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The Whisper Collective Podcast

Author: Narelle Lemon, Inger Mewburn, Tseen Khoo and Jonathan O'Donnell

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The Whisper Collective is inspired by art collectives who, through the ages, have come together with shared purpose and vision. We value openness, generosity and kindness and search out others who share these values.We want to be the kind of academy we want to see: inclusive, empowered, engaged and kind. We have been holding small networking events in Australia since 2015 and COVID-19 has inspired us to open these to the world. Enjoy our conversations from #Whisperfest events and specially curated episodes about various topics of studying and working in higher education. The Whisper Collective is bought to you by the Whisper Collective: The Research Whisperer team, Tseen Khoo and Jonathan O’Donnell, Narelle Lemon from The Wellbeing Whisperer via Explore & Create Co, and The Thesis Whisperer, Inger Mewburn.
25 Episodes
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This pod explores the topic of writing and fear via an interview by Cristina Munoz with the legendary writing teacher Peter Elbow. Hear how Peter approaches the problems of the blank page and Cristina's reflection on her own developing practice as a writer.This pod is part of a series called 'Your Brain on Writing', facilitated by Prof Inger Mewburn and Prof Paul Magee as part of the Centre for Public Awareness of Science internship program at ANU.
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the eighth.Mindfulness is about being present in the moment with your writing, but there may be difficult feelings there. It can help to move from rehearsing how badly you feel, to articulating a beneficial wish for everything and everyone around you, including yourself. And apply it more specifically to your writing practice. This practice comes from Chapter 8, ‘Conclusion’  in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond.Maybe you could dial up the positive talk, to yourself and others. How does that feel? What grace could be experienced?  Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education  
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the seventh.You will need to write an Acknowledgements section in your thesis, and you can have fun working out who you will thank and how you’ll include acknowledgements in your thesis. But you might also want to make a less formal, less constrained, more honest version. Here, for example, is my gratitude list. This practice comes from Chapter 7, ‘Rewriting’  in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond.Come listen to a lot of lovely things that make me grateful, and think about what you are grateful for.  Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education  
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the sixth. Some days, what we need is moderation. Your breath can help you get into the right headspace for that too. Here is an equal breath practice for balanced thinking.This exercise is all about the counting. It’s just complicated enough that you can’t multitask. The equal breathing means your brain should settle into a state that’s not too sleepy and not too fired up but just-Goldilocks-right for the task. This practice comes from Chapter 5, ‘Editing’  in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond. Even everything out so you are balanced in this 2-minute breathing practice.  Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education  
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the fifth.Taking a deep breath often makes us think about calming down. But we can use our breathing to get fired up too. The other part of the ‘flight and freeze’ response is the ‘fight’ instinct. If you find feeling like fighting gets you excited about writing, then a calming breath isn’t going to help you, you’ll need something to fire you up instead. Here is an energizing breath for firing up your writing. This practice comes from Chapter 5, ‘Editing’  in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond. Wake up your breath and your brain and your writing in this 2-minute breathing practice.  Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education  
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the fourthBreathing is amazing. Your brain checks in on your breathing to find out how things are going in the body, including to work out if it should help out by pumping out stress or calm reactions. So choosing your breath can help you influence your emotions. If you sit down to write and feel your ‘flight’ or ‘freeze’ stress reaction activate because you want to run away from the scary writing, then that will get in the way of the thing you want to do, which is stick at the desk and write some words. Here is a calming breath practice for when writing stresses you out in a bad way.This practice comes from Chapter 5, ‘Editing’  in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond.Take a deep breath, find some calm before you start writing in this 2-minute breathing practice. Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education 
