runonsentence Posted July 14, 2011 Posted July 14, 2011 Maybe this is weird; but does anyone have a method for keeping track of CFPs? I get a ton of emails with promising calls for papers for conferences and publications, but I find that I often forget about them, as they get lost in the email shuffle. I also never know what to do with calls I come across online; create a bookmark folder? I'd rather have a central place to keep track of them all. So for now I use email folders and bookmark folders, but I'm rather dissatisfied with this approach. Any wise gradecafe-rs have creative, brilliant ways of keeping track of such things that would be less disparate and less likely to collect digital cobwebs?
fuzzylogician Posted July 14, 2011 Posted July 14, 2011 Maybe this is weird; but does anyone have a method for keeping track of CFPs? I get a ton of emails with promising calls for papers for conferences and publications, but I find that I often forget about them, as they get lost in the email shuffle. I also never know what to do with calls I come across online; create a bookmark folder? I'd rather have a central place to keep track of them all. So for now I use email folders and bookmark folders, but I'm rather dissatisfied with this approach. Any wise gradecafe-rs have creative, brilliant ways of keeping track of such things that would be less disparate and less likely to collect digital cobwebs? My department maintains a public calendar with things like talks, events, conferences, deadlines for abstract submissions, etc. It's updated by several professors and students and I find it very useful for keeping track of what is going on in the general area of my university and in my field. A tech-savvy friend of mine also set up an RSS feed that updates users about upcoming conferences/deadlines. Our field is small enough that there is a website with updates about all of the conferences that could be relevant to linguists in general. Maybe there are resources like that out there in your department/field that you are not aware of? Even in the absence of shared resources, I find that creating a calendar entry for the deadline that includes a URL of the call for papers is very useful. Also, I sometimes use good old fashioned pen and paper lists. Those have the advantage that you can cross out completed tasks like finished abstracts and papers, which I find very satisfying.. Timshel 1
Timshel Posted July 21, 2011 Posted July 21, 2011 My department maintains a public calendar with things like talks, events, conferences, deadlines for abstract submissions, etc. It's updated by several professors and students and I find it very useful for keeping track of what is going on in the general area of my university and in my field. A tech-savvy friend of mine also set up an RSS feed that updates users about upcoming conferences/deadlines. Our field is small enough that there is a website with updates about all of the conferences that could be relevant to linguists in general. Maybe there are resources like that out there in your department/field that you are not aware of? Even in the absence of shared resources, I find that creating a calendar entry for the deadline that includes a URL of the call for papers is very useful. Also, I sometimes use good old fashioned pen and paper lists. Those have the advantage that you can cross out completed tasks like finished abstracts and papers, which I find very satisfying.. I think that is genius! I too have lost track of promising CFP dates, and I think creating a calendar with a link to the page for the CFP is genius. I'm assuming that could work with google calendar, right?
fuzzylogician Posted July 21, 2011 Posted July 21, 2011 I think that is genius! I too have lost track of promising CFP dates, and I think creating a calendar with a link to the page for the CFP is genius. I'm assuming that could work with google calendar, right? That's what I use. Works great.
runonsentence Posted July 21, 2011 Author Posted July 21, 2011 My department maintains a public calendar with things like talks, events, conferences, deadlines for abstract submissions, etc. It's updated by several professors and students and I find it very useful for keeping track of what is going on in the general area of my university and in my field. A tech-savvy friend of mine also set up an RSS feed that updates users about upcoming conferences/deadlines. Our field is small enough that there is a website with updates about all of the conferences that could be relevant to linguists in general. Maybe there are resources like that out there in your department/field that you are not aware of? Even in the absence of shared resources, I find that creating a calendar entry for the deadline that includes a URL of the call for papers is very useful. Also, I sometimes use good old fashioned pen and paper lists. Those have the advantage that you can cross out completed tasks like finished abstracts and papers, which I find very satisfying.. Belated thanks for the ideas, fuzzylogician. I'm on a professional listserv in my field that sends out a lot of calls, but I haven't tried looking around to see if we have a similar resource (calendar). Perhaps we do. But even so, it'd be nice to have my own space where I can selectively add calls I see myself actually responding to. I might give a Google calendar (devoted to CFPs and the like) a try.
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