Undergraduate / Bachelors

Submitted by Melanie Hubbard on May 16th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This assignment leads students through an analysis of media coverage of the 1965 Watts uprising. The intention is for students to learn more about the uprising and how a database can be used as a digital humanities tool.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Newspaper-Database-Analysis .docxdisplayed 933 times23.97 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

Students will learn how to use databases to conduct an analysis of newspapers.

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 

This assignment was given out as one of many exercises that introduced students to digital tools and digital humanities methods.

Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 
Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 
Suggested Citation: 
Hubbard, Melanie. "Newspaper Database Analysis ." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/newspaper-database-analysis.
Submitted by Melanie Hubbard on May 16th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This assignment requires students to apply their knowledge of antisemitic tropes to tweets with the final outcome of the assignment being a short analytical paper and a presentation.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Antisemitism_Social Media_Assignment.docxdisplayed 676 times22.42 KB
AttachmentSize
Student Presentation Templatedisplayed 1000 times1.25 MB
"About Assignment" Presentationdisplayed 1214 times8.57 MB
Learning Outcomes: 

Students will gain: greater social media literacy (e.g. the ability to analyze the visual and textual aspects of tweets), the ability to identify antisemitic motifs on social media, and greater reasoning, writing, and oral presentation skills.

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 

This assignment was designed for the class History of Antisemitism (JWST 4375) in Spring 2018. Students worked in pairs and each pair was given a single tweet selected by the digital scholarship librarian and approved by the faculty member.

The criteria for the tweets were: 1.) they had to be clearly antisemitic, 2.) they contained a visual, e.g. a meme, 3.) there was something significant about the tweeter or the receiver (if there was one), or both. For example, the tweeter was a known politician, or the receiver was a known journalist.

Students were given a Powerpoint template that they were required to follow, the intention being to keep them from getting too bogged down in the slide creation process and to help them structure themselves more effectively.

To introduce the assignment, the digital scholarship librarian presented some background on antisemitism and social media and then went through all of the tweets that were selected for the assignment. During this time, students were asked to begin analyzing what they were seeing and to identify ways they might start their research.

Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 

Presentation template

Suggested Citation: 
Hubbard, Melanie. "Antisemitism on Social Media Essay." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/antisemitism-social-media-essay.
Submitted by Amanda M. on May 11th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This lesson was developed for HIS484 (Topics in the History of Gender and
Sexuality/Pride in the time of HIV/AIDS) in the Spring of 2018. The students’ final assignment
culminated in a multimedia or digital research project on a topic of their choosing and heavily
relied on primary source and visual materials. This lesson focuses on how students, as content
curators and analysts, can engage in deeper analysis and contextualization of the sources they
present through their projects. Students collectively analyzed one example from a particular
resource that they are already acquainted with and considered the language used by both
systems of knowledge and the communities that they are studying, in order to help them form
thoughtful, critical, and reflective perspectives.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Lesson plan with links to google doc worksheet and google slidesdisplayed 1228 times92.09 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

Students will be able to analyze and contextualize primary source and visual materials related to HIV/AIDS.
Students will be able to articulate how knowledge is socially constructed and contested and how/why language evolves over time.
Students will engage with art as a primary source related to their research topics.

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 
Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 

See full lesson plan/pdf

Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 

This worked well with a small class, but may be more challenging with a larger class. I would likely have students work in groups to evaluate different works of art using the google worksheet instead of doing one for the whole class.

Suggested Citation: 
M., Amanda. "Visual Aids and Descriptors in Primary Source Evaluation & Curation." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/visual-aids-and-descriptors-primary-source-evaluation-curation.
Submitted by McKenzie Hyde on April 27th, 2018
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Short Description: 

As part of the research process, students need to learn how to organize and synthesize their sources. This short lecture, followed by a matrix outline given to every student, gives students the opportunity to focus their research question even more and to add their own ideas to the conversation of research within their chosen topic.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Synthesis Lesson Outlinedisplayed 1294 times306.53 KB
Synthesis Lesson Plandisplayed 3055 times272.34 KB
Synthesis PowerPoint Presentationdisplayed 1624 times1.41 MB
Synthesis Worksheetdisplayed 1474 times31 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

-Understanding research as a conversation
-Understanding and using synthesis to organize and weave together sources + our own ideas
-Understanding how essays/arguments can be organized by idea, not by source

Individual or Group:

Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 

Students should already have a focused topic and/or research question chosen before coming to the library for this lesson.

