katiegud Posted November 10, 2014 Posted November 10, 2014 While working on my literature review I came up with an idea that I thought might be publishable. Part of it would be necessary to write up, but to complete the article I would have to do some additional work that would not end up in my PhD dissertation. I emailed an editor to see if he was interested, and he said that I should submit it when I'm finished. So, do I talk to my supervisors about this now and risk them telling me not to take the time out of PhD work to finish the article? Or do I just write the article quietly on the side and not tell them about it until I'm finished? I'm in the UK, so I also asked on TSR, but I'm not sure if that makes a difference. How involved are supervisors in publishing? If it would be a solo article by me do they really need to be involved?
lyonessrampant Posted November 10, 2014 Posted November 10, 2014 All of my publications to this point have been completed independently. I wrote up the manuscript, got some feedback, submitted it, revised, and published. I didn't hide that I was doing this work, but I didn't really volunteer it either. As long as you meet the expected deadlines for the dissertation, I don't see why you working on a side project would be a problem. Of course, we're in different fields, so things might be different for you.
katiegud Posted November 10, 2014 Author Posted November 10, 2014 Thanks for the input! I wouldn't hide it from them certainly, but I don't want them to think I'm slacking on my required work. This would be my first publication (obviously), so I'm just trying to learn the process.
lewin Posted December 1, 2014 Posted December 1, 2014 In my field if a student graduated with their PhD dissertation finished and no other publications they would not get a job. You need these side pubs to have a good CV. But I would never sneak one past my advisor; they're all things that we worked on together even when I was the lead. Is this a possibility? As a junior person you might be overemphasizing your chances of a solo publication and a more senior collaborator could do wonders. (I don't know your field and how authorship usually goes...)
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