1, 2 & 6 - congress etc., proceeding & portfolio

Cards (30)

  • Conference is a formal meeting of people having a shared, common interest, where exchange of informations, views etc take place.
  • A conference can be one day conference or more than that.
  • The term 'conference' is quite common in the business and scientific segments.
  • Congress is a formal meeting of people with political, trade affiliations to discuss, exchange views within a specific sphere of activity.
  • The key difference between portfolio and resume is that portfolio is more detailed and has multiple pages, whereas a resume is only one or two pages long.
  • A portfolio contains relevant videos, web pages, photographs and graphs to show a person's skills and abilities.
  • A personal portfolio is a compilation of relevant work samples and documents gathered during university years and presented in a structured manner.
  • Portfolios are only used for certain jobs.
  • Seminar is more about a meeting relating to education background including training, where matters of technical knowledge are discussed and exchanged.
  • Symposium is a sort of meeting in which experts on a particular subject are called to speak upon it.
  • Workshop is like a class in which a group of interested people are trained, helped to learn some methods, develop skills to do something specific.
  • In Academia, PROCEEDINGS OR CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS are collection of academic papers published in the context of an academic conference/workshop.
  • Proceedings are usually distributed in printed or electronic volumes, either before the conference opens or after it has closed.
  • The proceedings typically contain the contributions made by researchers at the conference.
  • Proceedings are the written record of the work that is presented to fellow researchers.
  • A Journal paper is a regular periodical publication, printed monthly or bi-monthly, containing a collection of peer reviewed papers.
  • To be included in a student portfolio, students can write journal entries, fill out self-assessment, or fill in learning logs.
  • Conference papers are typically published in a collection called “proceedings”, which can be printed by university presses, professional organizations, big-name publishers, or simply online.
  • Conference Papers are articles written with the goal of being accepted to a conference, typically an annual or biannual venue with a specific scope where results can be presented as an oral presentation, a poster presentation, or a tabled discussion.
  • The purpose of a Portfolio is to showcase your best work, along with life experiences, values, and achievements.
  • A Personal Portfolio provides a personal record of a student's success or improvement in a range of areas and is essential and relevant to their own career development.
  • A Portfolio is a systematic collection of student work that represents student activities, accomplishments, and achievements over a specified period of time in one or more areas of studies.
  • A high 'impact rating' helps, this being a measure of citations to articles in the journal.
  • To create a Portfolio, first identify your best work samples, create a contents section, include your resume/biodata/CV, add a personal statement outlining your professional goals, list out your hard and soft skills, attach samples of your best work, include recommendations and testimonials from credible sources, mention any awards or recognitions that you have received for your work, and provide references.
  • A Portfolio should include a statement of originality, a work philosophy, your career goals, and your resume/biodata/CV.
  • Peer reviewing/refereeing is the process where experts in a field review the work of their peers.
  • The frequency of issues for different journals varies from once-a-month to once-a-year, or anything in between; it may not even be regular.
  • The review process for journals does not have fixed deadline/schedule; though journals may promise "reviews in six weeks", in my experience.
  • Journal papers tend to have generous page-limits (or none at all), but typically require the work to be more comprehensive and self-contained in return.
  • In general, in most fields, papers in well-recognized journals tend to have more prestige than papers in well-recognized conferences.