Landscapes and Narratives of PhD by Publication : Demystifying students’ and supervisors’ perspectives / / edited by Sin Wang Chong, Neil Johnson |
Edizione | [1st ed. 2022.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2022 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (222 pages) |
Disciplina |
025.52777
378.2 |
Soggetto topico |
Education, Higher
Dissertations, Academic Study skills Career education Higher Education Thesis and Dissertation Study and Learning Skills Career Skills Educació superior Estudis de postgrau Doctorands Estudiants universitaris |
Soggetto genere / forma | Llibres electrònics |
ISBN | 3-031-04895-4 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Intro -- Foreword -- References -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Demystifying the PhD by Publication -- The Impetus -- What the PhD by Publication Is and What It Is Not -- Misconception 1: The PhD by Publication Thesis Is the Same as the One for a Traditional PhD -- Misconception 2: Any Form of Publications Can Be Included in the Thesis for the PhD by Publication -- Misconception 3: There Are No Specific Requirements for the Synthetic Chapter in PhD by Publication -- Misconception 4: The PhD by Publication Is a Lesser Doctorate -- Misconception 5: There Is No Supervisor in the PhD by Publication -- Misconception 6: The PhD by Publication Is Suitable for Everyone -- Uniqueness of the Book -- Limitations -- Our Aspiration -- References -- Part I: Landscapes of PhD by Publication -- Chapter 2: Same But Different? Identifying Writing Challenges Specific to the PhD by Publication -- Introduction -- The Doctoral Journey and the Situated Nature of Academic Writing -- Identifying the Sample -- Analysis -- Challenges Associated with Institutional Setting -- Scepticism Towards the PBP -- Lack of Policies, Models, and Guidelines -- Finding Appropriate Supervisory Support -- Challenges Common to the Doctoral Journey, But with a PBP-Specific Manifestation -- Developing a Scholarly Identity -- Time Pressures -- Challenges Inherent and Unique to the PBP -- Losing Ownership of the Text or Writing Process -- Establishing Coherence Between the Pieces and the Whole -- Juggling Different Purposes and Audiences -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3: Ethical and Practical Considerations for Completing and Supervising a Prospective PhD by Publication -- Introduction -- The Ethics of Publication During the Doctorate -- The Ethics of Authorship -- Co-authorship -- Contribution and Attribution -- Biases in Scholarship and the Scholarly Publication Process.
Peer Review Process -- Publishing Biases -- Publications as Proxies of Productivity and Quality -- Inequitable Distribution of Resources and Support for Publication -- Disparity of Resources -- Disparities in Support and Developmental Opportunities -- Inconsistent Policies -- Conclusions and Recommendations -- References -- Chapter 4: Retrospective PhD by Publication in the UK: A Rapid Review on Educational Research Commentaries -- Introduction -- Methodology -- Findings -- Title Page -- Acknowledgement -- Abstract -- Authorship Declaration and List of Publications -- Introduction -- Literature Review -- Research Questions -- Research Methodology -- Description and Discussion of the Published Work -- Conclusion -- References and Appendices -- Discussion and Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 5: Metadiscourse in the Retrospective PhD by Publication: More or Less the Same? -- Introduction -- Metadiscourse and Academic Research -- Metadiscourse and Post-graduate Writing -- Contextual Framework for Understanding Metadiscourse -- Accreditation of Academic Knowledge -- Readers' Processing Abilities -- Power Relations in Academic Life -- Readers' Attitudinal Vulnerability -- Different Senses of Otherness -- Establishment of Writers' Identity -- Marketing Needs -- Creation of Symbolic Capital -- Methods -- Results -- Functional Analysis of the Findings -- Self-Mentions -- Endophoric Reference -- Engagement Markers -- Hybrid Discourse in Post-graduate Writing -- Conclusion -- Corpus A: Retrospective PhD by Publication -- Corpus B: PhD by Monograph (Mono) -- References -- Part II: Narratives of PhD by Publication -- Chapter 6: The Retrospective PhD by Publication: A Lesser Doctorate? -- Introduction -- What Constitutes Doctoralness? -- Researcher Autonomy, Identity and Doctoralness -- The Researcher Skills Development Framework -- My Thesis Portfolio. My Development to Autonomy as a Researcher -- Curiosity -- Determination -- Criticality -- Organisation -- Creativity -- Persuasion -- Summary of Evidence -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- References -- Chapter 7: Evolving Identities: A Collaborative Autoethnography in Supervising and Being Supervised by Colleagues -- Introduction -- Conceptualising Supervisory Relationships: Fixed or Fluid Roles? -- Engaging Theory -- Interrogating Fixed Identities -- Method -- Concept Map-Mediated Reflections -- Collaborative Auto-ethnography -- Dialogue -- Ian -- Naomi -- Karen -- Insights and Implications -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: Supervising Students Who Are Undertaking a Retrospective PhD by Publication -- Introduction -- My Personal Experience as a PhD Supervisor -- Retrospective PhD by Publication: Views of Supervision