{"id":1438,"date":"2013-03-01T18:47:14","date_gmt":"2013-03-01T23:47:14","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nazitunnels.org\/?p=1438"},"modified":"2013-03-01T18:49:44","modified_gmt":"2013-03-01T23:49:44","slug":"setting-the-pace","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/nazitunnels.org\/2013\/03\/01\/setting-the-pace\/","title":{"rendered":"Setting the Pace"},"content":{"rendered":"

It’s time to really buckle down and get this dissertation going.<\/p>\n

I read “The Clockwork Muse” by Eviatar Zerubavel to give me some ideas on how to accomplish the monumental task of writing a dissertation. In a nutshell, the trick is small pieces, planned times, and deadlines. In more detail, here are some notes that I took away from this book and have implemented in my pacing guide to dissertation completion.<\/p>\n

\"800px-BCL5_Saturday_Schedule\"<\/a>Schedule:<\/strong> Schedule specific times to write, specific hours and days each week. Look at your week, plot out all of your existing commitments, family, work, etc. and schedule writing time into the available spots. Scheduling the time gives it reality, fits it in with your already planned life, and gives it boundaries. The book suggests figuring out how long of a session works for you, and keeping your writing times limited to that. I shouldn’t have any problem, because I can only get a few hours in a day anyways. I have a family (a wonderful wife and five amazing children who want to see their husband and dad some time during the week), a full-time job, Church responsibilities, and personal health needs. That gives me about three hours on three days a week. Making some changes during the summer, I should be able to bump that up to five hours on those three days a week. Plan for known vacations, trips, and other blocks of days where you know you will not be able to write. I figured that I will have three days a week to write, but I still have a lot of research to do, so I bumped that down to two days of writing and one day of research.<\/p>\n

\"513px-Elephant_at_Indianapolis_Zoo\"<\/a>Bits and Pieces<\/strong>: Another tip is to divide the dissertation up into as small of parts as possible. This does several things. First it is psychologically a lot easier to think about focusing on writing 5, 10 or 20 pages of a section or chapter, than it is to think about writing a 300 page dissertation. I already had an outline during the prospectus writing phase. That has certainly changed already (due to the need to focus on one tunnel instead of all of them), and will change again as I learn more about the topic. To help with a very basic outline, I looked at several similar works and based my outline on their table of contents. Here is what I have so far:<\/p>\n

    \n
  1. Introduction: Historiography, methodology, and arguments<\/li>\n
  2. Chapter 1: Business Above Ground (193x-1944)<\/li>\n
  3. Chapter 2: Decision to Disperse<\/li>\n
  4. Chapter 3: Organization of Project X<\/li>\n
  5. Chapter 4: Tunnel Technology and Topology<\/li>\n
  6. Chapter 5: Collaboration with Killers<\/li>\n
  7. Chapter 6: Persecuted and Perpetrators<\/li>\n
  8. Conclusion: Meanings, Memories and Movements<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    That’s about it. I don’t know which tunnel, or which business I will study yet. Once that is clarified, I’ll be able to fill in the X’s and flush out the outline.<\/p>\n

    One other idea I liked about this section, is to not fall into the traditional trap of writing one chapter at a time. Zerubavel suggests, rather, to write as much as you can on all sections. That makes it that much easier when going through each revision, because you have something there already. Having a draft of the whole dissertation is much different, and far and away much better, than having a draft of only part of the dissertation, regardless of how “finished” the parts are. I’m going to give that a try.<\/p>\n

    Fail to plan? Plan to Fail:<\/strong> This next part was great in helping me visualize and actually help me believe that this project is actually achievable. With my end date in mind (December 2014, which will give me buffer time and time for revisions for a April 2015 defense and May 2015 graduation date), I figured out a rough estimate of pages needed, how days I will work, how many hours per day, and therefore how many hours available to write the dissertation. Dividing the pages by the hours gives me how many pages an hour I need to write, and a rough estimate of how many pages a day and week I will need to write. I gave myself a whole month of no writing for this year and next for buffer and reality. July of this year is all research, and I’m sure something will come up next year. Here’s what I came up with:<\/p>\n

    MONTHS<\/p>\n