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Syllabus Guidelines for
Designing a
Sophomore Research Seminar
What is an SRS?
Syllabus Guidelines for Designing a
Sophomore Research Seminar
When approving SRS courses, the Gen Ed
Board will look for the integration of skills and content. This
document provides guidelines to help you design your syllabus.
Guidelines for your syllabus:
Learning objectives and plans for integrating skills
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Have
you indicated key research topics to be discussed? These
should include, but need not be confined to, the following:
framing a research question; identifying and analyzing
secondary and, depending on the discipline, primary sources;
creating a thesis; constructing an argument. |
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Have
you indicated plans for integrating skills, such as the
timing in relation to the course, assigned books or handouts
addressing writing and research methods, a Library visit to
discuss use of online and other sources, etc.? |
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IF
your class will be analyzing primary sources, have you
indicated (in a general way) what these are (e.g., students
will interview retired GE scientists; students will look at
old newspapers)? How will you be discussing the gathering
of primary sources (e.g., a class on how to survey and
interview)? |
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Have
you described a sequence of at least three written
assignments for the research paper with intervening
instructor or instructor-guided feedback and student
revision? Feedback could include peer review, conferences
with the instructor, class feedback on oral presentations,
and/or written comments from the instructor.
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Possibilities for Research Paper Assignment Sequences:
These are suggestions to give you ideas about how to design your
sequence of assignments. You are free, of course, to design the
assignments in some other way as long as you include at least 3
stages with review and revision:
Stage 1:
Preliminary assignment possibilities:
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A statement of the research
question/s and an annotated bibliography
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A preliminary thesis statement and a
summary of methods
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A thesis statement and a preliminary
outline
Stage 2:
Feedback on one section of the paper:
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Introduction: exploration of the
question/thesis and background information
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Literature review: summary and
synthesis of what relevant sources say about the topic/issue
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Section of the body: One time
period, issue, or sub-topic of the larger question; data
analysis, etc.
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Oral presentation on progress with
feedback from the class and instructor
Stage 3:
Feedback on a rough draft:
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Students could be asked to submit a
complete rough draft for feedback or a partial draft.
Instructors might want to consider peer review and/or staggered
deadlines so that the time spent responding to papers is easier
to manage.
Stage 4: Final draft |