Graduate Seminar 2022-2023: Difference between revisions

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'''These are the key dates for 2022-23'''
'''These are the key dates for 2022-23'''


*  November - Graduate Proposal Deadline This is a link to the 2021-22 proposals [[Graduate_Proposals_2021-2022]]
*  November - Graduate Proposal Deadline This is a link to [[Graduate_Proposals_2021-2022]]


A previous year's Graduate Proposals [[Graduate Proposals 2020-2021|last year's proposals]]
A previous year's Graduate Proposals [[Graduate Proposals 2020-2021]]


*  November - Thesis Outline Deadline   
*  November - Thesis Outline Deadline   

Revision as of 09:48, 18 May 2022

Link to last year's GRS wiki page:

Graduate Seminar 2021-2022


Intro to GRS:

Outcome: Project Proposal (trim 4)

Outcome: Thesis Outline (trim 4)

Outcome: Thesis (trim 4 & 5)

This is the page for the Graduate Research Seminar 2022-2023 run by Steve Rushton, Natasha Soobramanien and Marloes de Valk. The seminar will comprise individual tuition with Steve, Natasha or Marloes and group sessions on specific methods (including peer to peer commentary, editing, line-editing and proofing). The days set aside for the seminar will be devoted to achieving specific outcomes which further the research and completion of the proposal and thesis. This page will be used to upload information on your Project Proposal and Thesis and to serve as an ongoing record of research.

How The Sessions Are Structured

The sessions will be for all second year media students: Y2LB and Y2XPub. These will take the form of all-day workshops which will take place every other Thursday. The outcome of each session will be published on the wiki (or Pad) and reviewed by the group. Sessions will include group work, individual work and individual tutorials with Marloes, Natasha & Steve. Achievable aims will be set ahead of the next session. 

Key Dates and Deadlines

These are the key dates for 2022-23

A previous year's Graduate Proposals Graduate Proposals 2020-2021

  • November - Thesis Outline Deadline

A previous year's Thesis Outlines Thesis Outlines 2020-2021

  • Dec - Deadline First Chapter
  • Feb - Deadline First Draft Thesis
  • March - Deadline Second Draft thesis (texts to 2nd readers)
  • Early April - Deadlines Second readers' comments
  • Mid April - DEADLINE THESIS


Grading procedure (Thesis):

Early May: Steve, Marloes and Natasha draft feedback on the thesis texts they supervised

Mid-May: Steve, Marloes and Natasha review each other’s feedback and grades

End of May: Finalize feedback and grades.

Early June: Finalized feedback and grades communicated to students.

Guides and Guidelines

Graduate_proposal_guidelines

Second Readers Guidelines

A Guide to Essay Writing (including guide to Harvard method).

Handbook details- thesis and final project

Thesis Guidelines

Criteria for evaluation (Thesis)

LB Code link (in progress)

https://pad.xpub.nl/p/LB-groupcritprotocals


Lens Based 2022 Text on Practice

Texts on Practice 2022 (a good basis for your project proposal)

Session One

Hosted by Steve, Natasha and Marloes Outcome session one: introductions of all students and writing tutors, outline of basic GRS plan for the year.

https://pad.xpub.nl/p/GRS1-2022-3

Pad for note taking and reference during the session. Here is the pad from last year's session:

Preparation for session one

What have you been making?

What do you want to do next?

Be prepared to give an account of where you are at with your self-directed research and talk about what you want to achieve this year and what you want to do. Lens-based students will give brief demos of current work flow. How have you been using the 2 week cycle between tutorials with Steve to make work?. Xpub students will talk about the work they have been doing on the Special Issues (individually and collectively). All students will be asked to consider what possibilities they wish to explore in the coming year.

Think concretely about what you want to make this year, how you are going to make it and why you are going to make it. Consider: What possibilities are open to you? (It is understood that making a final project is a process and things will change as you work on it). What material have you written (for previous presentations, descriptions of work , assignments for last year's methods class, the methods of annotation you developed &c) which you can use? Review the written feedback from tutors you got from previous assessments and have it available for reference during the first session.


The tutors will talk to you about doing a "hackpact" ahead of the next session (remember the notation exercises from trim 3 Xpub?)

Session Two

Outcome session two: Draft Project Proposal

Methods: outline on pad - discussion on draft proposal - hackpact show and tell

1 What do you want to make?
2 How do you plan to make it?
3 What is your timetable?
4 Why do you want to make it?
5 Who can help you and how?
6 Relation to previous practice
7 Relation to a larger context
8 References/bibliography
  • groups of 3 discuss drafts and write feedback on pad (1 writer who takes notes, 2 readers/respondents who discuss)
  • end of session, preparations needed for next session

Session Three

The presentation slides:

File:Session-2-slides.pdf


11:00 - 17:00

OUTCOME: THESIS OUTLINE :

• Morning: a short presentation with whole group,

  • break, split into 3 groups for drafting the outline.

• 11:00 - 13:00 introduction

  • Past students’ theses (Marloes will show different examples). 10 mins +Q&A
  • What's a thesis, how to go about writing an outline (Steve). 10 mins + Q&A
  • Resources and referencing (where to find texts and books, how to reference them in Harvard style; the Bootleg library &c. (Natasha) 10 mins + Q&A.
       Shadow libraries: https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Interfacing_the_law#Resources
  • Homework for next session:

1) Hackpakt!

2) Continue to work on thesis outline and proposal

• 13:00 - 14:00 Break

• 14:00 - 15:30 Writing

• 15:30 - 17:00 Review in small groups of 3/4