Lab Spaces has some great topic ideas sometimes. This week’s (month’s?) is “Things I wish I knew when...”. And I would like to tell you about the thing I did end up knowing. I have passed it on to successive generations, and they tell me that verily, it is the word of truth, righteousness, and good preparation.
Not the Bible like you think.
You see, Sci is a really really really really obsessively organized person. I am not kidding. Lately I’ve reached the point where I actually have too many things to be organized about and am slipping. This annoys me more than I can say.
But anyway. At the start of my second year, when I had to start preparing to write an NRSA, I knew I was going to do a lot of reading. I knew I needed somewhere to keep my notes. I bought a BIG honkin’ notebook. And I called it the Bible. Each section was divided into topics, and those into sub-topics. The whole thing was kept organized with tabs.
This book SAVED MY BUTT during my dissertation writing. Thanks to it, and to the preparation that went in to it, I wrote my thesis (it was mostly papers that had already been written but there were a bunch of things that had not) in THREE WEEKS. For a total of 410 pages. I was even able to sleep (most nights).
Because it’s what I put in this book that was amazing. For every paper I read, I put chapter (such as Jones, Smith, et al., 2010) in the margin, and verse (“The blah de blah of the brain mediates long term memory when stimulates in such and such a way”) into that notebook, under the right subject heading (In this case, say, Long Term Memory). Sometimes it went in under several headings. I tried to keep them succinct, about one line if I could.
And then, when I was writing and ended up saying “CRAP! What the heck do I know about Long Term Memory and the blah de blah?” I grabbed my Bible, flipped to the right section, and there it was. This was especially effective when combined with an EndNote library that contained literally every paper I ever read.
This Bible is not just good for dissertation writing, remember. I used it for my NRSA. I used it for every paper I have ever written (or am writing). I used it for my comps. It’s basically a written, detailed account of all the stuff I have ever read, but which my poor, overtaxed brain cannot remember.
I have since recommended this to many other grad students, and all those who implement it say it’s awesome. Many people who don’t implement it wish they did.
And I haven’t given up on my Bible. When I started a post-doc (and switched fields, incidentally), I started ANOTHER Bible. This one is electronic in nature (finally), and that works too.
So give it a try. It takes some time, and it takes some upkeep, but if you keep it with you and keep it updated, you will not be sorry come writing time. Sci promises.





Awesome! I wish I could be so organized (and disciplined to keep a BIBLE like this running without having gaps, and giving up in the end)!
What are you using (platform, software) for your digital BIBLE now? How do you like it?
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Bora Zivkovic, ScientopiaBlogs. ScientopiaBlogs said: Things you wish you knew when you started…THE BIBLE. http://dlvr.it/4x3Gq [...]
Oooh. I like it. I had a notepad filled with blurbs about original papers in my graduate field but nothing quite so sleek and organized. I'm just gearing up for reading for my new position, and I think I'm going to start a bible of my own
Like Coturnix I'm also curious, what platform do you use for your digital bible? I'm using Evernote for something similar (but far less disciplined, and thus far less useful. For example, I have one note for definitions - it really needs its own notebook since it's growing out of control. Getting there, slowly...)
Heh, honestly guys the electronic version is an Excel doc with LOADS of sheets in it. I'm not more sophisticated than that.
[...] Things you wish you knew when you started…THE BIBLE. [...]
I feel inadequate now.
I am so using this when I start my postdoc. I've been doing something like this with Papers for grad school, but I think a hard copy would be more effective.
I'm not worthy of the awesomeness of this. I too like Amanda use Papers in a similar way.
Ooooh, Excel version of The Bible sounds so useful. Right now, my "References" folder (with papers saved with condensed contents and relevance as filenames) plus my massive, major Endnote library do this for me.
Endnote could be this on its own, if there was a good way to add a field to enter the little succinct notes. There probably is.
Endnote could do it, but can it organize by Subject? Because it's the subject that I'm concerned about, not the alphabetical author list, I tend not to remember authors very well, but I always know what subject I need to look under...
You could go with different libraries, but the newer EndNote versions come with "Groups" which will allow you to sort your publication lists.
Try Mendeley or CiteULike for a personal paper organizer with your own notes?
[...] to current or future work, solely because they interest me. I’ve even started working on my research bible for my next project. I’m running consistently now. I went out for nearly an hour [...]
I usually enter in my own keywords for each of my Endnote refs...then I can search by them as I write. Not sure if you can sort by the keywords, but maybe.
[...] Things you wish you knew when you started…THE BIBLE. | Neurotic Physiology [...]
I've tried using mendeley which is awesome for quickly indexing things BUT the word plugin doesn't work...
Considering the lack of extra function in the electronic version, a paper version sounds quite useful...
[...] has spent several months hanging out in a lab book and desk. I think now it will hang out in my Scicurious-inspired research ‘bible’ for my next [...]
Thanks for the inspriation! This will come in handy with my three fellowship research proposals due in the coming months.... (gaaah)... keep feeding us grad school n00bs with good tips!!
Wow I'm super impressed. I guess I'm just not organized enough for this... I come up with a new way of organizing almost every week, meaning that I still haven't found a good way, and am relying on my own failing memory and the pile of papers on my desk... This works well most of the time though
This is brilliant! I keep a notebook like this for thoughts, notes at conferences, meeting notes, ideas, etc., but I think a separate notebook like this would be so useful. I recently downloaded Evernote and may try that as my organizing tool.
[...] lays out the experiments you will do, and gives you a guideline and a map for where you need to be. Keep a bible (not that kind). Practice efficiency. Make lists, see what you can get done in a day. Learn how to [...]