D. P. Dash
गहना कर्मणो गतिः (gahanā karmaṇo gatiḥ) | କର୍ମର ଗତି ବଡ଼ ଗହନ ଅଟେ | complex are the ways of action (Gītā, chap. 4, ver. 17)
Professor D. P. Dash
research educator, academic editor, slow professor ...
professor.dpdash[at]gmail.com | WhatsApp +91 99378 28816
ORCID | ResearchGate | Journal of Research Practice | Research World
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Abide With Me (Henry Francis Lyte, 1847)
Rev. Henry Francis Lyte wrote this hymn in 1847, during his last days, as he was dying from tuberculosis. The hymn touched me so much that I decided to transcreate it in Odia, my mother tongue (based on verses 1, 2, 6, 7, and 8). The full English original can be found in the Web: Abide With Me.
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
BREC 2014 Conference
2nd Borneo Research Education Conference (BREC 2014)
Developing as a researcher by doing meaningful research
Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia (26-27 Aug 2014)
http://www.swinburne.edu.my/brec/index.html
Developing as a researcher by doing meaningful research
Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia (26-27 Aug 2014)
http://www.swinburne.edu.my/brec/index.html
Borneo Post Online | 27 Aug 2014
The Star Online | 27 Aug 2014
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Ten Years of Connecting Researchers
Tenth-Year Editorial
Journal of Research Practice
Volume 10, Issue 1, 2014
In this editorial, we build on the current discussion around the nature, relevance, and future potential of the Journal of Research Practice (JRP). In the 10 years of its existence, JRP has managed to offer a platform to researchers who are prepared to acknowledge the challenges and raise fundamental questions about research practice. It has helped readers in reassessing the formulaic prescriptions of research and in imagining creative extensions to research practice. The discussion has also offered a number of ideas to strengthen the publication further. Some of these ideas have been explored, especially the place of research practice in building the civic and professional competencies needed in the twentyfirst century, examining the state of research practice in the troubled grounds of universities, engaging with research spaces outside the university system, and pursuing the quest for competence or good professional practice in applied disciplines. JRP should continue to be a venue for future conversations on what we mean by research and how it is to be carried out and evaluated.
The editorial covers:
1. Comments From the JRP Forum
2. Undergraduate Research
3. University Illusion
4. The Hard Nature of Soft Problems
5. Back to the Vision
Full text | HTML
Journal of Research Practice
Volume 10, Issue 1, 2014
In this editorial, we build on the current discussion around the nature, relevance, and future potential of the Journal of Research Practice (JRP). In the 10 years of its existence, JRP has managed to offer a platform to researchers who are prepared to acknowledge the challenges and raise fundamental questions about research practice. It has helped readers in reassessing the formulaic prescriptions of research and in imagining creative extensions to research practice. The discussion has also offered a number of ideas to strengthen the publication further. Some of these ideas have been explored, especially the place of research practice in building the civic and professional competencies needed in the twentyfirst century, examining the state of research practice in the troubled grounds of universities, engaging with research spaces outside the university system, and pursuing the quest for competence or good professional practice in applied disciplines. JRP should continue to be a venue for future conversations on what we mean by research and how it is to be carried out and evaluated.
The editorial covers:
1. Comments From the JRP Forum
2. Undergraduate Research
3. University Illusion
4. The Hard Nature of Soft Problems
5. Back to the Vision
Full text | HTML
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