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the third.The English-language proverb ‘they can’t see the forest for the trees’ means that someone is so involved in the details (the trees) that they can’t see the big picture (the forest). As a PhD researcher, you need to spend a lot of time looking at tiny details. Microscopic particles, items of code, codicils, footnotes, referencing databases and commas. Sometimes you need to look at the bigger picture, like when you are editing the thesis as a whole. But the big picture is bigger than that. The big picture is your whole life, your whole community, all human knowledge and beyond, to the whole universe. This practice comes from Chapter 4, ‘Recharging’ in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond. Close your eyes, and put your work into context.  Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education  
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the second.As you sit down to work at your computer, check in with your task, time, energy, body and mind. What would make your writing five to ten percent more productive? What would make your writing five to ten percent more joyful, luxurious, or comfortable? This practice comes from Chapter 3, ‘Writing’ in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond. As I wrote the first draft of this section, I was in an online writing group. Someone was  in bed with their camera off. Someone was on the sofa. People were alone in a room, or sharing with others. People were drinking water, tea, coffee and chai. People are eating snacks. Come and join us to make your worn writing space perfect, for you, for now.  Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education 
Welcome to a series of eight episodes that focus on writing well and being well for writing. This is the first. Put your headphones on, lace up your shoes, and plan to get away from your desk with a walking practice to help stir up thoughts and get your writing going. This practice comes from Chapter 1, ‘Reading and Thinking’ in Writing Well and Being Well for your PhD and Beyond. In A Philosophy of Walking, Frédéric Gros explores ways that walking and thinking are intertwined. Rebecca Solnit in Wanderlust and Walter Benjamin in The Arcades Project are two of my favourite examples of people walking and thinking through urban spaces. In ‘Kinds of Water’, the poet Anne Carson walks the pilgrimage trail to Santiago di Compostela, accompanied by epigraphs of Japanese poets. Above Heidelberg University is a beautiful walk called the ‘Philosopher’s Way’, and behind some of the oldest colleges in Cambridge is a walk called ‘The Backs’—both places where scholars could jog their thinking by getting physically moving, either alone or in company.Come along on a thinking and planning walking practice. Read more of Katherine’s reflections and practices on her blog, Research Degree Insiders https://researchinsiders.blogRead Katherine’s other books https://researchinsiders.blog/books/ Connect with Katherine on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/katherine-firth-0786b026/ Wellbeing and Self-care in Higher Education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Book series that Katherine’s book is about) https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHE Find out more about the book series edited by Narelle Lemon http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education 
Do you struggle to find time to write? Do you get distracted by important or urgent tasks, feel blocked, or fail to make progress with writing projects? Does writing often feel like a grind? If so, this interview with Prolifiko's Bec Evans and Chris Smith are the experts you need to hear from! They're in conversation with the Research Whisperers, Tseen Khoo and Jonathan O’Donnell.Bec and Chris’ expert-led training and coaching programmes improve writing productivity and publishing performance – vital for impact. In this podcast, they discuss questions around:prioritising your writing and making time for it.setting motivating and achievable writing goals.beating distraction by understanding what stops you writing.improving your productivity and feel positive about your progress.shifting your mindset to keep you going long term.REFERENCES FROM THE INTERVIEW Prolifiko-related resources and links: There are 2 blogposts on Research Whisperer by Chris Smith - 1) Should we really write daily? and 2) Five benefits of a writing 'system'.Blogpost on Time confetti – snatching time to write when you have none (by Bec Evans). 'How to find time to write using the traffic light approach' (worksheet) The life of a productive scholarly author: 5 findings from research (Slideshare) What's your writing personality? (Prolifiko quiz)Ellen J. Langer – Mindfulness (Da Capo Lifelong Books). This Harvard Business Review piece with Langer might interest you. Kellogg, R. T. (1994). The psychology of writing. Oxford University Press. This article  about Kellogg's work appeared in The Marginalian: The Psychology of Writing and the Cognitive Science of the Perfect Daily RoutineJamie Burford’s Research Whisperer post about romancing your writing.  GUEST SPEAKER BIOSProlifiko delivers specialist coaching services for writers, researchers and academics. Founded by writing productivity coaches Bec Evans and Chris Smith who have over 20 years’ experience supporting writers to write. Bec and Chris are also the authors of Written: How to Keep Writing and Build a Habit that Lasts. Published in the UK by Icon, Written is available for pre-order now in Australia and New Zealand.You can - and should! - sign up for their great newsletter Breakthroughs & Blocks. 
