Assignments
Multimedia
web portfolio
Multimedia web research project
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Multimedia
web portfolio
The
first assignment of your senior capstone seminar is an electronic
portfolio that illustrates your learning and development as
a women's studies major or concentrator. This portfolio
encourages you to examine what you have done and how you have
changed, both intellectually and personally, through your examinations
of gender across the humanities, natural sciences
and social sciences disciplines. The portfolio assignment asks
you to pursue two intertwined goals:
-
Integrative
thinking: Constructing coherent relationships among the
different parts of your work within the women's studies
major or concentration
-
Reflective
thinking: Examination of your intellectual and personal
growth through the unfolding of your women's studies
major or concentration
MEMOIR
ESSAY
The
center of this assignment is your memoir essay, in which you
examine your learning and development and analyze the ways
in which your assumptions, abilities, understandings, commitments
and/or future plans have grown or shifted during your work
in the Women's Studies Program. The
essay will be presented in one or more web pages, supplemented
by additional materials. Consider
the following questions as flexible guidelines as you construct
your essay:
- Why
did you choose to become a women's studies major or concentrator?
What influenced that decision?
- Can you
point to events or people in your college career that particularly
shaped your intellectual and personal development as a women's
studies major or concentrator? Consider particular courses,
professors, students, books, off-campus programs, research
projects, internships or organizational work.
- When
you look back at assignments from earlier
women's studies courses, do you see evidence
of changes in your understandings of gender, sexuality,
oppression, scientific research, theology or social structures?
Do you
see changes in your scholarly abilities as a writer, analyst
or researcher? Which
assignments best illustrate these changes, and
why?
- In what
ways has your women's studies major or concentration challenged
you to critically examine your own behavior, values and assumptions?
- How has
your women's studies major or concentration shaped
your plans
for post-college life?
SUPPLEMENTARY
COMPONENTS
Additional
relevant materials will support your memoir essay. Possibilities
for these supplementary components include:
- significant
work from previous women's studies courses (e.g., papers,
reports, poetry, artwork)
- work
you have created in courses outside of the Women's Studies
Program that helps explain your views on gender and feminist
analysis (e.g., music, artwork, posters)
- work
you have created specifically for this portfolio (e.g., photos,
audio clips, bibliographies)
- links
to web sites that are particularly significant to your views,
experiences or future plans
- music,
art or other public media that have been particularly influential
to your development within women's studies
The IIT HelpDesk can
provide digital cameras and other equipment that will allow
you to generate original supplementary materials for your portfolio. Materials
that are not original can be incorporated into your portfolio
only with full documentation and/or copyright permission. Remember
that fair-use and copyright laws apply to internet materials
in the same way that they apply to books and journal articles
obtained through campus library sources.
Supplementary
materials must be presented within an analytical and explanatory
context. For example, avoid constructions such as "I
wrote this paper in Women's Studies 121," followed
by a hyperlink to a Word document. Instead, clearly explain
why the paper was an influential project for you and how
it affected your understanding or knowledge, providing links
only to the most significant documents.
GENERAL
REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES
- A
web design and training session will be held in Rolvaag 250
on Thursday, Feb. 26. A follow-up web design work session
will be held in Rolvaag 250 on Thursday, March 11.
- The
multimedia web portfolio is due at 5 p.m. Friday
April 2 and
is worth 40% of
the total course grade. Unexcused
late portfolios lose 5% of full credit for each day beyond
the due date.
- Your
portfolio will be viewable from computers within the St.
Olaf local area network (see portfolios
created by students in the 2002-03
senior capstone seminar).
As a result, your audience will include current and potential
women's studies majors and concentrators who are curious
about the Women's Studies
Program. This wider audience means that you should
exclude any material you are not willing or that
is not appropriate to share with campus
viewers.
- All files
associated with your portfolio must be contained within a
single folder (a few essential guidelines such as this will
be presented during web design training on Feb. 26). To submit
your portfolio on the due date, give the folder a name that
clearly identifies you (e.g., "Breen Portfolio")
and then copy your entire folder to our course's DropBox
folder on the L:Classes/Brit drive.
- Make
use of web and multimedia technology but do not let the
technology take center stage, for that is where your integrative
and reflective thinking belong. Keep your web design simple
and straightforward, and keep your analytical thinking
first and foremost. If in doubt about how to proceed, you
are encouraged to consult with the Multimedia
Development Center.
GRADING
CRITERIA
An
excellent multimedia web portfolio will demonstrate:
- thoughtful,
reflective analysis of your learning and development as
a women's studies major or concentrator, and the
program's integration with other parts of your personal
and academic career
- appropriate,
relevant, original supplementary materials that are explained
in context
- clarity
of organization and writing, both within the memoir essay
and in the web portfolio as a whole
- ease
of navigation and visually appealing design
- no
errors in spelling, punctuation, grammar or sentence structure
- creative
intellectual engagement with the assignment
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Multimedia
web research project
A
second important part of your senior capstone seminar is an
independent multimedia research project that addresses
cross-cultural and/or international feminism. You will
construct a web site that explains your project’s thesis,
methods, literature review, evidence, arguments and conclusions.
