17,331 results
Search Results
2. Write a Scientific Paper (WASP): An overview of differences in styles between the sciences and the humanities.
- Author
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Grech V
- Subjects
- Humanities, Periodicals as Topic standards, Science, Writing standards
- Abstract
Researchers who cross a discipline may experience culture shock at the different worlds of science and medicine. This paper outlines the differences in concepts and philosophies and in presentation styles. The acute difficulties when attempting to read or write works in different disciplines are also addressed, as well as the differences in perceptions and values when approaching written works in unfamiliar branches of academia., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Paper Technologies in the Editing Factories of the Big Humanities.
- Author
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SCHÜSSLER, LOTTE
- Subjects
PAPER industry ,ROMAN Empire, 30 B.C.-A.D. 476 ,HUMANITIES ,NATURAL history - Abstract
Copyright of Technikgeschichte is the property of Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Navigating Controversial Topics in Required Diversity Courses
- Author
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Ryan A. Miller, Laura Struve, Morgan Murray, and Alex Tompkins
- Abstract
Required undergraduate diversity courses often expose students to topics and worldviews which may push them out of their comfort zones and prompt dissonance and even resistance. This paper reports on interviews with 68 faculty members across 16 humanities and social science disciplines at five predominantly white institutions in the Southern United States, detailing how they navigated discussion of controversial topics in required diversity courses. Most instructors aimed to expose students to critical social issues yet were concerned that resistance could disturb the learning process. We identified 20 unique strategies for handling controversial topics in class that included proactively establishing community and safety and normalizing conflict, and reactively acknowledging and surfacing multiple perspectives, as well as connecting content to students' lived experiences. Some instructors also reported a lack of controversy or conflict in their classrooms, which they variously attributed to student characteristics or their own disinclination to promote heated discussion - which, we argue, calls into question the breadth and criteria of many institutionally defined diversity course requirements. We conclude the paper with implications for faculty, educational developers, administrators, and institutions.
- Published
- 2024
5. Deep Impact: A Study on the Impact of Data Papers and Datasets in the Humanities and Social Sciences
- Author
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Barbara McGillivray, Paola Marongiu, Nilo Pedrazzini, Marton Ribary, Mandy Wigdorowitz, and Eleonora Zordan
- Subjects
data journals ,data papers ,data reuse ,humanities ,impact ,open data ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 ,Information resources (General) ,ZA3040-5185 - Abstract
The humanities and social sciences (HSS) have recently witnessed an exponential growth in data-driven research. In response, attention has been afforded to datasets and accompanying data papers as outputs of the research and dissemination ecosystem. In 2015, two data journals dedicated to HSS disciplines appeared in this landscape: Journal of Open Humanities Data (JOHD) and Research Data Journal for the Humanities and Social Sciences (RDJ). In this paper, we analyse the state of the art in the landscape of data journals in HSS using JOHD and RDJ as exemplars by measuring performance and the deep impact of data-driven projects, including metrics (citation count; Altmetrics, views, downloads, tweets) of data papers in relation to associated research papers and the reuse of associated datasets. Our findings indicate: that data papers are published following the deposit of datasets in a repository and usually following research articles; that data papers have a positive impact on both the metrics of research papers associated with them and on data reuse; and that Twitter hashtags targeted at specific research campaigns can lead to increases in data papers’ views and downloads. HSS data papers improve the visibility of datasets they describe, support accompanying research articles, and add to transparency and the open research agenda.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Preparing Students to Write a Professional Philosophy of Recreation Paper
- Author
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Stevens, Cheryl, Schneider, Paige P., and Johnson, Corey W.
- Abstract
This paper describes a process for guiding students through the writing of a Professional Philosophy of Recreation Paper and a one-page philosophy statement suitable for use in students' professional portfolios. The authors describe how the review of recreation education literature, scholarship on teaching and learning, and assessment of student learning were used over a 12-year period to arrive at the present design for course content, delivery methods, and the Professional Philosophy of Recreation Paper assignment. Over time it was discovered that exposing students to the humanities (e.g., philosophy, literature, film) as a complement to science (e.g., positive psychology, social cognitive theory, evidence-based benefits) was more effective for meeting learning outcomes than merely philosophy and theory alone. The authors also describe how assessment of The Professional Philosophy of Recreation Paper provides evidence that students are meeting standard 7.01 for accreditation under the 2013 COAPRT Learning Outcomes Standards. (Contains 1 table.)
- Published
- 2012
7. Future Priorities of the Humanities in Europe. What Have the Humanities to Offer?: Report of a Round Table Conference Held to Draft a Manifesto for the European Commissioner and Working Papers for the EC Working Party on Future Priorities for Humanities Research
- Author
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Parker, Jan
- Abstract
Humanities-based speakers and delegates to the European Commission conference on "Social Sciences and Humanities in Europe: New Challenges, New Opportunities" gathered at the end of the meeting to develop a proactive Humanities special interest group. The result was a round-table conference organized by the Humanities Higher Education Research Group, the international group based in and supported by the Open University's Institute of Educational Technology, to which senior humanities scholars and members of the European Community (EC) Working Party on Future Priorities for the Humanities were invited. This article provides a brief overview of these discussions, which developed around two issues: (1) What should be said to Europe about the Humanities and what they can offer?; and (2) What "are" the distinguishing features of the Humanities? A major conclusion of the conference was to propose to the EC that the question of what distinguishes the Humanities should itself be a research strand earmarked for support. (Contains 1 note.)
