Question

Undergraduates in the Archives – Question 2

By Kevin Gotkin, Benjamin Hebblethwaite, Timothy B. Powell, Suzy Taraba, Sarah Werner
April 2013

2What are the benefits of doing so, pedagogically and intellectually?

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My experience in the archive directly contributed to my interest in graduate school, which is perhaps unsurprising when you think about the demands of archival work. The move from undergraduate to graduate study shares the guiding principles of archival work.

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There were many benefits working with these undergraduates. The undergraduates selected to work for this project were balanced bilinguals who demonstrated robust literacy in English and Haitian Creole, which I was able to assess since they had taken my intermediate Haitian Creole course.

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The most obvious benefit to Penn students is the opportunity to work on a project designed to be used by Native American community members and to hear the voices of elders. Penn, unfortunately, has no Native American faculty working in the field of American Indian studies, and the state of Pennsylvania has no Indian reservations.

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Engagement is a clear benefit. Many students are visibly excited, even awed, by their first visit to our Davison Rare Book Room, where the class sessions take place. The room is itself beautiful, echoing an eighteenth-century English gentleman’s library with glass-fronted bookcases and walnut paneling. The setting, combined with the intriguing materials presented, often inspires students to focus especially closely on the objects on display.

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I think the biggest benefit of bringing students into special collections through this course is that students own the process of discovery. In many undergraduate humanities courses, students learn about a subject through reading about it and, sometimes, conducting research on a topic of their choosing. But their research is rarely significant in terms of discovering new knowledge or generating a new perspective on something.

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Kevin Gotkin

BA in Media, Culture, and Communication, Class of 2011 – NYU
PhD Student, Annenberg School for Communication – University of Pennsylvania

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Benjamin Hebblethwaite

Assistant Professor, Department of Languages, Literature & Culture – University of Florida
PI, The Vodou Archive

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Timothy B. Powell

Director, Native American Projects – American Philosophical Society
Senior Lecturer, Department of Religious Studies – University of Pennsylvania
Editor, Gibagadinamaagoom: An Ojibwe Digital Archive

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Suzy Taraba

Head of Special Collections and University Archivist – Wesleyan University

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Sarah Werner

Undergraduate Program Director – Folger Shakespeare Library

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Source: http://www.archivejournal.net/roundtable/undergraduates-in-the-archives-question-2/