Collaborators: 
Suggested Citation: 
Hyde, McKenzie. "Synthesis." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/synthesis.
Submitted by McKenzie Hyde on April 27th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This lesson, created for English 2010, or Argumentative Writing, teaches students how to use library databases and keywords in order to focus their research topics. Most students come prepared with a general or broad topic in mind, but they need to narrow their focus in order to get more relevant search results. Here they simultaneously learn to search in and use the library databases and to focus their research topics.

Attachments: 
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Narrowing a Topic Handoutdisplayed 2630 times142.65 KB
Narrowing a Topic Lesson Outlinedisplayed 1620 times150.64 KB
Narrowing a Topic Lesson Plandisplayed 2949 times299.2 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

-Understanding how to use library resources and why we use them (instead of Google, for example)
-Searching in library databases using Boolean operators, relevant keyword searches, and other library tools
-Focusing a general research question for a specific audience

Individual or Group:

Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 

We collaborate with the English faculty and instructors on campus to make sure students are ready to choose a topic for their final research paper before they come to the library for this lesson. The English 2010 curriculum generally stipulates that students do small assignments throughout the semester to work up to this final research paper. Coming to the library for our Narrowing a Topic and Synthesis lessons are important steps in this research process. Some professors like to adapt these lesson plans to their students' needs.

Collaborators: 
Suggested Citation: 
Hyde, McKenzie. "Narrowing a Topic." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/narrowing-topic.
Submitted by Carolyn Caffrey on April 18th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This activity is designed to support teaching at the intersections of scholarly communication and information literacy. The choose-your-own scenario activity, designed in LibWizard, can be used in a flipped classroom setting or in a traditional classroom. The choose-your-own scenario activity is inspired by and adapts questions from: Hare, S. & Evanson, C. (2018). Information privilege outreach for undergraduate students. College and Research Libraries. From 2018-2020 this took the place of an interactive survey with skip logic. In 2020, this was substanitally revised to use LibWizard, incorporate short videos, and still provide scenario-based learning. 

Learning Outcomes: 

Students will be able to:

    • Describe barriers to accessing published research 
    • Articulate benefits to alternative publishing models like open access
Discipline: 
Multidisciplinary

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 

The activity is marketed during Open Access Week and incorporated into information literacy sessions by librarians.

Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 

Some suggestions for integrating and scaffolding the content:

 

Follow up with a traditional library workshop on finding scholarly information and having students take note of whether or not it is freely available by analyzing the journal and using plug-ins like Unpaywall

Collaborators: 
Suggested Citation: 
Caffrey, Carolyn . "Access, Power, & Privilege." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/access-power-privilege.
Submitted by Nicole Branch on March 22nd, 2018
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Short Description: 

This lesson was co-developed by Daniel Ransom and Nicole Branch. This is an intensive APA workshop that could be broken into parts. It covers both APA citation and formatting, with a protest theme. The workshop was conducted as a stand-alone, outside of class workshop at Holy Names University in 2014 and 2015. Though Occupy is now dated, the theme of protest could be adapted to something more current. We didn't think it would be possible to make APA citation engaging, but this lesson did just that. It was especially popular with nursing and education students. We also include materials for integrating MLA.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Occupy APA Lesson Plandisplayed 13047 times96.14 KB
Occupy APA Cheat Sheetdisplayed 1025 times168.54 KB
Occupy APA Cheat Sheet (with MLA!)displayed 1028 times155.93 KB
Occupy APA Know Your Rights Handoutdisplayed 843 times98.6 KB
Occupy APA Know Your Rights Handout (with MLA!)displayed 730 times103.12 KB
Occupy APA Examples By Type Handoutdisplayed 899 times75.02 KB
Occupy APA Slidesdisplayed 1094 times2.92 MB
Learning Outcomes: 