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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8. Centenary Paper: Down But Not Out: Fighting to Maintain Federico García Lorca in UK Higher Education.
- Author
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BASTIANES, MARÍA
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *RHETORIC , *HUMANITIES , *MODERN languages - Abstract
Over the last decade, British universities have become increasingly reliant on an instrumentalist rhetoric to defend the ongoing relevance of research and teaching in the Humanities. This has resulted in a new chapter in the long-running saga concerning the crisis (purported or real) of Modern Languages alongside the study of literature. The very flexibility condemning traditional Modern Languages curricula to the past nevertheless offers new opportunities for literary study when used for the development of new skills. In this article, I employ my experience of a research-led undergraduate project on the UK stage legacy of Federico García Lorca as a case study to suggest ways in which the study of literature and theatre might be revamped. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Eyes Wide Open with Paper in Hand: The Year in Italy
- Author
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Serra, Ilaria
- Subjects
Epidemics ,Humanities - Abstract
We already know that 2020 is a year to remember. It is fair to wonder how many essays of this issue of Biography's International Year in Review will center on [...]
- Published
- 2021
10. Translation of Three Short Papers by Grete Hermann
- Author
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Bacciagaluppi, Guido
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Humanities - Abstract
Author(s): Guido Bacciagaluppi [sup.1] Author Affiliations: (1) grid.5477.1, 0000000120346234, Descartes Centre for the History and Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities, Utrecht University, , Utrecht, Netherlands After a number [...]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Grounding theory into practice : A response to Ewing's key paper.
- Author
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Mortimer, Teri
- Published
- 2019
12. Effects of Graduate Education on Initial Employment: Evidence from New Graduates in the Japanese Labor Market
- Author
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Hirao, Tomotaka
- Abstract
This paper replicates models developed by previous research to study the effects of graduate education on new graduates' initial employment in the Japanese labor market. If education is the best investment for an individual's economic success, then graduate degrees are expected to provide an individual with higher-earning job opportunities. Despite this reasonable economic premise, previous research showed that master's degrees in the humanities or social sciences in Japan have, in fact, a negative impact on obtaining initial employment compared to those with only a bachelor's degree in the humanities or social sciences. This previous research, however, could not overcome omitted variable bias because of data limitations. Omitted variable bias is a key problem for research on education; therefore, this study uses new longitudinal data to overcome omitted variable bias and clearly demonstrate the robustness of these earlier findings. The empirical results of this study corroborate earlier work, showing that master's degrees in the humanities or social sciences do not provide graduate students with an advantage in obtaining initial employment, after controlling for potential bias. At the same time, this study also confirms that natural science majors have a higher probability of obtaining initial employment in comparison with humanities or social science majors. In other words, this paper offers a valid replication of existing research. This shows that the Japanese labor market structure for graduate students has, in essence, remained the same since previous research was completed.
- Published
- 2023
13. Internal structures of abstracts and introductions in selected academic papers concerning literary and cultural subjects.
- Author
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Ščigulinská, Jana
- Subjects
WRITING ,LITERATURE ,SCHOLARLY periodicals ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,HUMANITIES - Abstract
The present paper is focused on the analysis of the possible differences related to the writing structures and strategies used in the abstracts and introductions of the academic journal World Literature Studies in the selected issue from 2018 and its papers published in English. The aim of the study was to determine whether the abstracts and introductions of the papers related to area of art and humanities followed and shared the features related to their structure which are accepted and preferred by the academic journals of higher ranks. The results of the analysis refer to growing tendency to employ such types of structures even in the research areas related to literature, culture or arts. On the other hand, the analysis revealed that in the indexed journal, World Literature Studies, the structure of the abstracts is not always unified, as some structures are omitted. Regarding that, the missing information is present and sometimes developed in the introductions. This is an important result of the research presented in this paper, as it illustrates the importance of the mutual relationship between academic abstracts and introductions when presenting the academic research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
14. Historicizing 'cross-cultural': [Paper in: Historicizing Cross-Cultural Research. Penny, Benjamin (ed.).]
- Author
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Penny, Benjamin
- Published
- 2007
15. An exchange on theory and cultural studies [An exchange that arose from a series of posts to the Cultural Studies Association of Australasia discussion list on the current state of Australian cultural sudies. Paper in: Art and Ecology.]
- Author
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Frow, John, Gregg, Melissa, Muecke, Stephen, During, Simon, Neilson, Brett, Turner, Graeme, Morris, Meaghan, and Burgess, Jean
- Published
- 2006
16. From Classroom to Community: Enhancing Undergraduate Research through an Interdisciplinary Cohort Model
- Author
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Renato Fakhoury and Emma Peterson
- Abstract
While scholars have found that undergraduate involvement in research is beneficial, the lack of such experiences in the social sciences and humanities is glaring. This paper analyzes how an emphasis on community through cohort models impacts undergraduate student experience in research, taking from the Emerging Scholars Program, an interdisciplinary research program where cohorts of undergraduates are matched with faculty and attend meetings, workshops, and presentations together. We find that the cohort model created a robust community that fosters positive relationships that develop professional skills and emotional support, allowing students to collaborate and aim more toward their professional goals. The results from this study offer valuable insights into how universities can ensure that students have meaningful research experience beyond the classroom.
