Signup date: 28 Feb 2020 at 11:11pm
Last login: 21 Apr 2021 at 7:08pm
Post count: 4
I would appreciate some advice over my reluctance to fall in with my University's constant urging to be "collegiate", and share lots of information about my thesis.
I study part-time, and work to pay for my study. The work is in my field of study - but that is the problem! I am a good researcher, and have done numerous short pieces of original research already. However, the sector in which I work (heritage) is competitive, and I have found that, as soon as I share my discoveries with colleagues, they quickly absorb my findings into their own work streams, and, before I know it, are doing talks, preparing exhibitions, and generally acting and speaking as if the work I laboured so hard to do, was their own idea.It is immensely frustrating! - and makes me feel that I really don't want to run that risk with my thesis research.
I am trying to keep this all in perspective: of course, I want to share discoveries in order to improve academic knowledge. I do know that it is usually people's enthusiasm for the topic that makes them speak as if "they" know, what I have discovered. I also know that I can be too sensitive and defensive!
But at the same time, I can feel exploited and taken advantage of. An example: I wrote a short paper last autumn - which I did not present to my direct supervisors, but to another team at work, whose area it fell more naturally into. I was not prepared for the enthusiasm with which it was received - nor for the fact that one of this team then went and discovered one of the items I had argued in my paper belonged to our collection, and started negotiating with the owner to buy it back!
I then reluctantly sent my paper to my own supervisors, knowing that they would get to hear of it. I have now discovered that they have "added" a second exhibition this season, to the one already planned. Guess what, the added exhibition is about the part of our collection that I wrote about - and, going on past performances from them, I expect that they will be using some of my work in the exhibition, without one word of credit or mention of what I did.
With this sort of behaviour as my working background, perhaps you can understand my concern about sharing my work? How do I get over this? And how do I protect my work? I would really like to submit a conference abstract - but I worry about having my work stolen.
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