The online project
also will incorporate relevant supplementary materials, which
may include electronic documents, photos, graphics
and/or video/audio clips. Although the projects are individually
based and evaluated, collaboration among class members is encouraged.
REQUIRED
COMPONENTS
Unlike
a printed research paper that must proceed sequentially, your
web-based project can assume a variety of organizational structures,
depending on the needs of your topic and your intellectual
and creative approach. No matter what organizational arrangement
you choose, your project must include the following elements:
- An introductory
page that describes the project and provides a clear navigational
framework
- A literature
review of the significant published research that is relevant
to your project
- A description
of your methodology: Will this project be based on interviews,
historical analysis, reliance on secondary
research, interpretative textual analysis or some other methodological
approach?
- A presentation
of the empirical evidence and your analysis of that evidence
- A conclusion
that describes the significant outcomes of your project and
its implications for our knowledge and understanding of cross-cultural
and/or international feminism
- A complete
works-cited list that follows a recognized citation style.
(One modification, however: Because an indented format is
not possible on web pages, double-space between each reference.)
SUPPLEMENTARY
COMPONENTS
The
multimedia format of this research project allows you to integrate
textual and nontextual displays of your empirical evidence
(e.g., photos, audio clips, text documents,
graphics, maps) and other supplementary materials that will
help your readers gain greater knowledge of the project. However,
the supplementary components can be a distraction if they are
not directly relevant to your project, so you are urged to
vigorously seek these additional materials but keep your standards
of entry high.
The IIT HelpDesk can
provide digital cameras and other equipment that will allow
you to generate original supplementary materials for your research
project. Materials that are not original
can be incorporated into your project's web pages only with
full documentation and/or copyright permission. Remember that
fair-use and copyright laws apply to internet materials in
the same way that they apply to books and journal articles
obtained through campus library sources.
GENERAL
REQUIREMENTS AND GUIDELINES
- Project
topics are due Tuesday, March 16. Based on those topics,
reference librarian Elizabeth Hutchins will lead a research
session on strategies and possible sources on Tuesday, March
30 in Rolvaag 355.
- A
2-3 page prospectus of your research project and an annotated
bibliography of at least five sources is due Thursday, April
8. This prospectus must identify the research topic you have
selected
and outline
the analytical and methodological approaches
you plan to use. The prospectus and bibliography will be
returned with extensive comments but will be ungraded. This
research prospectus should clearly answer the following questions:
- What
is the question you are asking? How is it connected
to cross-cultural and/or international feminism?
- What
methodological approach will you use, and why? (Note:
A wide range of research methodologies is applicable
in this interdisciplinary seminar, but you must be
clear about what approach you intend to pursue and
why it is appropriate for your topic.)
- Which
areas of scholarly research will be needed as a foundation
for your project? (Note: Sources within these areas
also are logical entries in your annotated bibliography.)
- Research
project work sessions will be held in Rolvaag 250 during
our class periods on April 13, 20, 27 and May 4.
- A complete
version of the research project that is ready for class presentation
is due Tuesday, May 4.
- The final
three class periods—May 6, 11 and 13—will be
devoted to class presentations and critiques in Viking Theater.
- The final
version of the research project is due Thursday,
May 13 and
is worth 40% of the total course
grade. Technical troubleshooting is allowed after
the due date but no changes in content are accepted. Unexcused
late projects lose 5% of full credit for each day beyond
the due date.
- Public
presentation and discussion of the research portfolios will
take place in Viking Theater Wednesday, May 19 from
2:30 to 4:30 pm.
- All files
associated with your research project must be contained within
a single folder. To submit your project on the due date,
give the folder a name that clearly identifies you (e.g., "Breen
Project") and then copy your entire folder to our course's
DropBox folder on the L:Classes/Brit drive.
- As part
of our growing archive of senior majors' and concentrators'
research, projects will be permanently linked from the Women's
Studies Program’s web page for future viewing on the
internet (see
research projects created
by students in the 2002-03
senior capstone seminar).
GRADING
CRITERIA
An
excellent research project will demonstrate:
- original
analysis based on significant research and familiarity with
the relevant scholarly literature
- a clear
connection with cross-cultural and/or international feminism
- all required
components
- relevant
supplementary materials that improve the project's analytical
value
- clarity
of organization and writing throughout the research project
components
- ease
of navigation and visually appealing design
- thorough,
accurate documentation of research sources
- no errors
in spelling, punctuation, grammar or sentence structure
- creative
intellectual engagement with the assignment
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