- Published
- 2024
17. Tell Us the Truth: A Collaborative Project
- Author
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Cirillo, Nancy R.
- Abstract
"Tell Us the Truth" is a collaborative article by a professor of English and her freshmen students in a core humanities course from the Fall 2016 entitled Readings in Atlantic Slavery. The students read novels, slave narratives, memoirs, and history. The essay follows the growing interest of the students as they read against the presidential campaign taking place during that period. The students were given the option of writing a final paper on the topic of why they should have been given evidence-based, unpoliticized history during high school. They all chose this option. The professor provides a narrative and cites passages from the papers submitted in support of their reasonable plea for learning what they came to call "real history"--history that is factual and unsanitized. [This article was co-written by the students of HON 124, Fall 2016.]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Learning to Learn: Empowering Students to Articulate the Value of Their HASS Degree
- Author
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Rahman, Nira and Lakey, Elizabeth
- Abstract
In an uncertain labour market, the questions around the employability of graduate students take on a new urgency. Fears about the graduate market in the coming years are acute and are compounded by a sense that there is a large disconnect between a university education and what is expected in the workplace. Australian labour market trends clearly demonstrate that the skills most in demand by Australian graduate employers are precisely the transferrable skills which are honed by doing a HASS degree at the university. However, HASS academics do not usually talk about the skills and attributes students are gaining during their university studies and how this is useful in the workplace. Creating this awareness in both staff and students is immensely important for future graduates to survive and excel beyond university. Based on focus groups, interviews, and student-led projects over the last three years, this paper explores how to balance the need to engage with deep disciplinary knowledge with the understanding that this knowledge is only useful in the real world if accompanied by explicit skills. By using a case study, this paper showcases how to articulate skills and knowledge to HASS students to prepare for workforce. Furthermore, it focusses on how graduate attributes and learning outcomes can be connected from assessment tasks to classroom teaching.
- Published
- 2023
19. Education as an Open Question: A Hermeneutical Approach to Problem-Based Learning
- Author
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Kloeg, Julien
- Abstract
In this paper, this theme of the open question is offered as a hermeneutical approach to problem-based learning. Most of the scientific literature on problem-based learning is in the realm of the behavioral-sciences. To the extent that the latter becomes the exclusive focus of research on problem-based learning, there is a risk of instrumentalization. The hermeneutical approach of this paper is meant to complement this field of research. The subjects of humanities research are not directly available to a humanities scholar, at least not in the way experimental subjects are to a natural scientist. This is Wilhelm Dilthey's epoch-making understanding of the humanities in a nutshell. Philosophical anthropologist Helmuth Plessner, drawing on Dilthey, extends this insight to the historicity of human existence as such, summarizing the latter as an 'open question' that is always impressing itself upon us as human beings, but which at the same time cannot be answered definitively. It is through this process of asking and answering that we leave behind a history in the first place. I use these arguments to show that the theme of the open question yields a series of interconnected educational insights: notably the importance of subjectification, the social and historical context within which education necessarily takes place, and the construction of new knowledge and experience. These educational insights are rendered explicit and put into practice in problem-based learning. I hope in this way to develop a research perspective on problem-based learning as not only a set of behaviors, but as the scene of meaningful action.
- Published
- 2023
20. The Bologna in the Field of Social Sciences and Humanities: A Precondition for Successful University Education
- Author
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Jelena Osmanovic Zajic and Jelena Maksimovic
- Abstract
The Bologna Process represents the most significant extensive reform of higher education in Europe. The particular aspects of the Bologna Process still incite critical evaluations as regards the successfulness of its implementation. The theoretical part of the paper analyzes the fundamental principles defined in the Bologna Declaration, requirements and critical views of the Bologna Process, as well as the relevant research conducted on this issue used for the comparative analysis. The introduction of the Bologna Process into the Serbian university education has initiated numerous changes, the increase of the student mobility being the most striking one. The empirical part of the paper focuses on the study of the following problem: the manner in which students of social sciences and humanities perceive the Bologna Process fifteen years after its implementation into the Serbian university education. Consequently, the subject matter of the research is the observation and description of students' attitudes to this phenomenon with the purpose of acquiring relevant information "firsthand." The achievable objective of the presented research reviews the context and condition of the Bologna Process during 2019/2020 academic year and its feasible improvements, which can contribute to comparative study of similar researches in the time of the pandemics. The specific research tasks include the study of the Bologna requirements, attitudes to the Bologna Process, benefits and restrictions of this reform, and particularly the attempt to suggest the improvement of the Bologna Process realization from the perspective of students of social sciences and humanities. The research sample consisted of the Bachelor students of social sciences and humanities from the Faculty of Philosophy in Niš (N=150). The survey technique and the scaling technique with a rating scale questionnaire were used (BOL-JM-JOZ). The questionnaire had five closed-ended questions, while the Likert scale was comprised of 23 items. The test of the instrument consistency proved its reliability. The obtained results were shown by the chi square test, which proved a statistically significant difference in the respondents' answers as regards the year of study, p<0.05. The main factors were extracted from the assessment scale by the application of the factor analysis. These factors examined the students' perceptions of the Bologna Process, comparing the answers provided by the students of the first, second, third and fourth year of study of social sciences and humanities, p<0.05.
