寻找扎尔曼:让本科生看到历史奖学金。

Ellen M. Eisenberg
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引用次数: 4

摘要

像许多教授本科生历史的人一样,我近年来一直在努力弥合教学和研究之间的差距。在高度集中的高年级课程中,通常可以通过分配一篇我写的文章或使用我自己的原始材料作为课堂练习的基础,与本科生分享我自己的工作。然而,我教的大部分课程都不在我的研究领域,在这些课程中,当我试图让学生参与到关于“研究历史”的讨论中时,我很难有意义地借鉴自己的研究成果。然而,在2003年春天,我正在教授的一个研究研讨会与一个正在展开的学术项目(后来变成了一个谜)结合在一起,这给了我一个不同寻常的机会,我可以与学生们分享我作为研究人员的经验。虽然课程的重点与我的项目没有直接关系,但我的学生的研究过程和我自己的研究过程之间的相似之处很快就出现了。我对我的项目的提及很快变成了头脑风暴会议,学生们试图想象新的资源供我参考,讨论历史证据的标准,并思考如何在富有成果的研究和徒劳的追逐之间划清界限。这一经历表明,在试图让学生看到自己的学术成就时,可能会出现各种新的问题和方向。
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Looking for Zalman: Making Historical Scholarship Visible to Undergraduates.
LIKE MANY WHO TEACH undergraduate history, I have made efforts in recent years to bridge the gap between my teaching and my research. In highly focused, upper division courses, it is often possible to share my own work with undergraduates by assigning an essay I have written or by using my own primary source material as the basis for in-class exercises. Yet the majority of courses that I teach are not in my area of research, and in these classes it is more difficult to draw meaningfully on my own work when trying to engage students in discussions about "doing history." In the spring of 2003, however, the convergence of a research seminar I was teaching with an unfolding scholarly project-which turned into a mystery-resulted in an unusual opportunity to share my experiences as a researcher with students. Although the focus of the course was not directly related to my project, the parallels between my students' research processes and my own quickly emerged. My mentioning of my project soon grew into brainstorming sessions in which students tried to imagine new sources for me to consult, debated standards of historical evidence, and mused about where to draw the line between fruitful research and a wild goose chase. This experience suggests the kinds of new questions and directions that can emerge from an attempt to make one's scholarship visible to students.
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