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Difficulties of Teaching Research on a Campus with Minimal Wifi and Other Thoughts on Research Papers

In my own writing as an academic, “research papers” have often relied on secondary sources. I love the idea of having students do research on their own lives and have recently encouraged them to mine their text message exchanges or record conversations to find words or phrases to explore in writing for 1121’s Unit 1 “Portrait of a Word” assignment–but I could do well to follow my own advice. My 1121 students who focused on autobiographical material were much less likely to plagiarize (although I think the few who did mostly did so without realizing they were committing academic dishonesty). I would love more prompts like that in 1121 Unit 1 that help students reframe their own experiences as generative material to think and write about. While my dissertation research focused primarily on poetry and memoirs and critical sources about my literary sources, I have occasionally done research for more creative autobiographical writing by asking family members to fill in details for stories I don’t fully remember or wasn’t originally there for. Maybe this could be an assignment in an 1121-style and/or -level class: Profile an older relative; gather information by interviewing family members, freewriting your own memories, and reading through any written records you can find.

In my classrooms, I rely a lot on librarians’ workshops and annotated bibliographies to explain research. I’m interested in primary sources from students’ lives and sources from library databases much more than I am in what students find in the first page of Google results. But I don’t necessarily do a great job at this–my 1101 students last semester had a pretty hard time using library databases to find sources for their annotated bibliographies, despite the intense scaffolding of my course. This semester, I was pleased to schedule library workshops for my 1121 students in person, but when one section’s librarian was quite late and my students voted that another library workday to find sources with assistance would be helpful, the librarians told me that there were no available days my sections could use what seems to be the library’s one computer lab during our normal class meetings before my students’ research assignment is due. I’m a bit frustrated with that–it feels hard to teach online research, through the library’s databases or otherwise, given the extremely unreliable internet on campus. (I emailed NYCCT’s VPs about this last week, and was told that the wifi signal wouldn’t be amplified until next fall–so frustrating!)

Homework for Feb 15 (by 2 pm, please!)

For next week, we’ll all be writing a statement of teaching philosophy, which you will post to the open lab (here!) These will be confidential and only shared amongst ourselves.

I particularly like this description of how to write a teaching philosophy from the Western University in Canada

Here are some examples of teaching philosophies (including my own– I include mine, not as a shining example, but just in the spirit of full disclosure.  Also, it is old!)

Example One  Example Two Example Three (Carrie)

Remember– this is only a draft. You will revise this at the end of the PD– and hopefully the exercise we did today will be of some help in getting started.

 

Hi– and welcome!

Hello, everyone. This is the site for our professional development. You will be posting here, and this is also where I will post our homework, etc.. That said, all of our readings will be found on Perusall.  To sign up, go to perusall.com.  I have sent you the class link. You will need this to sign up.  Don’t worry– there are no assignments there yet!

Glad to have you all here and looking forward to getting started! Remember that we have an optional office hour on Monday from 3:30-4:30. I sent the link. Please email me if you’d like me to send it again or if you need to meet at another time

Carrie