[Air-L] acceptable sources for undergraduate research in new media fields

Christopher Richter crichter at hollins.edu
Wed Oct 20 10:53:05 PDT 2010


On the "Our Virginia" textbook issue, see also The Atlantic's web page, http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2010/10/understanding-virginias-history-textbook-lie/64859/ 

Yes, Virginia, we really do call that education. . . in Virginia

Christopher J. Richter

Associate Professor, Communication Studies
Hollins University
8015 Quadrangle Lane
PO Box 9652
Roanoke, VA 24020-1652

Tel: 5403626358
Fax: 5403626286
crichter at hollins.edu 
www.hollins.edu 


-----Original Message-----
From: air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org [mailto:air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org] On Behalf Of Deen Freelon
Sent: Wednesday, October 20, 2010 1:34 PM
To: Air-L
Subject: Re: [Air-L] acceptable sources for undergraduate research in new media fields

On the subject, the Washington Post serves up a really striking object 
lesson in the perils of improper internet sourcing today: a 4th-grade 
history textbook's claim that "thousands" of blacks fought for the 
Confederacy during the American Civil War. Rejected by most credible 
historians, this claim is espoused by the Sons of Confederate Veterans, 
a revisionist organization whose work the author uncritically 
incorporated from the open web.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/19/AR2010101907974.html?nav=rss_email/components

~DEEN

On 10/20/10 8:46 AM, Gilbert B. Rodman wrote:
> Let me second what Todd said ...
>
> ... and add one more wrinkle.  I require students doing research 
> projects in my classes to include a certain number of "qualifying 
> sources" (one of the criteria being that the work in question has to 
> be scholarly in nature) ... but anything above and beyond those 
> qualifying sources is fair game.  After all, I don't want them to 
> *avoid* sources that might actually provide them with useful 
> information.  I simply want to make sure that they engage in a 
> particular type of research as part of the overall process.
>
> cheers
> gil
>
> On 10/20/2010 10:34 AM, Todd Harper wrote:
>> While I understand where you're coming from in not wanting freshmen to
>> simply rattle off the top 5 google hits for their topic, I'm not sure 
>> that
>> banning internet sources is going to accomplish the goal you're 
>> setting out
>> to do. As you say, the more recent your topic, the more publication 
>> delay
>> and other factors bite into your available sources on it.
>>
>> My suggestion (and one that has worked reasonably well for me) is to 
>> spend
>> some time with them identifying what the difference between a
>> credible/acceptable source and a non-credible source is, at least in 
>> terms
>> of what you consider those things to be. The usual offender here for 
>> me is
>> Wikipedia; while there is a time and a place for citing a Wikipedia 
>> article,
>> for example, I've had students use it as the end-all-be-all of 
>> knowledge on
>> any given subject. This usually leads to me walking them through a
>> recently-vandalized Wikipedia page's history (my favorite was a page 
>> for the
>> *Transformers* animated shows that replaced all the image captions 
>> with rap
>> lyrics) and explaining the ups and downs of wikis as information 
>> sources.
>>
>> I think if you make it clear that "JOE BOB'S SUPER AWESOME GLEE 
>> BLOG!" is
>> not a credible source, but the actual show website from Fox is, 
>> they'll get
>> the drift. I just feel like, in banning Google as a research tool, 
>> you are
>> inadvertently keeping good, useful sources out of the hands of your 
>> students
>> in an attempt to get them not to use it poorly. If you spend the time to
>> walk them through how to determine is information is reliable, 
>> credible, and
>> substantiated instead, I think you will reap greater rewards in the long
>> run.
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 10:57 AM, Tery G<teryg93 at gmail.com>  wrote:
>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> I teach a freshman level class called Digital Media Literacy. It's an
>>> introduction to concepts and tools related to digital media. Each 
>>> student
>>> does a final project, which, of course, requires them to do research. I
>>> spend a lot of time with them -- read articles, give examples, do some
>>> hands-on work, etc. -- covering why Google in particular and 
>>> websites in
>>> general are not the sources they should be using (or trusting). They 
>>> know
>>> how to use the library databases, but the topics they're examining 
>>> are so
>>> new that anything in peer-reviewed journals about those topics is 
>>> dated.
>>>
>>> Does anyone have suggestions about what might be acceptable 
>>> resources in
>>> this situation? I let them use articles from *The New York Times* and
>>> the *Journal
>>> of Computer-Mediated Communication*, but I have difficulty 
>>> justifying their
>>> not using some other sources I really would prefer they not use when 
>>> they
>>> can't find new enough information in the peer-reviewed journals.
>>>
>>> TIA,
>>> Tery Griffin
>>>
>>> Associate Professor of Media Arts
>>> Wesley College
>>> Dover DE 19901
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>>
>>
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-- 
Deen Freelon
Ph.D. Candidate, Dept. of Communication
University of Washington
dfreelon at uw.edu
http://dfreelon.org/


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