us will get to it before the term is out.<br /><br />More on other themes in the next comment, below…Notorious Ph.D.https://www.blogger.com/profile/08700875559325201086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-77779038698326048642011-06-18T00:21:16.321-07:002011-06-18T00:21:16.321-07:00I may be excused, but thought I should 'fess u...I may be excused, but thought I should 'fess up, anyway. Very interesting, and quite comforting to see that I am not the only one struggling to get motivated, but that's what this writing group is for!<br /><br />I've been slogging away at my Leeds paper, but it's been hi-jacked slightly by having to get ready to travel to the other side of the world. I'm now in London, will be in Hull (yay?!?) tomorrow, and hopefully will get some writing done while also being inspired by other people.<br /><br />One of my problems is that I find it very hard to rearrange my words/ thoughts while on the computer, and often find I have to print things off, scribble on the paper, write the opening sentence in pen or pencil, and then get typing. So, that's my recommendation for 'flash new items' - paper and pen. I had thought I was getting better at going straight to 'puter, but it seems not.<br /><br />Thanks to ADM and Notorious Ph.D for this service!zcat_abroadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07768195593099574501noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-18746891341879178462011-06-17T22:18:26.973-07:002011-06-17T22:18:26.973-07:00The questions about working on more than one proje...The questions about working on more than one project at once have got me thinking about my processes. I'm another person who works best when fired up and so will work exclusively on something when I'm ripe for it and then find a lot of it done when the deadline looms. <br /><br />I also factor in thinking time. Sometimes my thinking time is during a heavy teaching period or when I have a bunch of other tasks (editing, manuscript assessments, committee meetings), and sometimes it's not doing history research when I'm working on reviews or literary articles, but I've found that it's easier for me to juggle when I don't say "I have a project" and attack it immediately, but to write a possible outline of it and return to it later (after thinking time). <br /><br />Just as an aside, the best thinking time in the universe is during committee meetings. I always carry paper and pen into meetings and I almost always come out with a bunch of notes for my writing. Conferences are better for thought about fiction, for some reason (please don't ask to see my notes at Leeds!).<br /><br />I also like to give writing rest time before I finish it, which I mentioned earlier. I may work on another project while that piece is vegetating, or I might do paid work (or even paid work that's another writing project). In March I had a lot of stuff that needed to sit before I submitted and I had just enough time, so I organised a series of guest posts on my blog in honour of Women's History Month, for instance. <br /><br />What all this means is that I always look as if I'm doing a lot more than I actually do and that when I work, I work very efficiently. It's really important for me when I handle more than one job at once to actually have those breaks and only feel pressured about deadlines, not about the whole project for every minute of its existence. <br /><br />And I do feel pressured about deadlines. I love deadlines. If an editor doesn't give me a deadline, I have real trouble fitting what they want into my schedule.Gillianhttp://gillpolack.livejournal.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-16310200389543062762011-06-17T20:34:25.704-07:002011-06-17T20:34:25.704-07:00I met my goal this week and wrote 2,500 words of r...I met my goal this week and wrote 2,500 words of reading summaries that are becoming arguments that I'm going to use in the expansion of the dissertation section. I also located more primary sources, got through a bunch of secondary sources, and located a copy of WYJA.<br /><br />Next week I plan to complete going through the primary and secondary sources I identified this week. So pretty much more of the same, but I do like the direction my thinking is going for the article. I should be ready to revise and add these new ideas soon.<br /><br />See you next Friday!QueSerahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10959663812711093395noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-64863268753102016442011-06-17T20:12:16.201-07:002011-06-17T20:12:16.201-07:00Well, I worked on the article 3 days out of 5: Mon...Well, I worked on the article 3 days out of 5: Monday I was recovering from food poisoning, and today I was focused on conference paper research (not going well; shoot me now). I have an outline of another subsection of the article, about 350 words of notes on secondary reading, and a few more entries in the spreadsheet of data from the primary text. <br /><br />My goal for next week is pretty much the same: put in 20-30 minutes a day taking notes or outlining, just so I keep making some progress with the article; but the main event has to be the conference paper, as that deadline is looming. And after this next week I'll be away for two weeks, during which I doubt I'll have time to work on the article. I'll check in to say hi and cheer the rest of you on. In three weeks, I'm going to be trying to remember where I was with the article, so I guess that's my last goal for this week: try to leave myself some clear guidelines for when I return to it.Dame Eleanor Hullhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06512884104691200975noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-14499515231819185932011-06-17T19:43:29.616-07:002011-06-17T19:43:29.616-07:00I've been having a fantastic time at the works...I've been having a fantastic time at the workshop so far, but as I expected I haven't had a whole lot of writing time. Still, I've just about averaged an hour a day, and roughly written up a big chunk of the new technical material. But I'm realizing the write-up is a bigger job than I initially thought, and I'm not sure how many of the details ultimately should be included in the chapter. I think for now I'm going to try to get just enough of the rest down so I don't forget the things I've worked out, and move on to the structural issues in the Nth chapter that I mentioned last time.