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Research literacy is more than simply typing search
terms into Google and hitting enter. To do well in college, students need to know
how to navigate through the enormous amounts of information available to them. "I
found it on the Internet" could mean, after all, any personal webpage, any
corporate site, any government website, any social networking site--and not all
of these kinds of sources are equally valuable. And, although it's difficult to
fathom, there is a vast amount of information available on printed pages that cannot
be found "on the web." The student who knows how to find print information
in the library stacks is substantially better prepared for the demands of college
work than the student who relies on a search engine like Google.
For college level research credibility, students need
to know how to navigate the world of academic resources: hard copy books and bound
periodicals in the DuPont-Ball Library, electronic databases holding refereed journals
and other periodicals, interview techniques and survey questions are all part of
what "doing academic research" means.
EH 121 Research & Argumentation teaches students
essential research skills, and it asks students to demonstrate those skills in a
research project, usually conducted in the second half of the semester. Students
write an 8-10 page argumentative essay, whose point is bolstered by research. We
distinguish "the research project" from the other kinds of researched
writing done in EH 121: although all credible college level writing requires some
research, the research project gets special attention because without successfully
completing it, students cannot pass EH 121--regardless of their performance in other
elements of the course.
Students in EH 121 are expected to write a detailed
research proposal, an annotated bibliography of sources, an initial draft, and a
revised draft. Each instructor varies the course's specificresearch requirements
to suit the individual class, but all of the EH 121 teachers expect the same quality
of work.
Because we know how valuable research skills are in academic success, the
DuPont-Ball Library and the English Department have created the
Evans C. Johnson Research Prize for the best essay produced by a student
in EH 121 Research & Argumentation.
t the close of each calendar year, each student
who successfully completed EH 121 that year is eligible to submit his or her
research project to the judging panel, composed of two Library faculty and a
Stetson English faculty currently teaching EH 121. The judges evaluate each
submission based on several criteria, uppermost being the depth and quality of
the research.
Look for details to be published around campus, or
ask your EH 121 teacher for more information.
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