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Publishing from Your PhD
A01=Nicola F. Johnson
academic publishing process
Author_Nicola F. Johnson
career
Category=JNZ
Conference Paper
Conferred
crowded
Crowded Jungle
Dense
early
Early Academic Career
Early Career Researchers
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High Rejection Rates
Journal Article
Journal Ranking
Journal Review
journal submission strategies
jungle
Literature Review
Mammoth
Monash
Muddy Swamps
NICOLA Great
Past Calendar Year
peer review navigation
Professional Development
Professor Sara Dolnicar
Published Conference Papers
Publisher Confidentiality
publishing strategies for doctoral graduates
qualitative research challenges
Quantitative Research
Refereed Conference Proceedings
Research Grant Applications
researcher
scholarly communication barriers
thesis to article adaptation
VDM Verlag
Wo
Product details
- ISBN 9780566091629
- Weight: 430g
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 23 Dec 2010
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
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There is consistent pressure on all academics to publish, publish, publish. But not unless they have been awarded their PhD - considered by most to be the starting step of an academic career. So while the pressure is on to obtain the title, and then obtain a permanent position, and then publish journal articles, there is little support available to researchers in the nascent stage of their careers. Publishing from Your PhD precisely focuses on providing early career researchers with emotional and collegial support that is often not available in academe. It seeks to dispel nepotistic notions of superiority that places Professors and such on a pedestal. It specifically clarifies the difficulty in having written the PhD thesis and then rewriting it to suit the genre of journal articles. It does not deal with the 'how' of academic writing in general. This book endeavours to shed light on the path one must take to navigate the jungles of academia. This is an untrodden path which is unique to every researcher - especially those who employ abstract or critical theories in their research - and each journey through the jungle is different. However, because there is little literature about this embryonic journey, this book illuminates the processes and difficulties of publishing in journals and culling one's finely honed thesis into small chunks - a difficult task to which few admit.
Dr Nicola F. Johnson recently published The Multiplicities of Internet Addiction: The Misrecognition of Leisure and Learning with Ashgate (2009). She is a senior lecturer in teacher education in the Faculty of Education at Monash University, Victoria, Australia. Nicola is an early career researcher who has recently been awarded her PhD (2008) and commenced a full-time career as an academic in early 2007.
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