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[ecrea] CFP: Teaching Humanistic Research Skills (Cinema Journal Teaching Dossier)
Tue Jul 08 11:40:26 GMT 2014
*Beyond Google: Teaching Humanistic Research Skills* (Cinema Journal 
Teaching Dossier)
Despite claims of a tech-savvy, “digital native” student body, college 
instructors often find many students’ research skills are limited. For 
this dossier, we seek essays that address approaches for teaching 
humanistic research methods, speak to connections between teaching 
scholarly research and more general informational literacy, and/or 
discuss the tricky task of helping students become motivated and excited 
to undertake research projects. How can we teach research skills in 
compelling and creative ways? While media departments often offer 
courses in research methods that focus on specific qualitative and 
quantitative methods, humanistic research skills are often taught 
primarily through courses focusing first on substantive topic matter and 
skills based learning can become a lower priority. We’re looking for 
creative ideas for making research a lively and engaging process for 
students. Essays might address these topics:
   * Learning to use databases and sophisticated search techniques
   * Working in libraries and with librarians
   * Working with limited collections or resources
   * Using citation managers and tools for organizing research
   * Collaborative or team research projects
   * Exploring online media archives with students
   * Using the National Digital Public Library of America
   * Making research exciting and engaging for students
   * Integrating research into media projects other than traditional papers
   * Grappling with the meaning and ethics of plagiarism and paraphrasing
   * Game-ifying research skill acquisition—scavenger hunts,
     competitions, and other creative approaches
   * Evaluating source credibility
   * Scholarly research vs. informational literacy
   * Lessons from failures with research projects
If you have ideas for addressing these or related topics, please submit 
a 300-word abstract for a proposed 1500-word essay, briefly describing 
the essay topic and how it connects to the Dossier topic, as well as a 
150-word biography highlighting courses taught or other relevant 
experience. Proposals should be submitted to Tony Nadler 
((amnadler /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(amnadler /at/ gmail.com)>) and Alice Leppert 
((aleppert /at/ ursinus.edu) <mailto:(aleppert /at/ ursinus.edu)>) by July 20, 2014. 
Completed essays (including all images and links) will be due on Sept 
20, 2014.
For past issues of Cinema Journal Teaching Dossier, see 
http://www.teachingmedia.org/cinema-journal-teaching-dossier/ 
<http://www.teachingmedia.org/cinema-journal-teaching-dossier/>
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