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Research Questions
"Hobby" research?
May 29, 2012, 04:19:51 AM
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Topic: "Hobby" research? (Read 1055 times)
wet_blanket
Some kind of
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 3,430
"Hobby" research?
«
on:
November 09, 2009, 05:40:55 AM »
I'm a dissertating grad student at the moment. As such, I can't really be going off and pursuing research projects just for fun. There are some areas of research in my field that I find fascinating, but that are completely unrelated to what I do and why I'm driven to become a professor of basketweaving.
I know that when (if) I hit the TT I'm going to be even busier than I am now. But it seems that many people have their "serious" projects and manage to have an oddball, quirky, fun project too. Not that such projects lack rigor, or are only the stuff of the BMJ Christmas edition, but they're clearly playtime for the person concerned.
Just wondering if forumites have these kinds of projects? And how people find the time without feeling that they're slacking on the "important" stuff?
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Quote from: prytania3 on March 28, 2011, 11:49:56 PM
Wet Blanket will find success. The spreadsheet is the way...
msparticularity
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 12,182
Assistant Professor cum bricoleur
Re: "Hobby" research?
«
Reply #1 on:
November 09, 2009, 01:16:55 PM »
Yeah, I just did a book chapter on one of my ideas that is highly interesting to me, but not necessarily terribly compelling as a researched journal article. It is something of a balancing act, of course, because as another Forumite pointed out once (and as you clearly realize), there is an opportunity cost involved, since it takes time during which one might be doing more "significant" work. Still, mine ended up being personally very satisfying, and also helped me develop a literature base that
does
relate to some other things I'm working on. Also, I had some very cool conversations with wonderful people who share my interests, which also helps keep me feeling excited and motivated about my larger life and work.
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"Once admit that the sole verifiable or fruitful object of knowledge is the particular set of changes that generate the object of study...and no intelligible question can be asked about what, by assumption, lies outside." John Dewey
"Be particular." Jill Conner Browne
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