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There is an invited post over at lifehack.org by Michael Leddy, an English professor who recommends that we should divide major actions (such as “write term paper”) into smaller, more doable tasks (NAs in GTD’s parlance).
I think this could be a good read for students, and even for academics; Most of us keep this partitioning into smaller tasks “in our heads”; making it explicit and dumping it into paper might help with things such as time estimation… a consistent problem I have is that I never know how long I will need to finish a paper. This is one of the reasons I posted before that we need to decompose tasks to be able to track progress better.
Technorati Tags: reading, writing, best practices, time management, project management
About the author: Jose Quesada wanted to be a matador, an acrobatic pilot, or a painter, but found those activities not demanding enough, so he chose an academic career. He secretly hopes to orchestrate a system that produces papers without any human intervention (particularly, his).
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AMA citation:
Quesada J. Writing: granularity. Academic Productivity. 2006. Available at: http://www.academicproductivity.com/2006/writing-granularity/. Accessed August 21, 2008.
APA citation:
Quesada, Jose. (2006). Writing: granularity. Retrieved August 21, 2008, from Academic Productivity Web site: http://www.academicproductivity.com/2006/writing-granularity/
Chicago citation:
Quesada, Jose. 2006. Writing: granularity. Academic Productivity. http://www.academicproductivity.com/2006/writing-granularity/ (accessed August 21, 2008).
Harvard citation:
Quesada, J 2006, Writing: granularity, Academic Productivity. Retrieved August 21, 2008, from <http://www.academicproductivity.com/2006/writing-granularity/>
MLA citation:
Quesada, Jose. "Writing: granularity." 4 Dec. 2006. Academic Productivity. Accessed 21 Aug. 2008. <http://www.academicproductivity.com/2006/writing-granularity/>
This entry was posted
on Monday, December 4th, 2006 at 4:32 am and is filed under Teaching, Writing.
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January 27th, 2007 at 8:33 pm
[...] It seems that improving your estimation skills can take you a long way. Currently I’m trying to construct a todo list with all steps that a project needs till completion (using the granularity ideas previously mentioned, and the program toDoList with time estimation visible next to each task). Hopefully I won’t be late for my next deadline, which is in 15 days! [...]