Pru blogs
How to write a conference paper
[Relocated post: Originally published on 30 June 2007]
- Do a thorough literature review - comprehensive for Australia
and your sector, and at least checking international papers and
key documents from other sectors, or complementary fields. There
is no point presenting what others have already written, but
building on their work benefits everyone.
- Pull together relevant work and themes from existing presentations by colleagues
- Set up [del.icio.us/diigo] tags and let people know what you are
researching so others can contribute relevant material and follow
your research.
- Draft an outline of the paper, and organise collected quotes, documents, readings, links and ideas under key headings. At this stage I find it best to keep the references firmly attached to quotes as footnotes, even if this is not the final format required.
- It is not enough to just collect material. Remember to make time
to actually read and note these.
- At least four weeks before the paper is due, take a writing day away from the office, (and may be even offline!) to write a first draft from the material collected.
- Create a 'to do' notepad document where you note gaps that
require further research, quotes to research or references to
follow up.
- Blog the big questions/issues you have identified at this stage and invite comment.
- Continue to collect, read, think, follow up on the 'to do list' and clean up the paper.
- Remember to check back to the abstract and the conference
requirements to ensure you have not strayed too far from the
original submission.
- At least one week before the paper is due, do the final cut
including correct referencing and styling and give it to at least
one proofreader. You need to leave time to make the changes that
they will suggest, and follow up any leads they provide to key references.
- Submit the paper in the required manner and ask for confirmation
that it has been received. Find out how and when the paper will be
published, and whether you are permitted to publish online either
before or after the conference.
[If it is a refereed paper, you will need to re-work it in line with the comments received back from the reviewers, and resubmit. There may well be a very short turnaround for this process.]
- SAVE a copy of the final paper clearly labelled as such in your
official personal repository/file space. Then back it up.
- Provide a copy of the final version of the paper to the editor of your organisation's document archive/repository and website if appropriate, and advise of any embargo on publication.
Note: Sometimes the paper is not required until after the conference
in which case you have the luxury of including any feedback, comment
or issues raised by participants in the final version. The paper will
also be more up-to-date.
However, by this stage you will quite
probably never want to look at this paper again and will wish you had
finished it before the conference.
Tags:
research
how to
writing
events
papers
conferences
Posted at 01:57PM Feb 01, 2009
by Pru Mitchell |
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Pru Mitchell
- Location
- Adelaide, SA, Australia
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- Education Services Australia
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- Higher Education
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- Teacher/Educator
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