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How to Succeed in Postgraduate StudyBibliographyby Marie desJardinsQuick Index: | Previous: Conclusions | Up: Abstract and Index | Next: Acknowledgements | [1] Philip E. Agre. "What to read: A biased guide to AI literacy for the beginner." Technical Report Working Paper 239, MIT AI Lab, November 1982. [2] Diana Bental. "Thesis prevention: Advice to phd supervisors." AISB Quarterly No. 80 (Newsletter of the Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and Simulation of Behaviour), pages 58--60, Summer 1992. (Published under the alias `The Siblings of Perpetual Prototyping'). [3] Alan Bundy, Ben du Boulay, Jim Howe, and Gordon Plotkin. The researchers' bible. Technical Report DAI Teaching Paper No. 4, Dept. of Artificial Intelligence, University of Edinburgh, September 1986. [4] David Chapman. How to do research at the MIT AI lab. Technical Report AI Working Paper 316, MIT, October 1988. [5] UC Berkeley Graduate Division. Finding money for dissertation research/writing. The Graduate, II(3), Fall 1986. [6] UC Berkeley Graduate Division. Studying for the qualifying exam. The Graduate, II(3), Fall 1986. [7] UC Berkeley Graduate Division. Writing your thesis. The Graduate, II(1), Spring 1986. [8] UC Berkeley Graduate Division. Interviewing for a faculty position. The Graduate, III(2), Fall 1987. [9] UC Berkeley Graduate Division. The making of a successful proposal. The Graduate, III(1), Spring 1987. [10] UC Berkeley Graduate Division. Choosing your thesis or dissertation topic. The Graduate, IV(2), Fall 1988. [11] UC Berkeley Graduate Division. Beating the isolation blues. The Graduate, V(1), Spring 1989. [12] Roberta M. Hall and Bernice R. Sandler. Academic mentoring for women students and faculty: A new look at an old way to get ahead. [13] Roberta M. Hall and Bernice R. Sandler. The classroom climate: A chilly one for women? [14] Roberta M. Hall and Bernice R. Sandler. Out of the classroom: A chilly campus climate for women? [15] Robert Lefferts. Getting a Grant: How to Write Successful Grant Proposals. 1978. [16] Nellie Y. McKay. Minority faculty in [mainstream white] academia, 1988. Chapter 5. [17] NSF. An NSF study and report about women in computing research. Computing Research News, Summer 1989. [18] Bernice R. Sandler and Roberta M. Hall. The campus climate revisited: Chilly for women faculty, administrators, and graduate students, October 1986. [19] Bruce D. Shriver. The benefits of quality refereeing. COMPUTER, pages 10--16, April 1990. Also includes COMPUTER's guidelines for referees. [20] Alan Jay Smith. The task of the referee. COMPUTER, pages 65--71, April 1990. [22] Bill Somerville. Where proposals fail: A foundation executive's basic list of what to do and not do when requsting funding. The Grantsmanship Center News, Jan/Feb 1982. [23] Ellen Spertus. Why are there so few female computer scientists?, 1992. Expected to become an MIT AI Lab Technical Report. [24] Dale Strok. Women in AI. IEEE Expert, 7(4):7--21, August 1992. [25] Emily Toth. Women in academia. In The Academics' Handbook. Duke University Press, 1988. Chapter 4. [26] Virginia White. Grants: How to Find Out About Them and What to Do Next. Plenum Press, 1975. [27] Virginia White. Grant Proposals That Succeeded. Plenum Press, 1983. [28] Kantrowitz, M., and Digennaro, J. P. The Prentice Hall Guide to Scholarships and Fellowships for Math and Science Students. Simon &Schuster, 1994. [29] Parberry, I. A guide for new referees in theoretical computer science. SIGACT News 20, 4 (1989), 92-109. Available by anonymous ftp from ftp.unt.edu. [30] Sloman, A. Notes on presenting theses. Available by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.bham.ac.uk, in directory pub/dist/poplog/teach. [31] Nancy Leveson. Women in computer science: A report for the NSF CISE cross-disciplinary activities advisory committee, December 1989. [32] Feibelman, P. J. A Ph.D. Is Not Enough. Addison Wesley, 1993.
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