1 / 44

WRITING PAPERS AND GOING TO CONFERENCES

WRITING PAPERS AND GOING TO CONFERENCES. Gita Subrahmanyam Authoring a PhD and Developing as a Researcher. OUTLINE OF WORKSHOP. Why go to conferences and seminars? Hierarchy of conferences Writing, structuring and proposing papers Delivering papers. WHY ARE YOU HERE TODAY?.

dale
Télécharger la présentation

WRITING PAPERS AND GOING TO CONFERENCES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WRITING PAPERS AND GOING TO CONFERENCES Gita Subrahmanyam Authoring a PhD and Developing as a Researcher

  2. OUTLINE OF WORKSHOP • Why go to conferences and seminars? • Hierarchy of conferences • Writing, structuring and proposing papers • Delivering papers

  3. WHY ARE YOU HERE TODAY? • As a table, talk about your experiences to date • Have you been to a conference? As an attendee or as a paper-giver? • Do you have a conference coming up that you would like help with? • Why are you here today? What do you hope to get out of today’s workshop?

  4. Transmitting ideas is a key step in getting feedback and upgrading your knowledge. Credit:www.imageafter.com

  5. WHY GO TO SEMINARS AND CONFERENCES? 1. For staff • Create deadlines using short papers to kick-start your publications • Meet collaborators, friends, age cohort • Plug into the wider profession and gain an understanding of fashions, trends, tribes, taboos, discourses - and where the LSE sits • Collate oral wisdoms, gossip, tips • Book exhibitions, meet with publishers, network at dinners, receptions, bars

  6. WHY GO TO SEMINARS AND CONFERENCES? 2. For PhDs • Key socializing venues – networking • Spot potential examiners, meet key academics and hear professional gossip • Gain valuable critiques of your work – determine what needs to be changed or improved • Meet others in your peer group involved in the same areas of research (future collaboration potential here) • In USA: See how the job market works (early stages) and enter it (later stages)

  7. HIERARCHY OF CONFERENCES • Seminars in home institution - known audience • Postgraduate conferences • External seminars, specialist groups in your profession (wider audience) • UK national conference – choice of panels • European-level international conferences – workshops, panels, specialist groups • US/global conferences – huge attendance but often tiny audiences at individual panels – real action in bars, book fairs, receptions

  8. THE ELEMENTS OF A GOOD PAPER AND PROPOSAL

  9. CONFERENCE PAPERS SHOULD BE • Short - between 6,000 and 7,000 words • Focus on one idea or argument, not on multiple themes – so do not try to incorporate your entire PhD into a paper • Paper should be a good illustration of your work (e.g., not on a topic peripheral to your PhD or research expertise, in order to fit within a panel theme) • Paper should be designed for publication and meet publication standards in terms of style of presentation and methods

  10. FOCUS ON THE ‘NEED TO KNOW’ CRITERION • Normal (written) form is: • What do readers really need to know? • Conference (presentation) form is: • What does the audience really need to see on screen? • What do listeners really need to have explained to them?

  11. ‘NEED TO KNOW’ IMPLICATIONS 1 • However literary your normal style, plan the talk as a sequence of exhibits • Put all that you want to say/show on screen, in a user-friendly manner • Practice timings for your talk • Aim for a fast, well-paced start – do not ‘warm up’ the audience to your subject • Sell the paper – don’t be diffident

  12. ‘NEED TO KNOW’ IMPLICATIONS 2 • Organise your talk into 3 minute chunks, planning for one display per chunk • Use PowerPoint (not Word) to compose your displays – and have OHP backups! • Text should be free-standing and readily understandable without you speaking (audience will deconstruct it like that) • Try to avoid a build-up of slides or too many ‘flying bullets’ – delays exposition and too controlling

  13. ‘NEED TO KNOW’ IMPLICATIONS 3 • Pick a font that is visible to someone in the back row - like this one • Put equations and quantitative tables into separate image screens, magnified so that the smallest subscript is visible • Preferably use summary data tables, rather than detailed ones • Pick the best feasible fonts for display

  14. TIME LIMITS FOR PRESENTATIONS • Seminars ... 30 to 40 minutes • UK and most European conferences - 20 minutes per paper, then questions; normally 2 or 3 papers per panel • US and most international conferences - 10 to 15 minutes per paper, followed by questions; often 4 or 5 papers per panel • Workshops and intensive conferences – 20-30 minutes per paper, followed by one-hour discussion time

  15. IMPLICATIONS FOR PROPOSALS • A conference proposal/abstract should be an accurate and concise summary of what the paper delivers • Check the ‘Call for Papers’ carefully • What are the key themes of the conference? • What kind of presentation will you do? • How long should the abstract be? • When is the deadline for submission?

