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A Humanities core class covering the literature, ideas, social and cultural history of the era 1830-1900 in England.
This week, everyone should have a Wikipedia account and a group assignment.
Although your individual contributions to the research process will be color-coded in your group notebook, you should also keep a permanent record of your work by doing your private notetaking/composing in an individual research journal.
To create your personal journal, visit the template file in GDocs (link here), then choose "File--> Make a Copy" and save a personal copy for yourself with the file name Yourlastname Individual Research Journal.
Once you've created your copy, please visit the Sharing settings and remove everyone else from sharing except yourself and me. (I need access so that I can use your notebook entries to evaluate the "research process" component of the assignment.)
Exercises in the individual journal are formatted to match the group notebook exercises, so a recommended workflow is to:
This way, you'll have a private space for messy/ in-progress work that's not quite ready to share with the rest of the group.
Welcome to your Wikipedia assignment's course timeline. This page guides you through the steps you'll need to complete for your Wikipedia assignment, with links to training modules and your classmates' work spaces.
Your course has been assigned a Wikipedia Expert. You can reach them through the Get Help button at the top of this page.
Writing and research for this project will take place across four online "spaces":
Resources:
Create an account and join this course page, using the enrollment link your instructor sent you. (Because of Wikipedia's technical restraints, you may receive a message that you cannot create an account. To resolve this, please try again off campus or the next day.)
Find some sources and start learning about your topic!
In the initial phase of this project, each person should locate and post at least 3+ scholarly sources in your group notebook source list (Item 6). By next week, each person will need to "claim" (volunteer to interlibrary loan/ print/ check out, and then read + annotate) at least 2 of the most promising-looking sources from this group list.
The best way to initially find sources is to use the "bibliography bootstrap method": find just one other trustworthy person who's recently written about this topic in a scholarly context, then look at their sources for a good initial survey of available peer-reviewed scholarly books and articles on this topic. Most academic research works as a social network of multiple people writing about the same thing, so all you really need is one good scholarly source to give you a picture of how the conversation has worked so far.
To give everyone a head-start on finding that one trusted source for bibliography-mining, we've posted a list of "starter sources" for each topic in the Gdocs folder here. Some items on the list are articles, some are online bibliographies, and some are books. At this stage, your job is:
By the start of class on Wednesday, 2/19, please locate a high-quality Wiki article whose topic parallels your group’s chosen article topic. For example, if your group is writing an article on “Victorian cooking,” you might look around to find if there are good model articles on cooking in other historical/cultural contexts-- like “medieval cooking” or “Chinese cooking in the Song dynasty.” Or if that doesn't work, you might expand your search to other articles on domestic practices in historical context, like "Elizabethan needleworking."
Once you find a model article, please provide a link, the title, and a full topic outline in your group's Google Docs working notes.
By the end of this week, any needed Interlibrary Loan orders should be complete.
By the end of Week 7, every individual should have looked over the topic-specific starter sources on Gdocs and used the bibliography bootstrap method to find 3+ additional promising-looking scholarly sources on this topic.
Please make sure to post all your source ideas in Section 6 of your group research notebook; with everyone's contributions, this will end up containing ~15+ total scholarly source ideas.
When you list a source, please also do some thinking about how your group could get hold of it. If you end up interlibrary loaning it, please note this in the appropriate column on the source list.
To keep the research manageable, each group member will be responsible for acquiring and carefully reading 3-4 sources total (2+ in this initial phase, 1-2 more during revision). Please add notes in the rightmost column of the master source table (Section 6) to show which sources you'll be reading.
Since some other group members will need to access and use the information you find in your source, you'll need to take especially clear, careful, detailed and thorough notes as you read, covering not just portions of the source that are useful for your article section, but also any other facts that might be helpful for someone else's portion of the expansion. Section 7 of your research journal/ notebook contains a notetaking table with full details on how to format your notes.
As with the other exercises, please draft research notes in your individual journal, then copy-paste into the group notebook once you're finished.
By the end of Week 9, each group member should have read, annoated and posted thorough, detailed notes on each of the 2+ sources assigned them in the initial research phase.
All research notes should be collected in Section 7 of the group research notebook, so that other group members can use them as they compose their section of the article expansion.
Over the weekend of 3/15-3/17, please work as a group to create a basic section-level outline of your proposed article. This outline should reflect both the information needs of your readers (as brainstormed in Section 3 of your notebook) and the shape of available information on your topic (as reflected in the reading notes your group generated).
Group drafting can be either simultaneous (everyone logs onto Gdocs at once from their respective machines, drafting + chat is accomplished in real time) or asynchronous (group members add to the draft outline one after another over the course of a weekend), but every group member should clearly have contributed some portion of the outline (as reflected in the change log).
Your outline should include at least one new section (or subsection) per person in your group. This will allow groups to split the labor by assigning one section/subsection to each member.
You may expand and tweak this outline as you gather more information; the main goal is to have a working list of sections so that group members can get started on their individual writing tasks.
Resource: Editing Wikipedia, pages 7–9
Every student has finished reviewing their assigned articles, making sure that every article has been reviewed.
You probably have some feedback from other students and possibly other Wikipedians. Consider their suggestions, decide whether it makes your work more accurate and complete, and edit your draft to make those changes.
Resources:
Now that you've improved your draft based on others' feedback, it's time to move your work live - to the "mainspace."
Resource: Editing Wikipedia, page 13
Now's the time to revisit your text and refine your work. You may do more research and find missing information; rewrite the lead section to represent all major points; reorganize the text to communicate the information better; or add images and other media.
Continue to expand and improve your work, and format your article to match Wikipedia's tone and standards. Remember to contact your Wikipedia Expert at any time if you need further help!
It's the final week to develop your article.
Everyone should have finished all of the work they'll do on Wikipedia, and be ready for grading.