- Published
- 2023
21. Adaptation of Journal Article Tag Suite XML for Japanese humanities papers
- Author
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Hidehiko Nakanishi, Tsuyoshi Yamamoto, Nao Hattori, and Satoshi Taga
- Subjects
japanese language ,journal article tag suite ,humanities ,vertical writing ,xml ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Out of East Asian languages which do not use the Latin alphabet, Japanese is a very complicated writing system that uses “kanji,” which are ideograms, and “kana,” which are phonetic characters. Most of the Japanese papers published so far using Journal Article Tag Suite (JATS) are science, technology, and medicine fields adapting horizontal writing systems, which are structurally consistent with English papers. Most of them only replace Latin letters with Japanese characters. In this presentation, we suggested method of presenting vertically oriented Japanese humanities articles in JATS XML. For vertical description of Chinese numeric, we would like to propose the introduction of an element which specifies description direction. Alternatively, could be used as a hidden command when creating a document. We propose the following notation in the part of the number that can be converted: 六五. Chinese numeric 六五 is a Arabic numeric 65. With this, it is shown that 六五 of Chinese numerals can be converted to 65 in Arabic numerals. For vertical text description with JATS, we would like to suggest adding @ writing-mode as an attribute to :. Furthermore, note and references should be differentiated for example, between a and a in the future. As Kanji are ideograms, there are variations that cannot be expressed with UTF-8. If these difficult Kanji are included in the JATS text, it will be necessary to decide on their description method. For the propagation of use of JATS XML for non-Latin characters articles, the structure of the document for example, vertical description, and special presentation should be considered more widely.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Neither Computer Science, nor Information Studies, nor Humanities Enough: What Is the Status of a Digital Humanities Conference Paper?
- Author
-
Estill, Laura and Guiliano, Jennifer
- Subjects
DIGITAL humanities ,ELECTRONIC data processing ,COMPUTER science ,HUMANITIES ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
Copyright of Digital Studies / Champ Numérique is the property of Open Library of Humanities and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Good on Paper
- Author
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Da, Nan Z.
- Subjects
Johns Hopkins University Press ,Book publishing ,Books ,Humanities ,Social sciences - Abstract
Reading and the Making of Time in the Eighteenth Century Christina Lupton Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018. Decluttering expert Marie Kondo is stern about books: Get rid of [...]
- Published
- 2019
24. More than a Checkpoint: The Pedagogic Potential of a Dialogic Approach to Doctoral Progression Assessment
- Author
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Timothy Clark
- Abstract
In the UK, all doctoral programmes are expected to include some form of periodic progression assessment, with individual institutions having autonomy to design and implement their own structures. Yet, despite the potential significance of this assessment to individual doctoral journeys, the design of progression assessment processes has previously received very limited attention. This paper reports on a study which investigated doctoral students' experiences of progression assessment at one UK university, where the process involved both written and oral components. Utilising the concept of assessment for learning to support the analysis of narrative interviews with six doctoral students studying in the social sciences and humanities, the paper considers the pedagogic potential of doctoral progression assessment. The findings of the study indicated that the students perceived the dialogic aspects of the assessment to have the most significant potential for supporting learning and understanding, particularly where invitational, reflective, coaching format questions were utilised. The potential of assessment dialogue to present opportunities for reframing and disrupting thinking is explored, as well as the significance of this assessment in supporting autonomy, permission and motivation. The paper advocates careful consideration of both assessment design and practice in relation to these aspects.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Entangled Becoming in Humanities Doctoral Education
- Author
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Hatice Nuriler and Søren S. E. Bengtsen
- Abstract
Purpose: Institutional framings of doctoral education mostly do not recognize the existential dimension of doctoral experience. This paper aims to offer an expanded understanding of experiences of doctoral researchers in the humanities with the concept of entangled becoming. This concept is developed through an existential lens by using Søren Kierkegaard's philosophy -- particularly his emphasis on emotions such as passion, anxiety and despair -- and Denise Batchelor's derived concept of vulnerable voices. Design/methodology/approach: The conceptual framing is used for an empirical study based on ethnographic interviews with 10 doctoral researchers and supplementary observational notes from fieldwork at a university in Denmark. Two of the interview cases were selected to showcase variation across lived experiences and how doctoral researchers voice their entangled becoming. Findings: Common experiences such as loneliness, insecurity(ies), vulnerability(ies) or passion for one's research were identified across the interviews. On the other hand, this study shows that each doctoral journey in the humanities envelops a distinct web of entanglements, entailing distinct navigation, that makes each case a unique story and each doctoral voice a specific one. Originality/value: Combining an existential philosophical perspective with a qualitative study, the paper offers an alternative perspective for doctoral education. It connects the humanities doctoral experience to the broader condition of human existence and the sophisticated uniqueness of each researcher's becoming.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Living with the Impact Agenda -- Humanities Academics Negotiating and Resisting the Impact Agenda as Researchers and Doctoral Supervisors
- Author
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Signe Skov and Søren Smedegaard Bengtsen
- Abstract
