
4 episodes

What next after your PhD? Getting published in journals and getting your first academic job Oxford University
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- Education
Half Day Workshop for Post-Graduate and Early Career Historians of Medicine held on Wednesday 9th July 2014. A half-day symposium of talks on how graduate students advance thier academic career, from getting published in journals to landing that first post in a university. From experts in the publishing industry to university professors and leading academics, this series will let you know some of the tricks and tips for furthering your academic career after your graduate studies have ended.
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Beyond the Academy: Applying Medical History to Health Policy
Fifth and final talk given at the Half Day Workshop for Post-Graduate and Early Career Historians of Medicine Given by Professor Virginia Berridge, Director of the Centre for History in Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University of London
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Getting Published
Fourth talk given at the Half Day Workshop for Post-Graduate and Early Career Historians of Medicine Talks include; Getting your article published in top academic journals Professor Bill Luckin, University of Bolton. And First monograph: from thesis to book. Professor Keir Waddington, Director of Research Cardiff University, Editor: Studies for the Social History of Medicine, Pickering and Chatto
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Getting your Research Noticed: Public Engagement and History of Medicine
Third talk given at the Half Day Workshop for Post-Graduate and Early Career Historians of Medicine. Given by Dr Lindsey Fitzharris, Wellcome Trust Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Queen Mary, University of London.
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Early Career Experiences in History of Medicine
First talk given at the Half Day Workshop for Post-Graduate and Early Career Historians of Medicine Coming up with a master plan for your academic career - and knowing when to abandon it with Dr Matt Smith, Senior Lecturer, University of Strathclyde and Options and opportunities after the PhD with Dr Erica Charters, Lecturer in the History of Medicine, University of Oxford