Wednesday, February 19, 2014

What can you say about a Research Schedule?

Time Management
Time Management
 (Photo credit: Intersection Consulting)
And the answer is:  not much.  I've been spending a couple of hours a week thinking about this project and making notes about the film, but I'm not sure if I can actually pin down how much time I need for everything involved.  I need to have my bibliography and the final revision of my Review of Scholarly Literature done on March 12, which is not that far off now, so it's time to step it up. 

I'm now (as of this minute) planning on giving at least an hour a day, every day, until the two projects are done, and if I do more than an hour, I will NOT deduct that time from the next hour.  I will also probably have to adjust that daily hour upwards in order to get it all done, but I think an hour is a good starting point.  Here's my to-do list, in chronological order:

  • Find at least six articles that use shame theory to analyze something comparable to a film.
  • Find two more books on the theory (I already have one) AND reviews of the books from scholarly journals.
  • Create the MLA citations.
  • Start reading the articles (at least two a week), writing the annotations as I go.
  • Decide on which articles to use for the lit review, then write summaries (remember, they have to define the terms I'll be using).
  • Examine the books to see what I can get from them, prepare annotations (and summaries as above for the two I'm using for my lit review).
That's what I absolutely have to do, but I'd also like to do a starter analysis of the three scenes I want to use in the research paper, since that's my primary research and I won't know for sure how much and what kind of stuff I need from my secondary sources until the analysis is done.

And, I just decided that I'm not counting the time it takes to write my blog posts as part of my scheduled hour.  Now all I have to do is stick to the plan

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