Lynn P. Nygaard

Special Advisor

Lynn P. Nygaard
Email: lynn@prio.org
Mobile phone: 93 25 34 81
CV: Download CV

Research Interests

​I focus on various aspects of academic writing in research-producing settings. I adopt an academic literacies perspective, which sees academic writing as a situated social practice. This critical perspective draws attention to how writing practices differ between various groups of academics – based on their discipline, methodological orientation, institutional setting, staff category, and so on. Specific topics include 
  • Research productivity
  • Bibliometrics
  • Gender gaps in productivity
I also conduct research on doctoral education, focusing on identity development of doctoral students, and the PhD by publication as a new and unsettled genre. 

Background

As a special advisor on professional development, gender and diversity, I focus on both developing the professional skills of the researchers at PRIO, and developing PRIO as an institution with a diverse staff. 

My main area of expertise is academic writing and publishing. Since the 1990s, I have provided writing support and coaching for researchers in a wide variety of disciplines. As a native English speaker with an interest in writing, I began as a freelance copyeditor and translator for Norwegian academics looking to publish their work in international journals. Working more closely with researchers, however, shifted my focus away from language and more towards developing awareness of audience, honing the core argument, and structuring the story. I currently provide writing support through workshops, seminars, retreats, and one-on-one coaching, both at PRIO and other institutes and universities. I began at PRIO in 2008, focusing mainly on academic publications and project development, and later joined the Leader Team in 2016 to focus on professional development more broadly.

In 2013, I received funding from the RCN for a BALANSE project to increase the number of female professors at PRIO. This project subsequently developed into a doctoral project entitled "Ready or Not: Negotiating gender and institutional environment on the path to professorship". I received two more BALANSE projects: one that focused on developing the Leader Team, and one entitled "Saying Yes and No: The gender dimension of everyday decisions in academia." In 2022, my full title was changed to reflect my growing responsibility for addressing gender and diverstiy issues at PRIO. 

In addition to the writing workshops that I offer both at PRIO and to other institutions, I also provide training and support in project development, supervision, mentoring, and other aspects of professional development. 

Writing workshops

  • Academic writing: I provide workshops and seminars in academic writing at both the Master and PhD level, as well as for faculty. I offer short lectures, half-day or full-day seminars, two-day workshops, and three-day workshops. I also offer more specialized workshops (e.g., "Writing the introduction to your article-based thesis") on request.

Educational background

  • Doctor in Education (EdD) (2019): University College London, Institute of Education
  • Cand. Polit. (2000): Graduate degree in political science, University of Oslo
  • Bachelor's degree (1987): Women's studies, Highest Honors, University of California at Berkeley           

Work experience

  • (2022-present) Special Advisor on Professional Development, Gender, and Diversity, PRIO.
  • (2008-2022) Special Advisor on Project Development and Publications, PRIO
  • (2000-2009) Editorial Advisor, Center for International Climate and Environmental Research – Oslo (CICERO)
  • Freelance copyeditor and translator specializing in academic articles since about 1990

Other

  • Reference group, Akademisk skrivesenter [Academic Writing Center], University of Oslo (2016-) http://www.ub.uio.no/skrive-referere/skrivesenter/
  • Editorial board, Educate Journal, based at the Institute of Education, UCL, (2015-)
  • National Committee for Research Ethics in the Social Sciences (NESH) 2009-2013.
  • Diploma in Translation (Norwegian to English) from the Institute of Linguists (1993).

 

Events

PRIO started tracking events online in 2007. This listing is not complete. Past events may be mentioned in our news archive.

Recent Publications

Aksnes, Dag; Fredrik Piro & Lynn P. Nygaard (2022) Kjønn og vitenskapelig publisering - betydningen av kontekst [Gender and academic publishing: the importance of context], in Owesen, Ingeborg W.; & Helene Aarseth, eds, Kjønn og akademia - På vei mot BALANSE?. Bergen: Fagbokforlaget (93–104).

All Publications

Peer-reviewed Journal Article

Solli, Kristin & Lynn P. Nygaard (2022) The doctorate in pieces: a scoping review of research on the PhD thesis by publication, Higher Education Research & Development. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2022.2110575.
Nygaard, Lynn P.; Dag Aksnes & Fredrik Piro (2022) Identifying gender disparities in research performance: the importance of comparing apples with apples, Higher Education. DOI: 10.1007/s10734-022-00820-0.
Nygaard, Lynn P.; Fredrik Piro & Dag Aksnes (2022) Gendering excellence through research productivity indicators, Gender and Education 34(6): 690–704.
Nygaard, Lynn P. & Karim Bahgat (2018) What's in a number? How (and why) measuring research productivity in different ways changes the gender gap, Journal of English for Academic Purposes. DOI: 10.1016/ j.jeap.2018.03.009.
Nygaard, Lynn P. (2017) Publishing and perishing: an academic literacies framework for investigating research productivity, Studies in Higher Education 42(3): 519–532.

