How to ask me to do stuff
If you are asking me to do anything (answer a question, sign off on course units, review a manuscript, etc.), this is a task and should therefore be handled within Teams Planner.
Generally, avoid sending me emails, unless I’m being cc:ed on an email to someone else (which I usually should be if it's lab-related).
Whenever you assign a task to me in Planner, make sure to include a due date before sending it. I may ultimately need to adjust that date, but if you assign no date, it will automatically go to the bottom of my task list and probably won't get seen for a while.
Fall and Winter (September through March) are my “busy” quarter with regard to teaching, so please keep that in mind when asking me to review manuscripts, experimental designs, etc. Finally, please remember thatand I am officially (though not necessarily un-officially) “off the clock” in July and August (literally - my pay period is from Sep-June). I will usually need ~2 weeks to review a large manuscript (this is standard department policy for all professors).
When sending me things to review, edit, etc., please adhere to the following standards:standards:
- Attached file names should be composed of your last name followed by an underscore or space, then the product. You can also include a date/version at the end if you’d like (e.g., Kamper thesis 013118.doc). This makes it easy for me to identify it quickly among a large number of similar
files.files (I deal with a lot of files from a lot of students). Subsequent revisions should be noted as such in some way (e.g., Kamper thesis 013118b.doc). Include any referenced papers as .pdf files (zipped up if there are a lot). - Apply the principles of writing brevity as laid out in the Elements of Style:
- Re-read every sentence - if a word is not needed, eliminate it. For example, I see a lot of "in order to....", when the same sentence will always read better by simply removing the "in order"
- Another common example is using "if" versus "whether" - you are going to "determine whether x affects y", not "determine if x affects y.”
- I also commonly see the word “while” when you should be saying something like “although” (“while” should refer specifically to time).