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Paul Beaufait

Getting Reading Done With Sente (Tools We Use) | Savage Minds - 0 views

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    A getting-things-done based review of the Sente for Mac and iOS, and a few other reference management options.
Paul Beaufait

Guide to Publication: How To Get Your Writing Published in Journals - 0 views

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    Olson, Linda. (2014). Guide to academic and scientific publication: How to get your writing published in scholarly journals. London, England: e-academia. Retrieved from http://www.proof-reading-services.org/guide/
Paul Beaufait

Re-envisioning Academic Publication: From "Publish or Perish" to "Publish and Flourish"... - 0 views

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    "Academic publishing, mainstream journals, predatory journals, publishing ethics, early-career researchers, how to get published"
Paul Beaufait

1226 Optimizing Your Writing Process: Write Nonlinearly - 0 views

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    "Besides seeing projects as complex in space, the prolific also see them as complex in time. While novice writers see writing as "just writing," the prolific see it as a process consisting of these or similar stages: 1.        Conceptualization (a.k.a. note-taking or "noodling around") 2.        Planning and outlining (a little more structured than above) 3.        Research 4.        First Draft 5.        Revision(s) 6.        Final Draft 7.        Submission(s) 8.        Cash the Check (for freelance and other writers who get paid)" (Tales of Space and Time, ¶1).
Paul Beaufait

Tomorrow's Professor eNewsletter: 1317. Writers Groups: Composing a Balanced Faculty - 0 views

  • Writers groups can bring faculty members together for dedicated individual writing time, team brainstorming sessions, reading and discussions of books designed to improve writing productivity, and peer review of works in progress. By creating a supportive interdisciplinary group for idea exchange, writers groups rely on internal expertise, inspire interdisciplinary discussions, and create community (Benson-Brown, 2006).  In addition, scheduled writing time that leads to peer review of works in progress creates accountability that helps some faculty finish writing projects that otherwise might have languished.
  • Writers groups raise awareness in participants by helping them to see challenges faced by student writers and by offering them an opportunity to reflect on teaching through their writing activities. 
  • One basic success has been use of a facilitator to set meeting schedules, obtain meeting space, and keep group members on task via their commitment to participate at regular times.
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  • At colleges where a writers group is faculty driven, the leader is unlikely to be compensated by anything more than a line on his or her curriculum vitae, though perhaps this is not insignificant, given that leadership roles are frequently considered in tenure and promotion.
  • While some faculty in writers groups participate because doing so helps them to schedule time to work on projects, others need something different from the community: a group of peers who can review drafts and offer feedback for editing and revision. Even in interdisciplinary FLCs, the peer-review function can be very useful to members, providing them with commentary from a variety of perspectives.
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    Though focused primarily on "faculty learning communities ... on two-year college campuses," this article may help a wide range of group types envision benefits and get started.
Paul Beaufait

SAGE - the natural home for authors, editors and societies - Journal Gateway - 0 views

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    This academic publisher's webpage covers "a number of resources available to support you through the writing and submission process" (How to get published: Writing your article for publication, ¶1, 2015.03.10). Resources include a brochure, a presentation, a two-part video, and a link to the publisher's entire catalog of journals for previews of submission guidelines.
Paul Beaufait

How to write an effective title and abstract and choose appropriate keywords | Editage ... - 1 views

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    "The title, abstract, and keywords play a pivotal role in the communication of research. Without them, most papers may never be read or even found by interested readers" (The title, abstract, and keywords: Why it is important to get them right, ¶1, 2014.01.23).
Paul Beaufait

How to Write for ELT Magazines: English Advantage - 0 views

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    In this post, Burns introduced "a wonderful [28 min.] video that presents a very clear outline of how to write an article that can get published in a magazine like Voices or TESOL Connections" (¶1, 2014.07.14).
Paul Beaufait

Author Services Get published with "calls for papers" - 0 views

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    An extensive list of journals with current deadlines for submission (unless ongoing)
Paul Beaufait

Guide to Academic and Scientific Publication: How To Get Your Writing Published in Scho... - 0 views

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    "practical advice on planning, preparing and submitting articles for publication" (About this guide, p. 136)
Paul Beaufait

Tomorrow's Professor eNewsletter: 1345. Let's Get Ready for Summer Writing - 0 views

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    "The posting below looks at creating a summer plan to be more productive in your academic writing.  It is by Kerry Ann Rockquemore*, PhD, President and CEO of the National Center for Faculty Development & Diversity" (Folks, ¶1, 2014.07.14).
Paul Beaufait

Practitioner research in TESOL: 7 ways to get started - 0 views

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    In this August 2014 TESOL Connections article, Garton advocates systematic, principle-based practitioner research and, drawing upon the TESOL Research Agenda, suggests a variety of ways to begin.
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