Text development seminar in area studies

Text development seminar in area studies organized by Professor Ljiljana Saric at ILOS. The text development seminar is a compulsory component of the PhD programme. 

Abandoned rusty railway tracks in rural area

Photo: Jarli & Jordan/UiO

Overview

For this upcoming seminar you are invited to submit parts of a chapter or a draft of an article for your PhD thesis.

The papers will be circulated in advance to make sure that everyone gets a chance to read them. Please also see the guidelines for a monograph or article-based thesis.

The duration of each seminar will depend on the number of presenters/commentators. Those presenting a paper will also comment on someone else’s paper. 

  • Present and comment: 2 ECTS

The sessions run as follows:

  • Brief introduction
  • Introduction by the PhD fellow presenting a paper (about 10 minutes)
  • Commentary (5-10 minutes)
  • General discussion (15-20 minutes)
  • Recapitulation (5 minutes)
  • Pause (10-15 minutes)

Each seminar has the following maximum number:

  • 4 Presenters/commentators
  • An unlimited number of additional, registered participants

To register

We need at least 2 registered participants to run the seminar 

Please sign up here by the end of 27 November

The deadline for submitting texts is on the same date as the deadline for signing up: 27 November. Please send your texts to Professor Ljiljana Saric: ljiljana.saric@ilos.uio.no.   

The papers should be about 10 pages. If the announced seminar is going to address texts for the PhD thesis, this should be texts that are still in the making, not finished chapters or articles. If the seminar deals with conference papers, this, too, must be a draft and not a paper that has already been presented at a conference. You may use a Power-Point-presentation or similar.

If you like, you can give some instructions on how to read the material presented, suggesting which aspects to focus on.

The commentator does not have to be in the same field as the presenter. Often, someone from the "outside" will be more able to see the text presented as a text and to give valuable feedback on structure and argumentation. For example: are the aims and claims clearly stated at the outset? Does the writer indicate where he/she stands in relation to previous research or criticism and what his/her contribution consists of? Does the argument progress logically from one point to the next? The texts presented in these seminars are typically works in progress and commentary on how to improve the quality of the writing and the argumentation may therefore be especially welcome. We will discuss in English and/or Norwegian all depending. Remember: you can learn a lot about thesis writing from commenting on someone else's paper.

Questions? Feel free to contact Ljiljana Saric

Tags: PhD, PhD training
Published Mar. 31, 2023 9:36 AM - Last modified Nov. 30, 2023 2:00 PM