Purpose: In Denmark, there has been, over decades, an intensified political focus on how humanities research and doctoral education contribute to society. In this vein, the notion of impact has become a central part of the academic language, often associated with terms like use, effects and outputs, stemming from neoliberal ideologies. The purpose of this paper is to explore how humanities academics are living with the impact agenda, as both experienced researchers and as doctoral supervisors educating the next generation of researchers in this post-pandemic era. Specifically, the authors are interested in the supervisor-researcher relationship, that is, the relationship between how the supervisors navigate the impact agenda as researchers and then the way they tell their doctoral students to do likewise. Design/methodology/approach: The authors have studied how the impact agenda is accommodated by humanities academics through a series of qualitative interviews with humanities researchers and humanities PhD supervisors, encompassing questions of how they are living with the expectation of impact and how it is embedded in their university and departmental context. Findings: The study shows that there is no link between how the supervisors navigate the impact agenda in relation to their own research work and then the way they tell their doctoral students to approach it. Within the space of their own research, the supervisors engage in resistance practices towards the impact agenda in terms of minimal compliance, rejection or resignation, whereas in the space of supervision, the impact agenda is re-inscribed to embody other understandings. The supervisors want to protect their students from this agenda, especially in the knowledge that many of them are not going to stay in academia due to limited researcher career possibilities. Furthermore, the paper reveals a new understanding of the impact agenda as having a relational quality, and in two ways. One is through a positional struggle, the reshaping of power relations, between universities (or academics) and society (or the state and the market); the other is as a phenomenon very much lived among academics themselves, including between supervisors and their doctoral students within the institutional context. Originality/value: This study opens up the impact agenda, showing what it means to be a humanities academic living with the effects of the impact agenda and trying to navigate this. The study is mapping and tracking out the many different meanings and variations of impact in all its volatility for academics concerned about it. In current, post-pandemic times, when manifold expectations are directed towards research and doctoral education, it is important to know more about how these expectations affect and are dealt with by those who are expected to commit to them.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Boundaries of Empirical Approaches in Educational Research
- Author
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Christopher Olusola Omoregie
- Abstract
This paper critically reviews the research done in education faculties in Nigerian universities. This research, though categorized in postgraduate schools or colleges as mainly in the liberal arts/humanities and the social sciences, depends on the theories and methodologies from other disciplines. The arts and social sciences are disciplines where undergraduates in education take courses in teaching to earn bachelor's degrees, the postgraduate level offers varied opportunities for educational research to maximize the uniqueness of mixed method research for education.
- Published
- 2023
28. Introduction to the Basque Papers
- Author
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Loewen, Brad
- Subjects
Humanities ,Science and technology ,Social sciences - Abstract
The inspiration for this collection of papers lies in a 2016 conversation with Miren Egana Goya, linguist and historian in Donostia--San Sebastian, in which she expressed the desire to tell [...]
- Published
- 2018
29. THI: unmarked chains of paper clips
- Author
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Meyers, Helene
- Subjects
Paper Clips (Documentary Film) -- Criticism and interpretation ,After school programs -- Portrayals ,Holocaust memorials -- Portrayals ,Ethnic, cultural, racial issues/studies ,Humanities ,Philosophy and religion - Abstract
Abstract Paper (bps, a prize-winning 2004 Miramax document arc directed by Elliot Berlin and Joe Fab about a Holocaust collecting project t hat ctilminated in the Children's Holocaust Memorial in [...]
- Published
- 2014
30. Increased number of papers co-authored by professor and his students in humanities and social sciences journals published in Korea
- Author
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Rae Seong Hong and Eun Seong Hwang
- Subjects
authorship ,bibliometrics ,humanities ,republic of korea ,social sciences ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Humanities and social sciences studies in Korea have remarkably low rates of co-authorship between professors and students. We chose a bibliometrics-based approach to characterize changes in the ratio of joint authorship between professors and students. Articles classified in the humanities and social sciences sectors that were published in journals registered in the Korean Citation Index during 2 phases over a 10-year period—2004 to 2006 (phase 1) and 2011 to 2013 (phase 2)—were used as the main source for the analysis. The study results can be summarized as follows: first, the overall number of co-authored articles drastically increased from phase 1 to phase 2; the percentage of co-authorship articles increased from 34.8% to 47.7%, and the percentage of co-authorship between students and professors rose from 9.9% to 20.7%. This trend was particularly noticeable in the social sciences, such as accounting, social welfare, and economics/business administration. Second, papers written by scholars from Seoul National University, Yonsei University, and Korea University were often published in high-impact factor journals. Among those articles, the rate of professor-student co-authorship increased by 21.6% for 7 years. Third, the increase in professor-student co-authored articles published in high- impact factor journals was even sharper. These findings indicate that perceptions of professor-student co-authorship have changed in the humanities and social sciences. In the near future, positive perceptions toward joint research and joint authorship between professors and students are expected to become more widespread.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A voyage to Newfoundland 'for the reformation of abuses in that Country and upon the coasts thereof': A letter in the family papers of Sir Henry Salusbury, drafted by Richard Whitbourne (?)
