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Book Review: “BITE recipes for remarkable research”

Judy Robertson is the co-editor of  the free to download academic recipe book “BITE: Recipes for  Remarkable Research” which is published by Sense this month. I was privileged to take part in this project and contribute a recipe and case study to the book.

In this post Judy explains why on earth she wanted to write a recipe book, and shares one of her favourite recipes aimed at PhD students.

One of my favourite projects this year has been editing an academic recipe book with my co-conspirators Alison Williams and Derek Jones. It’s all about practical ways in which researchers can become more creative and produce even more remarkable research.

There are recipes for working on our own, working with others and working environments.  I enjoyed writing and editing recipes so much that I’m worried I’ll never write another academic paper again!

The writing process was unusual: the book has input from 34 academics across a variety of disciplines from archaeology to computer science. We have authors who are PhD students, emeritus professors, practitioners, and everything in between.   It contains short recipes, case studies and yes  – it does have a few academic papers too.

The idea of encapsulating knowledge of effective research practice in recipe format emerged at a writing workshop with members of the SPIRES network. We then ran a series of “Shut Up and Write” workshops where researchers contributed recipes from their own experience. Other recipes emerged from interviews or casual discussions with our colleagues. My co-editor Alison ruthlessly harvested recipes from anyone she met in conferences, coffee shops or planes.

Recipes work very well as a format for capturing effective ways of working. It’s practical knowledge, inspired by theory or experience, in digestible steps. We also found it very useful as a format for getting members of an academic community to share their ideas. Everyone is familiar with the recipe format, it’s quick to write, and low pressure in the sense that it doesn’t need to represent a pinnacle of scholarly thought.

We hope that the advice contained in the recipes is helpful to you. If so, share them with a friend. We’re also on the look-out for more recipes, so drop us an email at biteresearchrecipes@gmail.com if you feel inspired.

You can download the entire recipe book for free or order a paper copy. In the meantime, here is a sample recipe for PhD students written by a just graduated PhD student to whet your appetite.

My work is not me

Author: Alison Williams

Background

It is sometimes difficult for us to take criticism of our work. We are so bound up in it that the work somehow becomes us, and critique of the work feels like a personal attack.  This is damaging in two main ways:

This recipe is for people who come out of a meeting with a supervisor feeling completely devastated and stupid, and forgetting that they are in the top 1% of the world’s thinkers. Its aim is to help you detach yourself from your work so that even if the work is going badly, your confidence and self-esteem are not irreparably damaged.

Ingredients

Method

Cook’s tips

If you have an allergic reaction to the idea because of a total sense-of-humour failure, here’s what to do:

For the student: If you’ve got to the stage where anything will tip you into tears or bluster, get someone to tell you a couple of dreadful jokes before you go into your supervision session.

For the supervisor: If you’ve got to the stage where anything will tip you into cynicism or bluster, get someone to tell you a couple of dreadful jokes before you go into the supervision session.

Swap jokes at the start of the session.

Warnings

If you have a supervisor who you suspect won’t play, give them a copy of this recipe before the supervision session so that they have time to get used to the idea. Tell them that it is important to you that they play along without cynicism.

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