Objectives:
• Get Informed: Learn common rules for APA citation style
• Identify your targets: Learn to identify the type of information source,
especially for electronic sources
• Know your rights: Learn to use the APA Manual and online sources to
look up and apply APA rules

Discipline: 
EducationPsychology

Information Literacy concepts:

Individual or Group:

Tags:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 

This was offered as a stand-alone, outside of class workshop. Students signed up to attend. It was also shortened and adapted for in-class use in a range of courses.

Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 
Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 
Collaborators: 
Suggested Citation: 
Branch, Nicole. "Occupy APA: A Citation Sit-in." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/occupy-apa-citation-sit.
Submitted by Amanda M. on March 14th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This lesson was developed for a Photography course on the theory and psychology of photography (non-majors and majors both take this course). This lesson is typically presented at the beginning of a course section on the aesthetics of photography. It was meant to challenge their assumptions about art, information (online) as a commodity, and copyright practices of artists. Students may be asked to look up Richard Prince before class or during, as the lesson suggests.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Richard Prince, Aesthetics, Value of Info.pdfdisplayed 1135 times73.25 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

Identify and discuss relevant issues related to the work of Richard Prince, including copyright, appropriation, and visual information as a commodity.
Consider the original context of the work of Richard Prince and critique whether these images, in this new context, take on a different meaning.
Discuss the choices that Richard Prince has made in the production of his work to influence interpretation and aesthetic value

Discipline: 
Art

Individual or Group:

Assessment or Criteria for Success
Assessment Short Description: 
See lesson plan
Suggested Citation: 
M., Amanda. "Richard Prince, Aesthetics, and the Value of Information." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/richard-prince-aesthetics-and-value-information.
Submitted by Elizabeth Christian on February 26th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This activity introduces students to a variety of databases in their discipline by asking them to quickly review and prepare an “elevator speech” on the database’s best features and content. Students then do three rounds of “speed dating” to share with other students what they’ve discovered.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Activity worksheet for studentsdisplayed 1462 times14.8 KB
Lesson plan for instructorsdisplayed 1385 times14.22 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

Students will be able to identify and use appropriate databases to form an effective research strategy.
Students will be able to differentiate databases based on functionality and content scope.

Discipline: 
Multidisciplinary

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 
Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 
Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 

This activity works best if all students are in the same discipline, although it can be scaled to include general research databases or multiple disciplines. Part C asks students to quickly identify a research topic and evaluate their databases by searching for that topic. This will work if students already have a research topic in mind for an assignment. If not, you may wish to offer one or more examples for them to use, or skip it entirely.

Collaborators: 
Suggested Citation: 
Christian, Elizabeth. "Database "Speed Dating"." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/database-speed-dating.
Submitted by Nataly Blas on January 9th, 2018
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Short Description: 

This activity is intended to introduce students to business resources by following the Porter's 5 Forces. Each Force is its own activity with suggested discussion questions, examples and recommended research approach.

Attachments: 
AttachmentSize
Industry Research using Porter’s 5 Forces.docxdisplayed 1039 times116.47 KB
Learning Outcomes: 

Students will determine the initial scope of the task required to meet their information need.
Students will be able to identify and use key business databases in order to form an effective research strategy.

Discipline: 
AccountingBusiness

Individual or Group:

Course Context (e.g. how it was implemented or integrated): 
Additional Instructor Resources (e.g. in-class activities, worksheets, scaffolding applications, supplemental modules, further readings, etc.): 
Potential Pitfalls and Teaching Tips: 
Suggested Citation: 
Blas, Nataly. "Industry Research Using Porter's 5 Forces ." CORA (Community of Online Research Assignments), 2018. https://projectcora.org/assignment/industry-research-using-porters-5-forces.

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