- Author
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Lewis, Ryan, Pope, Peter E., and Fosnoes, Tor
- Subjects
Newfoundland and Labrador -- History ,Manuscripts -- History ,Abuse -- History ,Merchants -- Records and correspondence ,Academic libraries ,Humanities ,Science and technology ,Social sciences - Abstract
A copy of a letter addressed 'to the right honourable Charles, Earle of Nottingham' is preserved in a manuscript collection in the library of Christ Church College, Oxford. (1) The [...]
- Published
- 2018
32. Barry E.C. Boothman, Corporate Cataclysm: Abitibi Power & Paper and the Collapse of the Newsprint Industry, 1912-1946
- Author
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Hawkins, Richard A.
- Subjects
Humanities ,Social sciences - Abstract
Barry E.C. Boothman, Corporate Cataclysm: Abitibi Power & Paper and the Collapse of the Newsprint Industry, 1912-1946 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2020), 704 pp. Cased. $95. ISBN 978-1-4875-0556-1. As [...]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A Systematic Literature Review of Cognitive Exchange in Higher Degree Visual Art Education
- Author
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Heaton, Rebecca and Chan Lai Kuan, Shannon
- Abstract
This literature review paper presents ways cognitive exchange occurs in higher degree visual art education. It also attempts to demystify concerns regarding the value and presence of cognitive exchange in art education, this is because cognitive exchange is not considered in art education with the same breadth or depth as in higher education. Cognitive exchange research in higher degree visual art education is limited but there has been a surge in interest about cognitive functioning in higher education. It is therefore timely to consider how cognitive exchange is understood across visual art practices at this level. This paper presents a two phased systematic review, where cognitive exchange literature in the higher degree context is considered alongside such literature in art education. Four spaces: the individual, social, pedagogic, and policy orientated are discussed to present cognitive exchange practices in higher degree visual art education. The spaces and forms of cognitive exchange profiled, provide a knowledge contribution to disciplines that intersect with the arts and humanities. This is because they mobilize where and how cognitive exchange forms, they present opportunities and uses for cognitive exchange and help suggest ways to support its growth.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. PAPER REVOLUTIONS
- Author
-
Gibson, Richard Hughes
- Subjects
Mediation ,Personal computers ,Technology ,Humanities ,Social sciences - Abstract
'The odd thing about paper is that we still use it. The stuff should be obsolete, a quaint, medieval anachronism, replaced by new information technologies like the personal computer. Yet [...]
- Published
- 2019
35. Unsicherheiten der Technikentwicklung: Ein Lernpapier zur Interdisziplinarität.
- Author
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Basmer-Birkenfeld, Sissy-Ve, Redlich, Tobias, Weidner, Robert, and Langenfeld, Markus
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH teams , *TECHNOLOGY , *HUMANITIES , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *RESEARCH & development , *SOCIAL sciences , *ENGINEERING , *FORUMS , *ROBOTICS - Abstract
New technologies usually have potential, but their mode of action and long-term consequences are not always immediately apparent. This challenge can be met in an interdisciplinary way with approaches that integrate different perspectives. Young scientists have come together to work on meeting this challenge from an interdisciplinary perspective in the Young Forum of Technical Sciences: Technology that people really want. The aim is to support user-centred technology development based on interdisciplinary methods. Engineering, law, social sciences and the humanities can work together to shape technical developments in a way that leads to a form of technology that is adapted to the needs of society. Interdisciplinarity in research and development means mutual permeation of disciplines instead of mere coexistence. The aim is to promote interdisciplinary research groups and projects and to develop common methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
36. Folded Papers
- Subjects
Folded Papers (Poem) ,Humanities - Abstract
My father carried the first poem I published in his shirt pocket next to his chest. It described how at night during harvest my father drove home ciphering bushels of [...]
- Published
- 2021
37. Basic Values in Teaching Russian: Psycholinguistic Aspects
- Author
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Arynbayeva, Rimma A., Dmitryuk, Natalya V., and Stycheva, Olga A.
- Abstract
The study deals with teaching Russian as a non-native language to Kazakh students from linguistic and cultural positions. The purpose of the study is to substantiate the efficiency of adapting the integrated technology of mastering a non-native language based on the psycholinguistic analysis of the basic values. As the research methods, the study employs the association experiment and Karaulov's matrix of the "semantic gestalt" along with the classic linguodidactic attitudes; based on these methods the study provides the commentary of the associative fields with the valuably marked incentives. Such material being used will promote the actual development of the basic ideological values with the students. The theoretical and experimental content of the paper testifies to the effectiveness of the integrative methods in teaching Russian as a non-native language. The materials of the Free Association Experiment are presented in the comparative commentary of the semantic gestalt stimulus "Azhe -- Grandmother"; the latter represents in the linguistic consciousness of Kazakhs and Russians the significance of the concept under study in the system of the basic human values in the lexical-semantic group "Kinship relations". The conclusion postulated in the paper is as follows: the heuristic potential of the complex usage of the psycholinguistic (associative) and linguodidactic innovations is included in the process of developing a non-native language. The results of the study allow speaking about the expediency and prospects of further integration of the selected material into the study of the humanities at school and university.