  16. IMPLICATIONS FOR PROPOSALS (2) • ‘Need to know’ criterion should guide abstract • What do organisers need to know to assess whether to accept the paper and where to place it in a panel? • Core argument/bottom-line findings should form centre-piece of the abstract • Don’t waste words on literature review or methodology

  17. HAVE A GO • Write a proposal/abstract for the conference of your choice • Follow the ‘Call for Papers’ guidelines in the example you brought in, EXCEPT stick to a maximum of 200 words • If you haven’t brought a ‘Call for Papers’, then try using one of the spare copies at the front of the room

  18. A GOOD PROPOSAL/ABSTRACT • Sentence 1 – a hook, indication of motivation (for you and reader) • Sentences 2 –3 – formulation of research problem/question • Sentences 3 – 4 – outline of core finding (maybe a sideways glance at method) • Sentences 5 – 6 - implications

  19. GET SOME FEEDBACK • Pass your abstract to the person on your left • Read the abstract you have in front of you and think about what you might do to improve it • Feed back to the person who handed you their abstract, and get feedback on your own abstract

  20. WHAT CAN GO WRONGON THE DAY WITH AN OTHERWISE GOOD SEMINAR OR CONFERENCE PAPER

  21. SCARY CONFERENCE VISION - real life is more prosaic

  22. BE PREPARED FOR A REALISTIC AUDIENCE SIZE • Check the venue in advance for size and features – may indicate audience size • Conference slots respond to multiple factors, including competition, timings etc – so don’t regard small audiences, dribbling in late, in an over-large room, as unusual or depressing • Alternatively beware of an over-large audience, cramped and uncomfortable in too small a room

  23. BE PREPARED FOR POSSIBLE PRESENTATION PROBLEMS • Presentation facilities vary unpredictably - you need to be adaptable • Take Powerpoint slides in two storage formats (e.g. USB stick and CD). • Email slides to seminar hosts. • Take an OHP copy of slides • Print readable ‘handout’ copies of slides for a realistic audience (say 25) • Take 10-15 full paper copies, for zealots

  24. THINGS TO AVOID, IDEALLY:- BEING INVISIBLE – by never standing up- HAVE NO VISUALS AIDS – unexciting- READING THE PAPER WORD FOR WORD http://www.mcdonald.cam.ac.uk/McD/Seminar.jpg

  25. THINGS TO AVOID, cont’d.USING BADLY CONSIDERED VISUALS – that are unreadable and do not project well on an OHP (or in PowerPoint)

  26. PLAN FOR POSSIBILITY THAT YOU MAY BE ALLOCATED A NOT-SO-IDEALROOM AND THINK ABOUT HOW TO ADJUST FOR IT

  27. RANDOM UNIVERSITY ROOM – functional but depressing, no daylight, blackboard! Credit: http://www.finearts.uvic.ca/visualarts/facilities/images/seminar/seminar-1.jpg

  28. SMALL ROOM HAZARDS – no OHP, no screen, table dominating the space,.. + dogs! CREDFIT: http://www.eastwood.asn.au/images/hall15_b.jpg

  29. LARGE ROOM HAZARDS – long thin room, audience obstructs each others’ view, no equipment for visual displays Credit: http://www.brc.ubc.ca/vtour/images/cell/L3_seminar1.jpg

  30. SUBTLE HAZARDS - half the audience can’t see the OHP, narrow tables, and uncomfortable seating arrangment http://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk/conference/images/semnarrm2.jpg

  31. THINGS TO AIM FOR, IDEALLY STAND UP, and use CLEAR, VARIED SLIDES for best feasible delivery Credit: http://www.ruwpa.st-and.ac.uk/workshop2002/seminar%2520room3.jpg

  32. THINGS TO AIM FOR, cont’d FOR LARGE AUDIENCES (just in case) – think of the view from the back row http://www.sunyit.edu/news/academic/pictures/main.jpg

  33. IDEAL SEMINAR ROOM – central display screen + OHP, wide tables, space for moving around, daylight or good lighting, smallish group Credit: http://www.reidkerr.ac.uk/conference/images/ante2B.jpg

  34. PRESENTING DATApoorly

  35. START BADLY – I’ve printed my cover page in tiny font and slapped it on the OHP slide

  36. MAINTAIN CONSIS- TENCY: ‘Some of you may not be able to see the subscripts here too well’

  37. TABLES – complex, difficult to read, weak heading/title, unnecessary abbreviations, space wasted between data points

  38. CHARTS – 3D design, small and thin, weak heading, no logic to arrangement of bars, labels in a legend, key details in micro font

  39. VERY LARGE TABLES – multiple smudges of micro font are not ideal for presenting full regression results to a crowded room

  40. PRESENTING DATAproperly

  41. STRONG EXPOSITION – proper display, visible fonts, speaker visible… and using pointer for details Credit: http://www.pi1.physik.uni-stuttgart.de/Soellerhaus2002/Bilder/Soellerhaus2002-12.jpg

  42. Formula for effective number of parties

  43. Figure 7.2: How Scotland’s health boards compared in treating cataracts, 1998-9 financial year Notes:Treatment rates per 100,000 people The range is 506, and the midspread (dQ) is 55. Source: National Audit Office, 1999.

  44. Figure 1: How Scottish health boards treat cataracts, 1999-2000

More Related