Working on a conference paper.
seen from Uzbekistan

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from United States

seen from United States

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seen from Japan
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seen from United States

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seen from Germany
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seen from Netherlands
seen from Japan
seen from Germany
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Working on a conference paper.
09/04/2019
Day 2 of Thesis Marathon
I came back from Istanbul last week, relaxed and got my life together last weekend and now it’s time to get this thesis going!
I did 4 Pomodoro sessions and an added hour onto that. Read 9 paper in total as of today and I think I have 4 or 5 papers to go through for my literature review. Then I will start writing it. I am hoping to have a literature review written more or less, at the end of this week. I am taking my notes on a physical notebook because I get too distracted if I read from my computer and take notes there too. My mind prefers old school methods, I guess :D
20/06/2019
I’ve got the morning to myself today before my mom’s flight gets in, so I’ve spent the last couple of hours reading through some slightly older literature relevant to my PI’s work to make sure that I’m getting a good broad background in the area.
It feels odd to want to work during by break. The way I always imagined it was some kind of gut-wrenching horror, where I would be guilted into doing work on my “down-time” just to feel like I’m getting enough things done. But that’s absolutely not the case! I want to learn more about the area so I can make appropriate decisions for the research I’m going to do down the line, and I actually do reading papers, to a certain time-limited extend. Once I’m about halfway through a paper I’m reading in my down time I get a bit bored, but that’s fine because then I can just move along and do something else. Like reorganize Notion again and spend even more time thinking about how I want to organize it! 😜
So yeah. Here’s me, on my first morning of my week off, and I’m reading a paper. Influenced a bit by the pressures of my PhD, but at least not guilted into it. Besides, it’s a great way to kill the boredom of being in a semi-familiar house where you’re not sure what you’re allowed to do.
Study nights and study dates with my boyfriend.
Dissertation reading again
Study dates with my boyfriend 💖
How to Read Scientific Papers Quickly and Effectively
In this article I will share with you a few techniques for understanding how to read scientific papers quickly and effectively. The vast majority of the scientific articles follow a structure that is known as IMRaD. That stand for Introduction, Methods, Results and Discussion. In
Check out the original post at https://francescolelli.info/thesis/read-scientific-papers-quickly-and-effectively/
Title: How to Read Scientific Papers Quickly and Effectively
Categories: Thesis
Tags: article reading, heuristics, Hints, paper reading, Reading
Published by Francesco Lelli at Francesco Lelli
reading papers on Makerspace research
Today, I continue to read more papers on Makespace.
1. Resources, facilitation, and partnerships: Three design considerations for youth makerspaces by _Breanne K. Litts (IDC_2015) : Case studies and findings from observing three youth makerspaces in US offering the design consideration with the lens of activity, facilitation and community. Findings are: Accessibility and visibility as availability of tools and resources are important; Facilitators’ backgrounds are important to the identity of making; And community partnership..
"While access to and making with 3D printers, laser cutters, and e-textiles builds new types of literacies and representation, these technologies should not be prerequisites for makerspaces.” p350
2. Making a Makerspace: Designing User Services to Serve Designing Users by Owen G. McGrath : Adopting the design thinking in designing a new informal makerspace in a higher education (Berkeley in this case). They developed three personas of a novice explorer, a course worker and a student club member and made a journey according to them. More about the service design rather than space design:
Regarding two different types of makerspace in university...
“1) A discipline-focused trend driven by new curricular emphasis on the design process coming from engineering and product design industry with an emphasis on formal design process. 2) A more informal and person-oriented trend growing out of the Maker movement, which embraces an extremely broad range of do-it-yourself activities spanning from craft to science having in common an aim toward personal creativity [8].”
Mentioning the previous approach not based on the design thinking...
“have been easy and comfortable to think simply in terms of filling a space with furniture and equipment—breaking the task into parts and assigning out different subtasks to different teams: space, equipment, software, training, etc. Here the makerspace might have been treated as merely an extension of the existing drop-in computing facility. An institutional perspective grounded in what has worked in the past makes it tempting, for instance, to view 3D printing as just another kind of printing. We know how to offer laser printing, so we fit 3D printing into that model. Among the potential pitfalls of this container-and-contents design approach is that the we-know-best outcome ends up not matching what users really want or need.”
3. Bots for Tots- Building Inclusive Makerspaces by Leveraging “Ways of Knowing” by Nathan Holbert (IDC 2016) : Feminist’s take on the maker education, mostly the insights gained from the toy making workshop for 9-10 year girls. Worth reading particularly for planning and designing the workshop. There are good data, statistics on the while male-dominated maker culture.
“As the “maker movement” continues to expand and enter formal education settings this mainstream method of engaging kids with STEM ideas is in danger of marginalizing girls and underrepresented communities, leaving them out of this exciting opportunity.”- p79
4. Making Community: The Wider Role of Makerspaces in Public Life (CHI 2016) : The roles of makerspace in local society, focusing on the community makerspace. According to this paper, its role includes:
acting as social spaces;
supporting wellbeing;
serving the needs of the communities they are located in;
and reaching out to excluded groups.
More to read
The Makerspace Workbench: Tools, Technologies, and Techniques for Making
Inventing the Medium : Principles of Interaction Design As a Cultural Practice
School Library Makerspace (book)
Makerspace: Towards a New Civic Infrastructure : Comprehensive article on community makerspace.