Excited to announce my winter boot camp for #researchers who want to level up their #interdisciplinary#publication game. Completely virtual, starts December 12! See more here: https://t.co/iqtwgJ06tV
With enough background and explanation for those outside the field you come from.
It takes work, but it can be done. It’s highly individualized, not like a checklist. I can show you how. 4/4
https://t.co/iqtwgJ06tV
Stripping out the jargon is the quickest way to ensure your interdisciplinary research gets rejected.
So often the advice given to those who want to work across boundaries is “remove all the jargon,” but the jargon is there for a reason. 1/4
Stripping out the jargon is a key reason ID work is undervalued in ALL fields - you’re not displaying competence in anything. Instead, you really need to be using the right jargon for those you’re taking to, 3/4
This is wild, and every instructor needs to really think about what it means for your classroom.
How do we approach teaching, and more importantly learning, when AI can write the paper for you?
Zero draft is a critical part of the academic writing process.
But a lot of folks ignore it and run into all sorts of problems including the writer's block.
Here's what a zero draft is and why you should write one:
In beautiful Sonoma for #AIS2022 and ready to hear about the latest in #interdisciplinarystudies! We have a workshop on Global Mentoring coming up in an hour. Thrilled to be back to sharing our work in person, but still grateful for all the new ways we share these days.
Academic writing is a superpower. It's a key to publishing, getting a new job or tenure, and becoming known in the field
These 10 AI-powered websites will help you with EVERY part of your manuscript and will save you 100+ hours:
#openscience#AcademicTwitter#phdvoice#phdchat
How to Read Research Articles of Various Types 📚 & Assess Methodological Quality? (to UNDERSTAND, write better REVIEW & find RESEARCH GAP)
10 points Thread
Links to resource at the end
#AcademicTwitter@PhDVoice@PhD_Genie@ThePhDPlace@AcademicChatter
1. How to Read a Paper?
Past research found that the proportion of women on teams improved their collective intelligence @AnitaWoolley. Our latest research is finally published, and we found that the centrality of women on science teams improved team performance https://t.co/X0DUx6YMA0
We studied over a dozen classes and found that those using #CommunityBasedParticipatoryResearch methods and #TeamLearning created the most robust learning and social networks among students https://t.co/atzB5ZSKt1
My latest article with @ChrisAicardi "Formal and Informal Infrastructures of Collaboration in the Human Brain Project" - now open access with @STHV_journal https://t.co/yVzK7Jf0mc