<br /><br />Mostly, though, I'm going to keep enjoying this excellent workshop. It has nothing to do with my dissertation, and that suits me perfectly.Jeffhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01407714989987462536noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-62486084991374640382011-06-17T19:40:34.686-07:002011-06-17T19:40:34.686-07:00Under the circumstances of the week (which involve...Under the circumstances of the week (which involved going home to deal with a minor family medical emergency, as I mentioned last week), I'm pleased with what got done. My goal was to get all sections of my final chapter ready for a final rewrite, and I did that, for the most part. The rest I can do as I write a new version of the chapter from the beginning. I did not get quite as much done on the introduction as I'd hoped, but I did have what may be a significant breakthrough on the "contribution to historical literature" front that I'm quite excited about. I also managed to read an article on most days, which was my "bare minimum" that I set last week at ADM's blog and which lead to my breakthrough, and, on the day taken up with the medical situation, I managed to get a ton of writing done. So all good things. Rough word count for the week: 3800.<br /><br />My goal for this week is to produce a completed revision of this chapter, one that can go to the advisor, and to write a workable first draft of the introduction, which would leave me with my first full draft of my dissertation, which I will spend the rest of the summer revising. <br /><br />Again, it's an ambitious goal--and in all likelihood, I'll finish that by the Sunday after our next check-in. But what I'm finding is that I work best if my goals are slightly ambitious. If I've worked steadily, I don't feel guilty for not meeting a goal I always knew was ambitious, especially if I've been sidetracked by new, unexpected questions. But I think I'm getting more done than I would if I set myself something I knew I could easily accomplish.<br /><br />As for productivity tools, I'm an enormous fan of Scrivener, which I think has helped the quality of my work immensely. I have the freedom to break things up in sections, do random freewriting, etc, all in a way that's easily findable within one program. It's a dream for the long-form, sprawling zero draft. I also use Mellel, which I prefer to Word, but there is a steep learning curve and I know I haven't come close to tapping into its full potential. Dropbox has become increasingly important as well: one of my favorite uses of it is to upload the PDFs of my document images and then open them on another computer (old laptop, office computer), making them much easier to read and keeping my laptop screen relatively uncluttered. And finally, I'm now buying those boxes of snack packs, baking my own goodies, and pouring coffee/tea into this ginormous new thermos I just bought so that I have a steady supply of food and drink on campus and I can work for as long as my brain lets me. Also, Netflix Instant is great for those fifteen minute breaks we all need.thefrogprincesshttp://thefrogprincess.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-40590549448110261492011-06-17T19:13:27.764-07:002011-06-17T19:13:27.764-07:00@NWGirl -- I am always juggling multiple projects....@NWGirl -- I am always juggling multiple projects. The way I often handle it is by trying to procrastinate productively -- so, if I have a pressing deadline on one project, I will often feel driven to work on a different project, and I will give in to that and just work on the thing that is most enticing. What this means is that I often barely make my deadlines, but that when I am finally in a place where I must focus on a project, I find that a good chunk of it is already done. I don't recommend this because it's a pathological way of working, but it works for me, after a fashion, and I think I do better when I go with this tendency and don't fight it too much. I need the excitement of barely making a deadline to make me finish projects, and I think my work is better when I am concentrating on something I am excited about, even if it's not technically the next thing that's due.<br /><br />As for my article manuscript -- having procrastinated a lot before the last check-in by working on a fall syllabus, I was finally ready to turn to this project this week. Last week, I planned to write up all my ideas on a thread for my argument that is based on a new key concept, and I did that. I've incorporated all the new writing into the current draft of the manuscript. I then read over my research on another idea, and added a few lines on that where necessary. At the same time, I've been polishing my draft -- tweaking some sentences, completely rewriting several paragraphs that were extremely convoluted, and cutting out stuff that is turning out to be extraneous. My draft has grown by 565 words, but that's a good thing; at 18,841 words, I think it's quite long enough for the journal I'll be resubmitting to.<br /><br />For next week, I plan to identify some more concepts that I need to focus on, to figure out how they will embellish my argument, and to write up at least one of them (if not more). My goal is to have all of my new ideas incorporated into my manuscript somehow by July 1, just two weeks away. I am happy that the major reorganization that I thought needed to happen may not be necessary. So far, the new ideas have fit well into the current structure of the manuscript -- I needed to add a few paragraphs, but there was a logical place to put them that didn't necessitate fiddling with the overall organization.<br /><br />I've been using Zotero to take notes for over a year now, and I really like it. (I also like that I can access my Zotero notes when I'm not connected to the internet. Thank you for explaining that to me, Notorious Ph.D.) I've been tagging all my notes using my concept keywords, so when I am working on a particular concept, I go into Zotero and select a particular tag, and up pop all my notes on that idea. I always take verbatim notes, so I've been copying and pasting the block quotes into my manuscript and then figuring out how to work them into my argument.Scatterwriternoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-22650183378429979222011-06-17T18:51:36.189-07:002011-06-17T18:51:36.189-07:00I've had a very strange week, because I just d...I've had a very strange week, because I just discovered today that there's someone else writing essentially the same book that I am ... except that she's several years ahead of me in the entire project and already has interest from a press. I'm not actually as distraught as one might imagine, not least because I'm not trying to get tenure on this book or anything like that, but I am definitely flummoxed and unsure of what to do next.