This podcast episode is with the wonderful minds behind the Conference Inference blog, Jamie Burford and Emily Henderson, both based in the Department of Education Studies at the University of Warwick in the UK. They both research in the area of International Higher Education, with a shared focus on conferences, doctoral education, academic mobilities, gender, and queer theory. Together, they founded the academic blog Conference Inference, which is a hub for thinking about and researching conferences.Conference Inference blogJohn Adlam's article on the spiral configurationRead more about Jamie and Emily's research on conferences: Emily’s 2020 book with Routledge Gender, Definitional Politics and 'Live' Knowledge Production: Contesting Concepts at ConferencesSpecial issue that Jamie and Emily co-edited for the Gender and Education journal called “Thoughtful gatherings: gendering conferences as spaces of learning, knowledge production and community” (2020)Insider’s Guide to Success in Academia - Making sense of academic conferences (2023) 
Join: Narelle Lemon, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Malgorzata Powietrzynska, Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, USA Linda Noble, Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, USA Joanna Higgins, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Suskya Goodall, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Catherine Hoyser, University of Saint Joseph, USA Jane Dalton, University of North Carolina, USA This IN CONVERSATION event explores the myraid of contemplative practices that can be engaged with as scholars to support our individual and collective wellbeing including mindfulness, poetry, art making, and holistic education. Recorded on the 30 June 2022 as part of a collection of events to celebrate launching the book series: Wellbeing and self-care in higher education: Embracing Positive Solutions. You can find details here: https://www.routledge.com/Reflections-on-Valuing-Wellbeing-in-Higher-Education-Reforming-our-Acts/Lemon/p/book/9781032081496You can watch the event here: https://youtu.be/MxS0lEoz2QkDownloadables to support connection to the book series: http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/downloadables
Join: Narelle Lemon, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Bertha Chin, Swinburne University of Technology, Sarawak, Malaysia Borneo Bron Eager, The University of Tasmania, Australia Kay Hammond, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand Megan McPherson, The University of Melbourne This IN CONVERSATION event explores how our story telling widens the conversation about wellbeing and self-care in higher education, not just individually, but collectively. We provide hope. We share with compassion. Both of which we would argue we all require as we reframe our identity in higher education where wellbeing and self-care are a part of what we do, not ignored, an add-on, or something we do when we have reached exhaustion, burnout or even worse. Recorded 29 June 2022 for a collection of events to celebrate launching the book series: Wellbeing and self-care in higher education: Embracing Positive Solutions. Find out more at: https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHEYou can watch a video of this event here: https://youtu.be/U1sY6D_0Cv0 Free downloadables available here: http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/downloadables
Join Narelle Lemon, Wellbeing Whisperer/Swinburne University of Technology, Australia and Katherine Firth, The University of Melbourne, Australia for this recording of the IN CONVERSATION event as part of the book launch tour to celebrate the launching of the series Wellbeing and self-care in higher education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Routledge).  This conversation was designed for writers, researchers and PhD students from any discipline in higher education with a focus on the how, what and why of writing well and being well. Recorded on 21 June 2022 as part of the Book Launch for the series Wellbeing and self-care in higher education: Embracing Positive Solutions (Routledge) found at https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHEFree downloadables can be accessed here http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/downloadablesA video of this event can also be accessed here https://youtu.be/_0016VO--W4Follow the series progress here: http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education
Welcome to this episode where we are joined by:Narelle Lemon, Swinburne University of Technology, AustraliaAminda O’Hare, Weber University, USA Pattie Pryma, Mount Royal University, Canada Michelle Tichy, Rollins College, USA Emma MacGregor, Toronto Metropolitan University, Canada Kristina Turner, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Siobhan O’Brien, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia In this IN CONVERSATION event we engage deeply and explore relationships in higher education from varying perspectives, disciplines and career stages. Drawing on notions of care, belonging, rejuvenation and ripple effects, we share insights into how enacting self-care is not selfish but relational. This event was recorded 23 June 2022 as a part of a collection of events to celebrate launching the book series: Wellbeing and self-care in higher education: Embracing Positive Solutions. You can find the book series at: https://www.routledge.com/Wellbeing-and-Self-care-in-Higher-Education/book-series/WSCHEFree downloadables can be access here: http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/downloadablesAnd you can watch the video of this event here: https://youtu.be/VDJFF7sdf_EFollow the series progress here: http://www.exploreandcreateco.com/book-series-wellbeing-selfcare-in-higher-education
