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Landscapes and Narratives of PhD by Publication : Demystifying students’ and supervisors’ perspectives / / edited by Sin Wang Chong, Neil Johnson
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
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Microsoft Exchange server 2013 [[electronic resource] ] : design, deploy, and deliver an enterprise messaging solution / / Nathan Winters, Neil Johnson, Nicolas Blank
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
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Microsoft Exchange server 2013 [[electronic resource] ] : design, deploy, and deliver an enterprise messaging solution / / Nathan Winters, Neil Johnson, Nicolas Blank
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
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui