Study Skills: A Student Survival Guide
PLATINUM WINNER - 2006 MarCom Creative Awards

Postgraduate students require a variety of skills in addition to the specialist knowledge of their area of research, including organisation, time management, preparation and presentation of a seminar, and writing a thesis and a research paper. This outstanding title provides PhD and MSc students with advice on key issues relating to the organisation and presentation of their research.

  • Helps students to deal with an increasingly competitive marketplace after completing their studies
  • Clearly written and illustrated by professional lecturers
  • Covers the skills that the Research Councils expect students to develop during their doctoral training
  • Features handy quick tips, checklists and key ‘remember’ points so that students can dip into it in any order throughout their research or read in stages as their work develops

This easy-to-use guide on study skills is also of practical value to new supervisors wanting to ensure their students are equipped with the transferable skills needed to take them through their PhD and beyond.

From the reviews:

“I am left with just one question: why should readers pick this manual as opposed to others?… One answer is timing: Due to this book’s newness, its lists of websites and the like for additional information will prove highly reliable… Second, the fact that it was written by several people, each one an expert in the area he or she discusses… Yet the ultimate answer… rests with the book’s conciseness, its coverage of so much advice on so many (related) subjects…” IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATIONS, March 2006

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Study Skills: A Student Survival Guide
PLATINUM WINNER - 2006 MarCom Creative Awards

Postgraduate students require a variety of skills in addition to the specialist knowledge of their area of research, including organisation, time management, preparation and presentation of a seminar, and writing a thesis and a research paper. This outstanding title provides PhD and MSc students with advice on key issues relating to the organisation and presentation of their research.

  • Helps students to deal with an increasingly competitive marketplace after completing their studies
  • Clearly written and illustrated by professional lecturers
  • Covers the skills that the Research Councils expect students to develop during their doctoral training
  • Features handy quick tips, checklists and key ‘remember’ points so that students can dip into it in any order throughout their research or read in stages as their work develops

This easy-to-use guide on study skills is also of practical value to new supervisors wanting to ensure their students are equipped with the transferable skills needed to take them through their PhD and beyond.

From the reviews:

“I am left with just one question: why should readers pick this manual as opposed to others?… One answer is timing: Due to this book’s newness, its lists of websites and the like for additional information will prove highly reliable… Second, the fact that it was written by several people, each one an expert in the area he or she discusses… Yet the ultimate answer… rests with the book’s conciseness, its coverage of so much advice on so many (related) subjects…” IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATIONS, March 2006

54.95 In Stock
Study Skills: A Student Survival Guide

Study Skills: A Student Survival Guide

Study Skills: A Student Survival Guide

Study Skills: A Student Survival Guide

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Overview

PLATINUM WINNER - 2006 MarCom Creative Awards

Postgraduate students require a variety of skills in addition to the specialist knowledge of their area of research, including organisation, time management, preparation and presentation of a seminar, and writing a thesis and a research paper. This outstanding title provides PhD and MSc students with advice on key issues relating to the organisation and presentation of their research.

  • Helps students to deal with an increasingly competitive marketplace after completing their studies
  • Clearly written and illustrated by professional lecturers
  • Covers the skills that the Research Councils expect students to develop during their doctoral training
  • Features handy quick tips, checklists and key ‘remember’ points so that students can dip into it in any order throughout their research or read in stages as their work develops

This easy-to-use guide on study skills is also of practical value to new supervisors wanting to ensure their students are equipped with the transferable skills needed to take them through their PhD and beyond.

From the reviews:

“I am left with just one question: why should readers pick this manual as opposed to others?… One answer is timing: Due to this book’s newness, its lists of websites and the like for additional information will prove highly reliable… Second, the fact that it was written by several people, each one an expert in the area he or she discusses… Yet the ultimate answer… rests with the book’s conciseness, its coverage of so much advice on so many (related) subjects…” IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATIONS, March 2006


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780470094853
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 04/22/2005
Pages: 144
Product dimensions: 6.63(w) x 9.70(h) x 0.35(d)

About the Author

Kathryn Allen is the author of Study Skills: A Student Survival Guide, published by Wiley.

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Table of Contents

Preface.

Foreword by Clare Isacke.

Introduction by Kathryn Allen.

List of contributors.

SECTION ONE: PERSONAL EFFECTIVENESS.

Chapter 1: Effective Organisation and Time Management (Professor Steve Webb and Professor Bob Ott).

Chapter 2: Personal and Interpersonal Skills (Mr Neil Walford).

SECTION TWO: FINDING AND USING INFORMATION.

Chapter 3: Information Retrieval (Barry Jenkins)

Chapter 4: Critical Reading (Dr Stan Venitt).

SECTION THREE: COMMUNICATION SKILLS.

Chapter 5: Oral and Poster Presentations (Dr Maggie Flower).

Chapter 6: Writing a Paper (Dr Jeff Bamber).

Chapter 7: Writing and Defending Your Thesis (Dr Stan Venitt).

Index.

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