Further Information on Readings Assignments

 

Informed participation

Why it’s graded: In graduate school, you learn from your peers and discussing information rather than just absorbing information via lectures. In virtually every graduate course, you’ll be expected to participate in class, and you’ll actually get much more from the class if you do so.

Grading criteria: Do you participate in a relevant way that shows that you’ve done the readings and thought about them?

 

Honor agreement

Why it’s assigned: To make sure you’re clear on what’s expected of you

Grading criteria: Whether you turn it in on time

 

Article summaries

Why they’re assigned: To give you early feedback on your understanding of research articles and ability to write about them clearly, succinctly, and using good scientific and APA style.

Grading criteria:

Understanding of article

            Writing and writing style

            APA style reference

            Avoidance of plagiarism

Notes on assignment: See link for an example. I’m looking for 1.5 to 2 pages, typed, double spaced, on each article summarizing why it was done (background), what was done (in general—who did what), what was found (no numbers, in words), and why we should care. The APA style reference for the article should appear at the top of the document, and you should turn in a copy of the article with the assignment (or you can email me a link or pdf).

 

Completion of Human Participants Training

Why it’s assigned: The training is required to serve as experimenter or PI on any studies you conduct alone or with others.

Grading criteria: Whether you turn it in on time

Notes on assignment:  Bring me two copies of the printed certificate—one for your file and one to send to the IRB office.

 

Completion of IRB form

Why it’s assigned: To help you understand what the questions are asking, so that when you do one for real, the process will go more quickly and smoothly.

Grading criteria:

Whether you answer the questions asked on the form

Whether I would have questions or concerns as a reviewer

How many revisions it takes until your study is approved

Notes on assignment:  The study you choose to describe can be one that you’ve made up or one that you get out of a journal (or even one you’ve done before as long as it’s not for a study you turned in to the UNI IRB). It doesn’t have to be an earth-shattering study (I’m not grading you on design except that it needs to make sense), but you should show that you’ve thought through the details—who would you recruit, how would you recruit them, etc. If you’re doing an article that you got from somewhere else and it doesn’t specify, make it up.

 

Conference information

Why it’s assigned: To encourage you to investigate conferences and get involved with research and/or career exploration

Grading criteria: Whether you accurately complete the assignment

Notes on assignment: Investigate 3 potential conferences for your research or to meet with practitioners in your field. For each conference, list the following:

  • Name of conference
  • Name of association
  • Website
  • Dates, whether annual, location
  • What types of presentations are there
  • Who can present
  • What the submissions deadlines are and what is required to be submitted
  • Why this conference would be a good one for you to attend/present at

Assignment should be typed and put in your own words. (don’t just cut and paste a glob from their website—show that you actually read and processed it)

 

Writing paper

Why it’s assigned: To get you thinking about what your goals are and how you can get there (writing goals down makes it more likely that you’ll reach them). To force you to start planning ahead.

Grading criteria:

            Thoughtfulness of your plan/ideas

            Grammar/writing

Notes on assignment: This one can be written informally, but it still needs to be written well and should be typed. In the writing plan, you’ll react to the information in the Silvia book and in class. The thesis is an impediment to graduation for some students—what will you do to ensure that it’s not one for you? How can/will you use the information you’ve learned here and elsewhere to keep your writing and research on track? What are your pitfalls you need to watch for?

             

List of faculty and choosing of thesis supervisor

Why it’s assigned: This one is actually a departmental requirement, not part of the class, but since you’re all in this class I’m putting it here so you’ll remember. The idea is to get you talking to faculty who might be thesis supervisors/committee members and finding out about how your and their research ideas mesh. And of course, to get you started on your thesis by identifying your supervisor.

Grading criteria: Turning it in on time

Notes on assignment: There is a departmental form I’ll send out that you’ll need to get your supervisor to sign (sometimes in the past there has been confusion over whether person X is chairing person Y’s thesis—this ensures that both parties are on the same page).

 

CV/Resume

Why it’s assigned: You’ll all need to do one eventually, and the more feedback you get, the better.

Grading criteria:

            Format

Content (not how much you’ve done, but how well you do describing what you’ve done)

Notes on assignment: You can do a regular resume, a scannable resume, or a CV, but let me know which it is. Grammar, etc. count here, as they will when you turn it in to a school or employer. If you already have a CV/resume, that’s great—just update it.

                                                 

Article review

Why it’s assigned: To give you practice reviewing articles. If you become a professor, you will do these “for real.” There are also journals that allow graduate students to serve as reviewers. But even if you never do another review, going through the process will help you understand and critique research that you’ll use in your thesis, in other papers, and in practice. It will also help you identify problems that you can fix in your own research and writing.

Grading criteria:

            Accuracy (whether your criticisms are valid)

            Clarity (how well I can understand what you’re getting at)

Notes on assignment: We’ll go through the entire process so you can see what it would be like to be a reviewer. You and some peers will individually review an article, then I’ll send the other reviews (blind) back to you along with my “editor’s letter.” This will also give you an idea of what it would be like to have your article reviewed (i.e., what those usually look like).

 

Integrative review

Why it’s assigned: To give you practice and feedback on writing more than just an article summary. One of the biggest problems that graduate students have is how to pull together research in a literature review. This will hopefully create some paragraphs you can use in your thesis and make the literature review writing part of your thesis (typically the hardest part) go more quickly and smoothly.

Grading criteria:

Accuracy

Clarity

Scientific writing style (using formal writing, using an appropriate amount of detail, using topic sentences and explaining/critiquing/commenting on results, etc.)

APA style

Notes on assignment: This review should be about 2-3 typed pages (in APA style) plus an APA style reference section. It should be something that you’re thinking about for your thesis, and that you could use as a subsection in your thesis literature review. Talk to me about topics if you’re not sure. 

 

APA presentation

Why it’s assigned: You need to have a good understanding of APA style for your classes and thesis. This is a way to get that information without necessarily reading every word of the manual. It also gives you more experience (and feedback from someone else) on a presentation.

Grading criteria:

            Content (do you accurately describe the important parts of the chapter/section)

            Style (are your PowerPoints well done, is your presentation style easy to follow and interesting, etc.)

            Understanding (how well can you answer people’s questions)

Notes on assignment: The presentation should be 10-15 minutes (no more than 15 even with questions) and include some audio-visual materials (e.g., PowerPoint). In your presentation, you should briefly outline the type of information to be found in your section and then point out information that you believe people are less likely to know. Don’t review things that everyone already likely knows or that wouldn’t generally be relevant.

 

Chapter 1: Justin Simmons

Chapter 2: Kristin Broussard

Chapter 3: Cori Klein

Chapter 4: Rachel Messinger

Chapter 5: Evan Zheng

Chapter 6: Brock Rozich

Chapter 7: Emily Bannitt                                 

Chapter 8: Michael Mintz

Appendices: Monica Ehn

 

APA style test

Why it’s assigned: Having a particular style in a field is important so that people can easily find the things they need. You’ll need APA style for your  papers in grad school, including your thesis, and for any presentations/publications you do. And people seem to have problems learning it (or at least applying it consistently), so hopefully being tested on it will inspire you! (in other words, I’m tired of marking up APA style errors on papers—we should be past that.)

Grading criteria: The test will be short answer (e.g., write the APA style reference for this article) and multiple choice (e.g., which of the following should you report with an ANOVA in a results section)