Better Research Papers: Workshop Your Handout - Faculty Workshop

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Tuesday, August 26th, 2014, led by Margot Hanson and Michele Van Hoeck BETTER RESEARCH PAPERS: WORKSHOP YOUR HANDOUT 2:00-3:30 PM, LIBRARY GREEN ROOM Would you like to see higher quality research papers from students? Are you discouraged by grading papers with weak sources or insufficient citation? Drawing on recommendations from studies of student research habits, as well as librarian experience working with Cal Maritime students, attendees will work with a partner to revise one of their own research assignment handouts (prompts). NOTE: Please bring a paper copy of one of your research paper assignments to the workshop.

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Better Research Papers: Workshop Your Handout

Margot Hanson and Michele Van HoeckTuesday, August 26th 2014

2:00-3:30 PM, Library Green Room

Today’s Agenda

2:00

2:20

2:40

3:05

3:15

Welcome• Project Information Literacy research findings

Small Group Activity• Evaluation of sample handout

Individual Activity and Group Discussion• Evaluate and redesign your own handout

Resources• Help for Research Guidance and Support

Closing and Evaluation

When you review research assignments, what do you see students struggling with most?

https://todaysmeet.com/BetterResearchPapers

"Truth Be Told: How College Students Evaluate and Use Information in the Digital Age,"

Alison J. Head and Michael B. Eisenberg, Project Information Literacy Progress Report, November 1, 2010.

MAJOR FINDINGS

"Assigning Inquiry: How Handouts for Research Assignments Guide Today's College Students," Alison J. Head and Michael B. Eisenberg, Project Information

Literacy Progress Report, July 13, 2010

83% of handouts in our sample

called for the standard research paper.

Few handouts asked students to present findings using other formats, including multimedia

and oral presentations.

"Assigning Inquiry: How Handouts for Research Assignments Guide Today's College Students," Alison J. Head and Michael B. Eisenberg, Project Information

Literacy Progress Report, July 13, 2010

Six in 10 handouts

recommended students consult the library shelves—a place-

based source—more than scholarly research databases, the library catalog, the Web,

or…any other resource.

"Assigning Inquiry: How Handouts for Research Assignments Guide Today's College Students," Alison J. Head and Michael B. Eisenberg, Project Information

Literacy Progress Report, July 13, 2010

Few of the handouts (14%) that

directed students to use the libraryʼs online scholarly

research databases…specified which database to use…from the hundreds that tend to be

available.

"Assigning Inquiry: How Handouts for Research Assignments Guide Today's College Students," Alison J. Head and Michael B. Eisenberg, Project Information

Literacy Progress Report, July 13, 2010

Details about plagiarism, if mentioned at all, were scant and tended to emphasize the

disciplinary recourse instructors would take against students who were caught in acts of academic dishonesty.

"Assigning Inquiry: How Handouts for Research Assignments Guide Today's College Students," Alison J. Head and Michael B. Eisenberg, Project Information

Literacy Progress Report, July 13, 2010

Few of the handouts provided information for contacting

instructors when students had questions about a research

assignment, whether by email, face-to-face, the telephone, or

in online forums.

RECOMMENDATIONS

Add Situational Context

Why are students being asked to engage in a pedagogical research exercise in a certain course in the first place?

Peel back the layers of the knowledge production process and what it means in the academic environment, in a given discipline, in a given class.

Add Information-Gathering Context

Research assignments, in general, should have students learn how to derive information from multiple and diverseformats.

Ask for Help

Contact a librarian and/or CETL for help, ideas, and inspiration.

HOT TIPSAdapted from Maricopa Community College District Libraries

Verify and sample resources available at the library

Model with a sample paper

http://rwc.hunter.cuny.edu/reading-writing/on-line/mla-sample-research-paper.gif

Experiment with short, lessoverwhelming essays or projects

Scaffold by providing steps & support structure for students

Flickr user Ron Cogswell

Teach students to select quality information &

Evaluate sources appropriate to their topics

Open Clipart

Offer a reasonable time frame & mini deadlines for the assignment

Be clear with the citation style & format. Offer examples!

Encourage students to ask for help

Invite a librarian to class!

"Assigning Inquiry: How Handouts for Research Assignments Guide Today's College Students," Alison J. Head and Michael B. Eisenberg, Project Information

Literacy Progress Report, July 13, 2010

76% of students surveyed

considered written guidelines about course-related

assignments to be one of the most helpful materials an

instructor can provide.

EVALUATION TIME!