BOOKS FOR TEACHERS, ADMINISTRATORS, AND POLICYMAKERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION
What They Didn't Teach You in Graduate School Edition 2
299 Helpful Hints for Success in Your Academic Career
Foreword by Laurie Richlin and Steadman Upham
Illustrated by Matthew Henry Hall
- Publisher
Stylus Publishing - Published
28th February 2012 - ISBN 9781579226442
- Language English
- Pages 224 pp.
- Size 5.5" x 8.25"
- Images 16 illus
- Request Exam Copy
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- Publisher
Stylus Publishing - Published
27th March 2012 - ISBN 9781579226459
- Language English
- Pages 224 pp.
- Size 5.5" x 8.25"
- Images 16 illus
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- Publisher
Stylus Publishing - Published
27th March 2012 - ISBN 9781579226466
- Language English
- Pages 224 pp.
- Size 5.5" x 8.25"
- Images 16 illus
- Request E-Exam Copy
• This irreverent, but serious guide to what life in higher education institutions is really like, now enhanced by 100 new tips
• Invaluable advice that ranges from getting your Ph.D. to setting the course of your academic career
The 100 new hints expand sections on the dissertation process, job hunting, life in the classroom and on dealing with students, as well as on matters that affect readers’ careers, such as research, publication, and tenure. The book concludes with a tongue-in-cheek appendix on How to Become a Millionaire while an academic.
"What They Didn't Teach You in Graduate School is exactly what it claims to be: a collection of tips and hints that are rarely part of graduate education and yet are essential to survival in academic life, no matter what stage or discipline. Gray and Drew share their experiences teaching, publishing, and navigating institutional bureaucracy in a way that is highly readable and uniquely informative. This book would find a welcome place on any your scholar's shelf."
Mary Hamner, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
"Authors, Paul Gray and David E. Drew’s (2012) text is a well written, excellent read, that is insightful for those who are in the process of starting their academic career. From the start to finish, they provide the reader with a lot of useful tips to help one be more savvy and keen as an academic. Readers should enjoy this book because it is well organized and structured. Additionally, the chapters and hints are laid out in a way that is easy and pleasurable to read. The authors do a good job of describing terms and breaking larger concepts into smaller sections or over several tips to allow for the reader to get a better grasp of the overall ideas put forth. They also write in a clear, concise and, more importantly, a direct manner. In essence, Gray and Drew do not try to stump you, nor do they try to act as if they are leading experts. Rather, they sincerely convey their thoughts based upon their experiences as professors. The topics covered in this book are essential and useful because they walk you through several stages of what it takes to have a successful academic career, such as ways to complete your dissertation and effectively publish to working through your first job search and colleague relations. That said, if you are considering a career in the professoriate or currently in a PhD program, and would like a few helpful hints please consider reading this text."
Derrick Gunter - NACADA
“Filled with enough advice to help keep one engaged and productive for an entire academic career.”
- The Journal of Scholarly Publishing
“We plan to buy one of these for each of our incoming faculty and doctoral students. Take a look. It’s a wonderful read.”
- The Review of Higher Education, Dennis E. Gregory
"This manual's strength is in the crisp, straightforward tips on subjects ranging from how to handle students who may present a physical danger to how to navigate new technology for better teaching, research and writing. It is presented with a clever wit [and] includes a chapter on diversity that is brief and blunt."
- Black Issues in Higher Education
"The second updated edition of What They Didn't Teach You in Graduate School: 299 Helpful Hints for Success in Your Academic Career includes a hundred new tips and keys to success in obtaining a PhD, and covers everything from the underlying rules of academic life to the dissertation process, job hunting, and dealing with students. From those who are students to those who have just landed their first faculty position but still strive for their PhDs, this is packed with clear directions and insights not to be missed!"
- California Bookwatch
Foreword 1 to the First Edition by Laurie Richlin
Foreword 2 to the First Edition by Steadman Upham
Introduction
CHAPTER ONE: BASIC CONCEPTS
CHAPTER TWO: THE PhD
CHAPTER THREE: THE DISSERTATION
CHAPTER FOUR: JOB HUNTING
CHAPTER FIVE: TEACHING
CHAPTER SIX: RESEARCH
CHAPTER SEVEN: TENURE
CHAPTER EIGHT: ACADEMIC RANK
CHAPTER NINE: YOUR FINANCIAL LIFE AS AN ACADEMIC
CHAPTER TEN: LIFE AS AN ACADEMIC
CHAPTER ELEVEN: DIVERSITY
CHAPTER TWELVE: ON WRITING
CHAPTER THIRTEEN: ON PUBLISHING
CHAPTER FOURTEEN: PERSONAL CONSIDERATIONS
CHAPTER FIFTEEN: FINAL THOUGHTS
CHAPTER SIXTEEN:CONCLUSION AND ENVOI
APPENDICES
APPENDIX A:MECHANICS OF THE DISSERTATION
APPENDIX B: OUTSIDE INCOME
APPENDIX C:HOW TO BECOME A MILLIONAIRE
APPENDIX D: WRITING HINTS
APPENDIX E: YOUR HEALTH
About the Authors
Paul Gray
Paul Gray was Professor Emeritus and Founding Chair of Information Science at Claremont Graduate University. He specialized in information systems, particularly decision support systems, knowledge management, data warehousing and electronic commerce.
David E. Drew
David E. Drew holds the Joseph B. Platt Chair and previously served as dean of the CGU School of Educational Studies. He is a sociologist who applies quantitative and qualitative techniques, especially multivariate models, in studying the effectiveness of organizations.
Matthew Henry Hall
Matthew Henry Hall is a cartoonist whose work appears in Readers Digest, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Adjunct Advocate, and many other publications, including the the "Teachable Moments" column of Inside Higher Ed.