- Published
- 2022
38. Demonstrating 'Impact': Insights from the Work of Preservice Teachers Completing a Graduate Teacher Performance Assessment
- Author
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Brett, Peter and Parks, Michelle
- Abstract
Initial Teacher Education (ITE) reform in Australia has mandated that graduating teachers demonstrate their practice and 'impact' through the completion of a Teaching Performance Assessment (TPA) prior to graduation. The requirement to analyse 'impact' in teaching, requires a nuanced understanding of what 'impact' is and how it manifests in varied contemporary classrooms. This paper reports on how a sample of high-performing pre-service teachers from one Australian ITE institution, within a framework devised by Australia's largest TPA consortium, appraised the impact of their teaching in the context of the disciplinary area of Humanities and Social Sciences (HASS). How 'impact' was articulated through GTPA submissions revealed data-informed and holistic interpretations layered to include opportunistic teaching moments and relational and affective impact as well as analysis of cognitive progress. The paper also identifies ways in which analysis of impact might be further finessed with greater attention to pedagogical content knowledge and discipline-specific progression.
- Published
- 2022
39. Cultivating Criticality in a Neoliberal System: A Case Study of an English Literature Curriculum at a Mega Distance University
- Author
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Retha Knoetze
- Abstract
Neoliberal practices such as managerialism and academic casualisation impact higher education systems globally. While these practices can constrain any curriculum aimed at enabling transformative learning, this paper shows that they place particular limitations on arts and humanities curricula intent on cultivating criticality and a sense of social responsibility. I draw on data from an English literature curriculum study at a mega distance education institution in South Africa and use Legitimation Code Theory to take a close-up look at how two neoliberal practices: managerialism and academic casualisation cause misalignments between the underpinning values of the curriculum and the kinds of pedagogic and formative assessment practices that are employed. I conclude that decisions regarding administration, enrolments and staffing based on neoliberal values can frustrate students' epistemological and ontological access to humanities disciplines and limit the potential of humanities curricula to offer a higher education in service of the social good.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Papers on Rhetoric
- Author
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Palumbo, Lidia
- Subjects
Papers on Rhetoric (Nonfiction work) -- Book reviews ,Books -- Book reviews ,Humanities ,Languages and linguistics - Published
- 2010
41. Social Science, Philosophy and Education
- Author
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Barrow, Robin
- Abstract
This essay argues for the urgent need for philosophy as the necessary first step in any educational undertaking. Philosophy is involved with making fine distinctions which are necessary to clarify concepts and terms. The paper focuses primarily on the problems with an overreliance on scientific research in the social sciences, with special emphasis on the dangers posed in educational research. Three specific problems are identified. First, the emphasis on scientific research downgrades non-scientific research, which may be more appropriate as modes of inquiry in many aspects of education. Second, the emphasis on scientific research distorts research in areas such as the arts and humanities because individual success as a scholar is largely measured by criteria that make sense in the natural sciences but not necessarily in the arts. Third, and most significantly, the paper questions whether social action and interaction can be investigated in a truly scientific manner. [This paper was presented at "Philosophical Issues in Education: A Symposium in Honour" of Dr. Robin Barrow, held at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, B.C. on November 2, 2018.]
- Published
- 2019
42. PhDs by Publications: An 'Easy Way Out'?
- Author
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Niven, Penelope and Grant, Carolyn
- Abstract
PhDs by publications are a relatively new model for doctoral research, especially in the context of the Humanities or Education. This paper describes two writers' experiences of conducting doctoral studies in this genre and in these faculties. Each discover alternative ways of employing a body of published research papers in development of an overarching thesis. The writers argue that whilst it can be a pragmatic choice for some, PhDs by publications are more likely to be highly complex meta-narratives and that an overview of past research is fraught with theoretical, conceptual and epistemological challenges in the quest for coherence. They claim that the nomenclature "PhDs "by" publications" or ""through" publications" is misleading: in the epistemological space of Humanities or Education studies, this mode of doctoral research is more accurately represented as a "PhD "with" or "alongside" publications". They conclude that the particular affordance of the model is that it privileges accounts of the process of knowledge building and of descriptions of the gradual emergence of "doctoralness" in the person of the researcher. (Contains 3 notes.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Chinese Co-Authored Papers in the Humanities and Social Sciences Indexed by SSCI and A&HCL, 1995-2004: A Statistical Analysis
- Author
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Haiyan Zheng
- Subjects
Collaborative research ,Chinese co-authoring papers ,Social sciences ,Humanities ,SSCI ,A&HCI ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Collaborative research is one of the most noteworthy trends in the development of scientific research, and co-authored papers are some of the most important results of this research. With the speed-up of globalization, wider adoption of computers and advanced communication technologies, and more frequent academic exchanges and co-operation, collaborative research across organizations, regions, and fields has provided greater access to Chinese researchers in the humanities and social sciences. Accordingly, co-authored papers have witnessed considerable growth in number and proportion. The Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) and the Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI), published by the Institute for Scientific Information (USA), enjoy a high reputation worldwide as large-scale and comprehensive retrieval systems for international large comprehensive papers and citations. This article aims to reveal the trends of Chinese collaborative research in the humanities and social sciences from the perspective of bibliometrics and offer advice for Chinese researchers and managers in these fields, by analyzing Chinese co-authored papers in the humanities and social sciences indexed in the SSCI and A&HCI in the last decade (1995-2004).
