"A Place to Be Heard and to Hear": the Humanities Collaboratory as a Model for Cross-College Cooperation and Relationship-Building in Undergraduate Research.
{"title":"\"A Place to Be Heard and to Hear\": the Humanities Collaboratory as a Model for Cross-College Cooperation and Relationship-Building in Undergraduate Research.","authors":"Caitlin Larracey, Natalie Strobach, Julie Lirot, Thai-Catherine Matthews, Samanda Robinson","doi":"10.1007/s10755-022-09612-x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>This article reports findings from a study of laboratory-styled humanities undergraduate research (UR) programming designed to increase access to this high-impact practice, better reaching historically excluded students and less visible institutions. The Humanities Collaboratory (HLAB) is a ten-week summer research program that emerged from the partnership of a research university and the area community college system. Aimed at actively addressing educational inequity, and the more specific lack of access humanities students have to impactful UR opportunities, HLAB offers an intensive humanities research experience to first-generation students, low-income students, and Students of Color currently enrolled in two-year colleges, HBCUs, MSIs, and HSIs. Since the program's creation in 2018, qualitative data collected from 50 participating students over three years of self-evaluations illustrates why HLAB presents a significant learning opportunity for students and highlights the critical importance of relationship-building in UR. Analyzing students' responses through the heuristic of communities of practice provides insight into a community-focused UR pedagogy that emphasizes relationality among students, mentors, and institutions. Students detail the importance of collaborative skill-building, opportunities for peer support, networking connections, and possibilities for more holistic personal growth in UR experiences. Our findings describing the benefits of relational UR signal the need for cooperative programming designs that increase access to undergraduate research for humanities students across institutions of higher education.</p>","PeriodicalId":47065,"journal":{"name":"Innovative Higher Education","volume":"48 2","pages":"219-238"},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9185128/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Innovative Higher Education","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10755-022-09612-x","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2022/6/10 0:00:00","PubModel":"Epub","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article reports findings from a study of laboratory-styled humanities undergraduate research (UR) programming designed to increase access to this high-impact practice, better reaching historically excluded students and less visible institutions. The Humanities Collaboratory (HLAB) is a ten-week summer research program that emerged from the partnership of a research university and the area community college system. Aimed at actively addressing educational inequity, and the more specific lack of access humanities students have to impactful UR opportunities, HLAB offers an intensive humanities research experience to first-generation students, low-income students, and Students of Color currently enrolled in two-year colleges, HBCUs, MSIs, and HSIs. Since the program's creation in 2018, qualitative data collected from 50 participating students over three years of self-evaluations illustrates why HLAB presents a significant learning opportunity for students and highlights the critical importance of relationship-building in UR. Analyzing students' responses through the heuristic of communities of practice provides insight into a community-focused UR pedagogy that emphasizes relationality among students, mentors, and institutions. Students detail the importance of collaborative skill-building, opportunities for peer support, networking connections, and possibilities for more holistic personal growth in UR experiences. Our findings describing the benefits of relational UR signal the need for cooperative programming designs that increase access to undergraduate research for humanities students across institutions of higher education.
本文报告了一项关于实验室式人文学科本科生研究(UR)计划的研究结果,该计划旨在增加学生参与这种影响力大的实践活动的机会,更好地帮助历来被排斥在外的学生和知名度较低的机构。人文学科合作实验室(HLAB)是一项为期十周的暑期研究计划,由一所研究型大学与地区社区学院系统合作开展。HLAB 旨在积极解决教育不公平问题,以及更具体的人文学科学生缺乏获得有影响力的 UR 机会的问题,为第一代学生、低收入学生和目前就读于两年制学院、HBCU、MSI 和 HSI 的有色人种学生提供密集的人文学科研究体验。自该计划于 2018 年创立以来,从 50 名参与学生三年的自我评价中收集到的定性数据说明了为什么 HLAB 为学生提供了重要的学习机会,并强调了在 UR 中建立关系的至关重要性。通过 "实践社区 "启发式分析学生的回答,可以深入了解以社区为重点、强调学生、导师和机构之间关系的 UR 教学法。学生们详细描述了在 UR 体验中合作技能培养、同伴支持机会、网络联系以及更全面个人成长的可能性的重要性。我们的研究结果描述了关系型 UR 的益处,这表明高等教育机构有必要进行合作计划设计,以增加人文学科学生参与本科生研究的机会。
期刊介绍:
Innovative Higher Education is a refereed scholarly journal that strives to package fresh ideas in higher education in a straightforward and readable fashion. The four main purposes of Innovative Higher Education are: (1) to present descriptions and evaluations of current innovations and provocative new ideas with relevance for action beyond the immediate context in higher education; (2) to focus on the effect of such innovations on teaching and students; (3) to be open to diverse forms of scholarship and research methods by maintaining flexibility in the selection of topics deemed appropriate for the journal; and (4) to strike a balance between practice and theory by presenting manuscripts in a readable and scholarly manner to both faculty and administrators in the academic community.