<br /><br />I'm going on vacation on Monday for a week, so my plan is to Do Nothing for a week, to let things lie and see how I feel about the state of my work when I return. All will be well, I know, but I don't want to take action before I know just what action that should be.What Now?https://www.blogger.com/profile/04017629066466055668noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-6779585039704809662011-06-17T17:50:49.308-07:002011-06-17T17:50:49.308-07:00I did not meet my goal of completing one section o...I did not meet my goal of completing one section of the paper. I managed to work three days, but like Zabeel I struggled with consistency. I realized today that I need do nothing but write in the morning. As I mentioned last week, we've had a couple of home improvement projects going. I have a tendency to work on those first, especially if it requires being outside, thinking that I'll stay inside during the heat of the day and work. That's not working so I need to make sure that writing comes first next week, house projects be damned. That's one goal for the upcoming week -- write first. Sticking to that goal, I hope, will help me complete at least one section of this paper.<br /><br />I think it's time to revive the Pomodoro technique (www.mytomatoes.com). My husband is strongly encouraging me to do just that since it worked so well when I was working on my dissertation. So to accomplish my goal of writing first, I commit to completing 4 tomatoes (4 x 25 min.) before I do anything else in the morning (other than walk the dog). And perhaps the momentum will carry me through another two tomatoes for a total of 6.<br /><br />I have a question for others in the group. Any suggestions for juggling multiple projects? In addition to this paper revision, I am finishing revisions to turn the diss into a book. But I also need to plan ahead for next year. To get research funding for next summer from my uni, I will need to submit an application this fall. I have an idea for an article, but I'm struggling with the distraction of this shiny, new project. How do you keep moving on an older project while developing something new? I know this is a skill I need to develop and could sure use some advice.NWGirlhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12964449528349902284noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-75734244259989922982011-06-17T15:21:15.607-07:002011-06-17T15:21:15.607-07:00I did not meet my goal of a "decent" con...I did not meet my goal of a "decent" conference paper draft. Instead I decided that the outline I was working from didn't work and spent quite a bit of time flailing around for another approach. Maybe I've found it? I am close, but not yet there<br /><br />Meanwhile I received potentially good news about another project which may mean I need to revisit my priorities regarding conference paper #2. <br /><br />Failure to meet my goals this week means that I will have to work this weekend, which I don't usually do in the summer. Spouse is out of town, though, so it's a good time for an all-out push to get something drafted. I tell myself I won't do that anymore, but honestly, I always do, especially for conference papers. <br /><br />Given the possible change in priorities, I honestly don't know what my goal should be for next week. I will try 60 minutes of generative writing/ day, which may be toward conference paper #2 or possibly toward the other project.<br /><br />Like Ro, I've also been using Evernote increasingly for notes and ideas--I find it great for capturing little insights throughout the day.Traveliahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12960808534599164879noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-32888350354919278172011-06-17T15:06:35.569-07:002011-06-17T15:06:35.569-07:00This week has been another at around 80%. Generate...This week has been another at around 80%. Generated over 2,500 words (goal 1=met); continued, fitfully, expanding the outline into subsections so I can become project-oriented in the next phase of my summer (goal 2=60%, *sigh*). There was some procrastination and time spent on teaching at a camp this week that disrupted what little routine I had gained.<br /><br />Working on the zero draft, I’ve gotten good writing momentum going, which was important to me in this first few weeks. I don’t need to agonize over every sentence, or the phrasing of every concept like I did back when I had Bad Writing Habits. I need to remember that when I start in on the more substantive first draft pages. <br /><br />I feel more and more certain that it's time to move from zero draft to first draft, but at the same time I know that I still need a lot of background reading for those subsection projects. This will affect weeks 5-12 more, but I’m saying this so that I stay vigilant now: I have to watch out for the abyss of “but I haven’t read enough / don’t fully understand this topic / may, in fact, be talking out of my *$$.”<br /><br />I’m losing much of this week to travel, but once we arrive at New Summer Place I have 6 weeks with only the dissertation and outdoor activity on my agenda! <br /><br />Goals for week 4: (1) 3 writing sessions; (2) 90 minutes of reading each travel day; (3) create a daily work schedule for New Summer Place.Jasonnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6648409483330236099.post-38245011270394958872011-06-17T14:29:20.860-07:002011-06-17T14:29:20.860-07:00I'm still plugging away at it. I think my big...I'm still plugging away at it. I think my big struggle at the moment is with consistency. I had productive days today and on Tuesday, but there were certainly other days this week when I didn't even open the file. <br /><br />Progress: section one is written in draft form and I'm pretty happy with it. I've sketched out sections two and three in terms of argument and relevant primary sources. <br /><br />Aims for next week. 1. Spend at least 3 hours each day working on this project. No excuses. 2. Section 2 written in draft reflecting the research I have done up til now.Zabeelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01007016285110989138noreply@blogger.com