This paper on Thucydides isn't going to write itself. Which is fine! I have an outline and an opening paragraph and an opening quotation and a stack of relevant books and some nice quotes from a relevant article, and it's not actually due until Monday, because all I need to do tomorrow is give a presentation to the class on it.

On a totally unrelated note, someone give me a good estimate for how many words take about 15 minutes to read at a slow, thoughtful pace.
dorothean: detail of painting of Gandalf, Frodo, and Gimli at the Gates of Moria, trying to figure out how to open them (Default)

From: [personal profile] dorothean


One of my professors said that for presentations, one (double-spaced) page = two minutes.

From very recent experience I have found that this means a page that is shorter than what one produces in MS Word with the default font settings (Calibri size 11). I can and did read a five-page, double-spaced report in that font in exactly ten minutes, but it was by no means slow or thoughtful.

Elsewhere I have seen that one page = 250 words. This is much shorter than my usual page, so perhaps that's the kind of page that can be read thoughtfully in two minutes. In this case 15 minutes = 3750 words.
dorothean: detail of painting of Gandalf, Frodo, and Gimli at the Gates of Moria, trying to figure out how to open them (Default)

From: [personal profile] dorothean


.... I came back to inquire how it went, and then I realized that 3750 words is 15 pages of 250 words each. Gah! I meant to say that if 2 minutes = one page = 250 words, then 15 minutes = 7.5 pages = 1875 words. That sounds better!

I hope that didn't lead you astray! I shouldn't try to be helpful with arithmetic in the middle of writing my own term papers.
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