PhD Thesis

Nygaard, Lynn P. (2019) Ready or Not: Negotiating Gender and Institutional Environment on the Path to Professorship. PhD thesis, Institute of Education, University College London, London, UK.

Monograph

Nygaard, Lynn P. & Kristin Solli (2020) Strategies for Writing a Thesis by Publication in the Social Sciences and Humanities. London: Routledge. Insider Guides to Success in Academia.
Nygaard, Lynn P. (2017) Writing Your Master's Thesis - From A to Zen. London: SAGE.

Book Chapter

Aksnes, Dag; Fredrik Piro & Lynn P. Nygaard (2022) Kjønn og vitenskapelig publisering - betydningen av kontekst [Gender and academic publishing: the importance of context], in Owesen, Ingeborg W.; & Helene Aarseth, eds, Kjønn og akademia - På vei mot BALANSE?. Bergen: Fagbokforlaget (93–104).
Solli, Kristin & Lynn P. Nygaard (2022) Same But Different? Identifying Writing Challenges Specific to the PhD by Publication, in Wang Chong, Sin; & Neil Johnson, eds, Landscapes and Narratives of PhD by Publication. Cham: Springer (13–30).
Nygaard, Lynn P. (2021) Into the fray: becoming an academic in my own right, in Savva, Maria; & Lynn P. Nygaard, eds, Becoming a Scholar: Cross-cultural reflections on identity and agency in an education doctorate. London: UCL Press (121–135).
Nygaard, Lynn P. & Maria Savva (2021) Belonging and becoming in academia: a conceptual framework, in Savva, Maria; & Lynn P. Nygaard, eds, Becoming a Scholar: Cross-cultural reflections on identity and agency in an education doctorate. London: UCL Press (10–26).
Savva, Maria & Lynn P. Nygaard (2021) The 'peripheral' student in academia: an analysis, in Savva, Maria; & Lynn P. Nygaard, eds, Becoming a Scholar: Cross-cultural reflections on identity and agency in an education doctorate. London: UCL Press (154–172).
Nygaard, Lynn P. & Rocco Bellanova (2018) Lost in Quantification: Scholars and the Politics of Bibliometrics, in Curry, Mary Jane; & Theresa Lillis, eds, Global Academic Publishing: Policies, Perspectives and Pedagogies. Bristol: Multilingual Matters (23–36).

Edited Volume

Savva, Maria; & Lynn P. Nygaard, eds, (2021) Becoming a Scholar: Cross-cultural reflections on identity and agency in an education doctorate. London: UCL Press.

Blog Posts

Do Men Really Publish More than Women?

Posted by Lynn P. Nygaard, Dag W. Aksnes & Fredrik Piro on Sunday, 3 April 2022

Academic publishing, which has long been the stick by which academics measure their prowess, has been repeatedly shown to be yet another arena in which men consistently outperform women. Women produce fewer articles, collaborate less, and are cited less than their male colleagues. This is an established truth. Or is ... Read more »

Turned Away at the Gate: How Peer Review Can Reinforce Social Inequalities

Posted by Lynn P. Nygaard on Thursday, 24 September 2020

In today’s instalment of PRIO’s blog series marking Peer Review Week 2020, Lynn P. Nygaard discusses ways in which peer review in its current form can reinforce existing inequities in the research system, and points to a need for more training in and reflection on the role of the reviewer ... Read more »

Black Scholars Matter: Power and Prejudice in Academia

Posted by Lynn P. Nygaard on Friday, 3 July 2020

With summer holidays around the corner, I don’t think I’ve ever looked forward to a vacation so much. I’m exhausted after months of alternating between being terrified I would die from a mysterious bat virus, frustrated with having to learn how to suddenly adapt to a virtual work life, and ... Read more »

Open for Whom?

Posted by Lynn P. Nygaard on Thursday, 24 October 2019

The theme of this year’s International Open Access Week is equity in open knowledge. This is an issue that’s of particularly importance for PRIO as a peace research institute. Today, we continue our blog series on open access and open science at PRIO with a blog by Lynn P. Nygaard, ... Read more »

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