
6: The PGR (Digital) Toolkit
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このコンテンツについて
Outline
1. Introduction to Digital Tools for Postgraduate Researchers
- Abundance of productivity apps and the challenge of choosing the right tools
- Referencing Cal Newport's "Digital Minimalism" and its relevance in hybrid work
2. Why Should PGRs Have a Digital Toolkit?
- Most research work is conducted digitally
- Benefits of having choice in digital tools beyond institutional offerings
- Minimizing distractions from integrated networking features
3. Deciding What Goes in the Digital Toolkit
- Focusing on open-source, community-supported software
- Importance of interoperability and compatibility
- Prioritizing lightweight computing to avoid overburdening devices
4. Understanding Digital Minimalism
- Selective and intentional use of digital tools
- Reducing time spent in shared workspaces
- Staying offline when possible to focus on tasks
5. Suggested Digital Tools for PGRs
- Obsidian: Markdown-based note-taking with visualization
- Zotero: Bibliographic management and citation tool
- Tropy: Organizing and managing research photos
- OpenRefine: Cleaning and transforming messy datasets
- WeekToDo: Minimal weekly planner for task management
6. Conclusion and Call for Listener Suggestions
- Invitation to share personal digital tool recommendations
- Instructions for submitting voice recordings
- Promise of future episodes on research projects and doctoral supervision
Call to Action
Send a voice recording of a digital tool suggestion to the email address pgrmatters@pm.me with the subject line "digital toolkit".
Links
- Zotero
- Tropy
- Obsidian
- OpenRefine
- WeekToDo
- Carroll, R. (2021) The Bullet Journal Method: Track Your Past, Order Your Present, Plan Your Future. The 4th Estate.
- Newport, C. (2020) Digital Minimalism: Choosing a Focused Life in a Noisy World. Penguin Books.
Music by Matthew Sillence