Podcasting, eh? Everyone and their pandemic puppy seems to be making podcasts these days. To crowd the bandwagon even more, Research Whisperer Tseen Khoo (La Trobe University) invited some fab poddy colleagues to  help her create this meta-resource: a podcast about podcasting, through a researcher lens. In this episode, there's talk of the pros and cons of podcasting for a researcher, and it includes tales of  joyous, productive connections as well as professional vulnerability (and even terror). Tseen's savvy and uber-nerdy (in the best possible way) guests are Lauren Gawne, Ryan Gustafsson, and Inger Mewburn. This podcast was created as a resource for La Trobe University's RED team as part of their 'Communicating your research' program. Editing and production support was provided by Inger Mewburn and Matt Smith (@nightlightguy). Links: Lauren Gawne (@superlinguo)Lingthusiasm (podcast with Gretchen McCulloch)LingComm conference (Linguistics Communication conference)Superlinguo (Lauren's blog) Communicating Research: An online self-guided slide set Ryan GustafssonCall Me By My Name Project (podcast with Lee)Adopted Feels (podcast with Hana)  |  Website |  Instagram |  Facebook Inger Mewburn (@thesiswhisperer)Software and platforms mentioned by Inger in this episode: Riverside (recording software). For recording, alternatives are Zencastr or  Squadcast. For editing audio: Descript On the Reg (podcast with Jason Downs) Academics Talk about The Chair (podcast with Narelle Lemon, Megan McPherson, and Anitra Nottingham)
Welcome to this episode with Narelle Lemon and Desiree Dickerson. This episode was recorded on Monday 23rd Nov 2020, it was the third session on day one of WhisperFest 2020, and our first fireside chat.The focus of this discussion was on perfectionism, burnout and imposter syndrome in higher education.  Some things we talked about were the discussion on perfectionism and how we respond to what we notice in ourselves, recognising the cost, and being gentle on oneself with a curiosity
This fireside chat with Dr Tseen Khoo  and Dr Kylie Ball about why academia shouldn’t be a competition was recorded on Thursday 26 November 2020 as part of Whisper Fest 2020. Tseen and Kylie talk about the hyper-competitiveness of academia and how we can resist being held hostage by it. They’ll discuss the creation of their blogs and their philosophy (Kylie’s Happy Academic and Tseen’s Research Whisperer), Kylie’s research on highly productive and happy research teams, and why sharing is better for everyone in academia.Like you may wish to investigate further are: Kylie Ball (Founder, Indago Academy, Melbourne)www.indagoacademy.com | @kylieball3 | LinkedIn Tseen Khoo (Academic and co-lead for Research Whisperer)https://tseenster.com/ https://researchwhisperer.org/author/tseen/ @tseenster  
One way to take back control is to set up a consultancy or other business that builds on your skills and background. This session gives you the low-down on how you can do this, and what it’s like to shift into this space. This podcast episode is a discussion between Inger Mewburn and Tim Cahill a successful consultant and the Managing Director, Research Strategies AustraliaIt was recorded on Thursday the 26th of November, 2020, the last day of Whisperfest. Whisperfest was a four day, online event featuring lots of people we knew, sharing what they were passionate about with our audience.'Rich academic, poor academic' was a three hour Q&A session - there were two more hours where Inger and Narelle talk about side hustles and we interviewed Craig Davis about his insights into being a start up mentor. This is the third part of a series of three podcasts which captures this relevant and interesting conversation.Services and products mentioned:Research Strategies AustraliaTim Cahill - Managing Director - Research Strategies AustraliaPart one to this series - side hustles Part two to this series - start up mentor 
What can a side hustle look like? How might you leave academia? What’s possible when starting your own business? This podcast episode is a discussion between Inger Mewburn and Craig Davis about their successful side hustles, being an entrepreneur, and how to bust a move out of academia. Craig shares his insights into being a start up mentor.It was recorded on Thursday the 26th of November, 2020, the last day of Whisperfest. Whisperfest was a four day, online event featuring lots of people we knew, sharing what they were passionate about with our audience.'Rich academic, poor academic' was a three hour Q&A session - there were two more hours where Inger and Narelle talk about side hustles and an interview with a successful consultant. This is the second part of a series of three podcasts which captures this relevant and interesting conversation.Services and products mentioned:Craig Davis Canberra Innovation Network - Empowering EntrepreneursPart one to this series - side hustles 
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