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Maria Kurdi and Antal Bokay (editors), Focus: Papers in English Literary and Cultural Studies
- Author
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O'Neill, Christine
- Subjects
Focus: Papers in English Literary and Cultural Studies (Book) ,Nordic Irish Studies, Vol. I (Book) ,Books -- Book reviews ,Humanities ,Literature/writing - Abstract
Maria Kurdi and Antal Bokay (editors), Focus: Papers in English Literary and Cultural Studies. Pecs: University of Pecs, 2002. 149 pages. No price given. Michael Boss and Irene Gilsenan Nordin [...]
- Published
- 2003
45. Papers on Rhetoric
- Author
-
Vassilaki, Ekaterini
- Subjects
Papers on Rhetoric (Book) -- Book reviews ,Books -- Book reviews ,Humanities ,Languages and linguistics - Published
- 2004
46. It Takes a Village! Editorship, Advocacy, and Research in Running an Open Access Data Journal.
- Author
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Wigdorowitz, Mandy, Ribary, Marton, Farina, Andrea, Lima, Eleonora, Borkowski, Daniele, Marongiu, Paola, Sorensen, Amanda H., Timis, Christelle, and McGillivray, Barbara
- Subjects
OPEN scholarship ,OPEN access publishing ,CONSCIOUSNESS raising ,SCHOLARLY periodicals ,SCIENTIFIC community - Abstract
Partaking in the editorial process of an academic journal is both a challenging and rewarding experience. It takes a village of dedicated individuals with a vested interest in the dissemination and sharing of high-quality research outputs. As members of the editorial team of an open access data journal, we reflect on the emergence of data-driven open research, a new journal genre (data paper), and a new journal type (data journal) in the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (AHSS). Access to data—the currency of empirical research—is valuable to the research community, crucial to scientific integrity, and leads to cumulative advancements in knowledge. It therefore requires significant investment and appropriate venues for dissemination. We illustrate the necessity of raising awareness about data-driven open research and best practices in data-driven publishing. We discuss how it involves building a community of authors and readers, establishing a company of editors, reviewers, and support staff, and passing on the practice, which has been challenging the status quo in research and publishing. Potential future directions are considered, including data peer review and reward, recognition, and funding structures for data sharing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. LA CONSTATACIÓN DEL VACÍO DE INVESTIGACIÓN EN HUMANIDADES: SU VARIACIÓN EN TESIS Y ARTÍCULOS DE INVESTIGACIÓN.
- Author
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MEZA, PAULINA and NASCIMENTO, AUGUSTO
- Subjects
- *
HUMANITIES , *HUMANITIES research , *ACADEMIC dissertations , *REPORT writing , *HUMANITIES education - Abstract
In this paper we present a classification of sources and the strategies used by writers of theses and research papers in order to identify a research gap in Humanities. Based both on a qualitative study and a corpus analysis, we aim to determine the variation of such communicative act (identifying a research gap) in theses and research papers in the Humanities. The results show that identifying a research gap is carried out in both genres, though it is more frequent in the theses, possibly due to its evaluative nature. Thus, regardless the genre, it is easy to present an own research gap (without the reference to other sources). Finally, data show that specific strategies for identifying a research gap in the Humanities are not the same in both genres that are analyzed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. James Graham-Campbell, Richard Hall, Judith Jesch, and David N. Parsons, eds. Vikings and the Danelaw: Select Papers from the Proceedings of the Thirteenth Viking Congress, Nottingham and York, 21-30 August 1997
- Author
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Jochens, Jenny
- Subjects
Vikings and the Danelaw: Select Papers from the Proceedings of the Thirteenth Viking Congress, Nottingham and York, 21-30 August 1997 (Book) ,Books -- Book reviews ,Humanities ,Literature/writing - Abstract
Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2001. Pp. xiii + 368. For its quadrennial meeting in 1987 the Viking Congress chose to focus on the Danelaw, an obvious choice since, beginning in the [...]
- Published
- 2002
49. Biographies of marble, wood, paint, and paper
- Author
-
McCallum, Mary Jane Logan
- Subjects
Humanities - Abstract
A response to Arini Loader, ''Kei Wareware': Remembering Te Rauparaha.' Biography 39.3 (Summer 2016): 339-65 Dear Arini, It has been wonderful--and somewhat intimidating--to read your essay ''Kei Wareware': Remembering Te [...]
- Published
- 2016
50. Experiential Learning and the University's Host Community: Rapid Growth, Contested Mission and Policy Challenge
- Author
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Buzzelli, Michael and Asafo-Adjei, Emmanuel
- Abstract
This paper examines the recent growth of experiential learning (EL) and the university-community (or so-called town-gown, TG) connections created as a result of this expansion. The research is framed by critical scholarship on the nature and role of the university and the place of liberal education specifically, as well as policy drivers aimed at social and economic impacts from EL. Two subthemes are also examined: first, the role of the arts, humanities and social sciences disciplines in EL expansion and, second, the extent to which TG connections focus on the university's local host community as opposed to more distant and even international arrangements. Mixed research methods including public document analysis and key informant interviews are used to document and interpret EL developments across nine varied universities in Ontario, Canada. The results underline broad sector commitment to EL that in turn creates new and different TG connections for the university. Rapid expansion has brought a variety of challenges identified both by universities and community EL partners. The paper concludes with discussion of policy implications and consideration of the future of EL in light of the 'digital pivot' of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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