from PhD Students Themselves -- What Do the Retrospective PhD by Publication Supervisors Think? -- Advising on the Collation and Number of Outputs -- Advising on the Originality and Contribution of the Student's Work -- Supervising the Writing of the Synthesis -- Supervising the Preparation for the Viva -- Key Recommendations -- References -- Chapter 9: Demystifying Retrospective PhDs by Publication: A Collective Approach -- Introduction -- The Process -- What Were We Able to Offer? -- Why Was the Approach Successful? -- Is This Approach Transferable? -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- References -- Chapter 10: The Retrospective/Prospective PhD by Publication Journey -- Introduction -- Early Stages of My 'PhD' Study Journey -- Pitfalls of the Traditional PhD -- Understanding Study Transitions Across All Levels of Study -- Brief Overview of the Stages of My Transition Model -- First Contact and Admissions -- Pre-arrival -- Arrival and Orientation -- Introduction to Study -- Reorientation and Reinduction -- Outduction. Mapping of the Stages -- Themes and Activities -- A Crossroad: A PhD or Book Writing -- Applying Transitions to PGT Study and Producing Journal Papers and Research Reports -- To Do a Traditional PhD or a Retrospective/Prospective PhD by Publication? -- Applying My Model to a Retrospective/Prospective PhD Publication Route -- First Contact and Admissions -- Pre-arrival -- Arrival and Orientation -- Introduction to Study -- Reorientation and Reinduction -- Outduction -- Tips and Advice for Success with a Retrospective/Prospective PhD by Publication -- The Benefits for Me of Doing a Retrospective PhD by Publication -- Conclusions: Value of the PhD by Publications Route -- References -- Chapter 11: The Inside Out and Backwards PhD -- Introduction -- The Retrospective PhD by Publication -- The Process -- The Inside Out PhD -- Emotional Well-Being -- Identity -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 12: From PhD by Publication to Full-Time Academic: Narratives of Three Women -- Introduction -- Conceptual Framework -- Methods -- Findings and Discussion -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 13: The PhD by Publication as Preparation for Work in the 'Performative University' -- Introduction -- PhD by Publication -- Benefits of the PhD by Publication -- PhD by Publication and the Performative University -- Neoliberalism and Performativity -- Identity Formation and PhD Research -- PhD by Publication: Becoming a Productive Unit -- Assuming an Entrepreneurial Identity -- Negotiating Precarity -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 14: Conclusions: Demystifying the PhD by Publication and the Research Road Ahead -- Rethinking the Value of Doctoral Education -- PhD by Publication as an Emerging Academic Genre -- PhD by Publication and Academic Identities -- References. |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910616368103321 |
Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2022 | ||
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Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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Microsoft Exchange server 2013 [[electronic resource] ] : design, deploy, and deliver an enterprise messaging solution / / Nathan Winters, Neil Johnson, Nicolas Blank |
Autore | Winters Nathan |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Indianapolis, Ind., : Sybex, c2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (410 p.) |
Disciplina | 005.713769 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
JohnsonNeil
BlankNicolas |
Soggetto topico |
Client/server computing
Electronic mail systems |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-118-77953-3
1-118-75027-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Chapter 1 Business, Functional, and Technical Requirements; Building the Foundation for Requirements; Establishing Project Roles; Getting Started with the Exchange Design; Requirements as Part of a Larger Framework; Understanding the Types of Requirements; Business Requirements; Technical Requirements; Constraints; Assumptions; Requirements Elicitation; Summary; Chapter 2 Exchange Design Fundamentals; Introducing Design Documents; From Requirements to Design; No Single Way to Implement Exchange; How Much Detail Is Enough?; Section Guide; Section Index
Executive SummaryBusiness Requirements; Summary of Vision and Scope; Functional Specification; Architecture Summary; Compliance; External Publishing; Migration or Legacy Integration Requirements; Interoperation with Third-Party Applications; High-Availability Strategy and Requirements; Transport Design; Client Access Design; Mailbox Design; VM Requirements; Bandwidth Requirements; Exchange Solution Sizing; Moving Forward; A Living Document; How Do You Know When to Finish Designing?; Overengineering; Keep It Simple; Future Proofing; The Microsoft Way; Chapter 3 Exchange Architectural Concepts The Evolution of Exchange 2013Exchange 2000/2003; Exchange 2007; Exchange 2010; Exchange 2013; Discontinued Features; Exchange 2013 Editions; Transport; Management; Role Separation; High Availability; Exchange Online Integration; Summary; Chapter 4 Defining a Highly Available Messaging Solution; Defining Availability; Defining Availability Components; Defining the Cost of