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One of the primary reasons for the rising pressure on academics is “publish or perish” culture, where academic promotions and funding are heavily tied to publication volume rather than ...
In graduate school, when I first heard the saying “publish or perish,” I remember it uttered as a dire warning: If you want to make it as a professor, you have to publish, publish, publish ...
More than 62% of participants attributed irreproducibility in science to the “publish or perish” culture. “Publish or perish” reflects the unfortunate reality that, oftentimes, researchers must ...
Created by social psychologist Max Hui Bai, Publish or Perish simulates the experience of building a career in scientific research. The game is to publish as many papers as possible and rack up ...
Here he explains the many benefits to publishing for established scholars and students alike Many in higher education still play the “publish or perish” game, while others say too many publications ...
I’m no fan of the “publish or perish” idiom because publishing research should not be a quantitative game. My advice for faculty – and for students, for that matter – is to make sure the research ...
These global happenings should serve as warnings. The message is clear: Deliver or perish! RESULTS, LESS RHETORIC Lyndon Baines Johnson, as I see it, is one of the most consequential presidents of ...
Sometime back while doing my post-graduate courses at the University of Hawaii, I often heard from my professors this phrase “publish or perish.” Translating it to millennial lingo, this is the ...
Fuelling this troubling trend is a mentality known in academia as “publish or perish” which has existed for decades. The publication of research papers drives university rankings and career ...