Downtime; Planning for Failure; Defining Terms for Availability; Service-Level Agreements; RPO and RTO; Defining High Availability and Disaster Recovery; Achieving High Availability; Building an Available Messaging System TransportNamespace Planning; Exchange Hybrid Deployment; Database Availability Group Planning; Summary; Chapter 5 Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution; A Brief History of Exchange Storage; Exchange 4.0-5.5; Exchange 2000-2003; Exchange 2007; Exchange 2010; Storage Changes in Exchange 2013; Issue 1: Storage Capacity Increasing; Issue 2: Mechanical Disk IOPS Performance Not Increasing; Issue 3: JBOD Solutions Require Operational Maturity; Issue 4: Mailbox Capacity Requirements Increasing; Issue 5: Everything Needs to Be Cheaper; Storage Improvements in Exchange Server 2013 Automatic Database ReseedMultiple Databases for Each JBOD Disk Spindle; Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution; Requirements Gathering; Making Sense of the Exchange Mailbox Server Role Requirements Calculator; Selecting the Right Storage Hardware; Storage Validation Using Jetstress; Summary; Chapter 6 Management; Trends in Management of Platforms; Role-Based Access Control; RBAC Overview; Understanding the Components of the RBAC Permissions Model; Planning Your Management Strategy; Understanding Built-in Management Roles, Role Groups, and Role Association; Role Assignments Under the Hood |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910463792103321 |
Winters Nathan
![]() |
||
Indianapolis, Ind., : Sybex, c2013 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Microsoft Exchange server 2013 [[electronic resource] ] : design, deploy, and deliver an enterprise messaging solution / / Nathan Winters, Neil Johnson, Nicolas Blank |
Autore | Winters Nathan |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Indianapolis, Ind., : Sybex, c2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (410 p.) |
Disciplina | 005.713769 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
JohnsonNeil
BlankNicolas |
Soggetto topico |
Client/server computing
Electronic mail systems |
ISBN |
1-118-77953-3
1-118-75027-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Chapter 1 Business, Functional, and Technical Requirements; Building the Foundation for Requirements; Establishing Project Roles; Getting Started with the Exchange Design; Requirements as Part of a Larger Framework; Understanding the Types of Requirements; Business Requirements; Technical Requirements; Constraints; Assumptions; Requirements Elicitation; Summary; Chapter 2 Exchange Design Fundamentals; Introducing Design Documents; From Requirements to Design; No Single Way to Implement Exchange; How Much Detail Is Enough?; Section Guide; Section Index
Executive SummaryBusiness Requirements; Summary of Vision and Scope; Functional Specification; Architecture Summary; Compliance; External Publishing; Migration or Legacy Integration Requirements; Interoperation with Third-Party Applications; High-Availability Strategy and Requirements; Transport Design; Client Access Design; Mailbox Design; VM Requirements; Bandwidth Requirements; Exchange Solution Sizing; Moving Forward; A Living Document; How Do You Know When to Finish Designing?; Overengineering; Keep It Simple; Future Proofing; The Microsoft Way; Chapter 3 Exchange Architectural Concepts The Evolution of Exchange 2013Exchange 2000/2003; Exchange 2007; Exchange 2010; Exchange 2013; Discontinued Features; Exchange 2013 Editions; Transport; Management; Role Separation; High Availability; Exchange Online Integration; Summary; Chapter 4 Defining a Highly Available Messaging Solution; Defining Availability; Defining Availability Components; Defining the Cost of Downtime; Planning for Failure; Defining Terms for Availability; Service-Level Agreements; RPO and RTO; Defining High Availability and Disaster Recovery; Achieving High Availability; Building an Available Messaging System TransportNamespace Planning; Exchange Hybrid Deployment; Database Availability Group Planning; Summary; Chapter 5 Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution; A Brief History of Exchange Storage; Exchange 4.0-5.5; Exchange 2000-2003; Exchange 2007; Exchange 2010; Storage Changes in Exchange 2013; Issue 1: Storage Capacity Increasing; Issue 2: Mechanical Disk IOPS Performance Not Increasing; Issue 3: JBOD Solutions Require Operational Maturity; Issue 4: Mailbox Capacity Requirements Increasing; Issue 5: Everything Needs to Be Cheaper; Storage Improvements in Exchange Server 2013 Automatic Database ReseedMultiple Databases for Each JBOD Disk Spindle; Designing a Successful Exchange Storage Solution; Requirements Gathering; Making Sense of the Exchange Mailbox Server Role Requirements Calculator; Selecting the Right Storage Hardware; Storage Validation Using Jetstress; Summary; Chapter 6 Management; Trends in Management of Platforms; Role-Based Access Control; RBAC Overview; Understanding the Components of the RBAC Permissions Model; Planning Your Management Strategy; Understanding Built-in Management Roles, Role Groups, and Role Association; Role Assignments Under the Hood |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910787564503321 |
Winters Nathan
![]() |
||
Indianapolis, Ind., : Sybex, c2013 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|