Submissions due: Friday, February 20, 2015.
Winners notified: Monday, March 16, 2015
Award Ceremony: March 30th-April 3rd. 2015 (TBD)
Honors Convocation: Friday, April 17, 2015
Winners' research projects due in final form: Wednesday, May 20, 2015
In 2014 the ALURA Committee recognized two scholars.
Michelle Hahn and Dr. John Glover (History)
Mounika Parimi with Dr. Katherine Baber (Music)
Submit Application Form, Research Reflection Essay, Faculty Statement of Support, and your research project for consideration for the award. Send your application package via email to:
Armacost Library Undergraduate Research Award Committee
c/o Lua Gregory
lua_gregory@redlands.edu
Lua Gregory, First Year Experience Librarian (Chair)
The proliferation of electronic information has made undergraduate research a much more complex process than in the past. This award was established to reward those students who demonstrate thoughtfulness and creativity in their approach to research and whose work exhibits excellence in critical thinking. We seek submissions from undergraduate students across the curriculum whose research journeys have resulted in a research-based project (paper, poster, exhibition, performance, or other non-traditional research project).
In previous years the ALURA Committee has awarded $500.00 to a single scholar or has split the award between two scholars.
What do we mean by "research"? For this award we define research as an investigation into the existing scholarship and/or creative production in a particular subject area or in relation to specific research questions. If the primary focus of your project is lab experiments or data gathering and analysis, your Research Reflection Essay should discuss the current state of scholarship related to your research and how that work helped shape your hypothesis, methodology, etc.
Currently enrolled University of Redlands undergraduate students may submit completed research (or made significant progress toward completing) that
The ALURA Committee is looking for evidence of the following in both the research project and Research Reflection Essay:
Carefully review the ALURA Rubric so that you know how the selection committee will be evaluating your research project and Research Reflection Essay.
*In the event the Selection Committee determines that no research project meets the criteria outlined above, there will be no award given for that year.
The Research Reflection Essay is a 750-1000 word document is the most important part of your application. Please note that due to the nature of this award, the Reflection Essay portion of your submission is heavily weighted, and therefore we encourage you to provide us with a thoughtful and thorough reflection of your research experience.
The Reflection Essay provides an opportunity for you to demonstrate the ways in which library research has supported, enhanced, and broadened the academic work you are submitting. Tell us about your research process and how your discovery, choice, and use of sources fit into that process.
The Reflection Essay is a place for you to talk about your engagement with the resources you used. We want to know how your interactions with library staff, faculty, fellow students, and others, and with library services and collections made a difference in your research.
The research process will vary by discipline, and not every student will interact with library staff, services, and collections in the same way. While the traditional text-based academic genre of the research paper may have more obvious library connections, we encourage students engaged in other kinds of research to think carefully and creatively about how you have searched for, evaluated, and synthesized various information sources throughout your overall research journey. Your lab or field research is likely grounded in a comprehensive literature review, how did gathering and processing that information reinforce or change your research methods in the lab or field? Your research may have culminated in a performance or exhibit, likely informed by background investigation and inquiry; if so, how is that reflected in the final product?
Carefully review the ALURA Rubric so that you know what the selection committee will be looking for in your Reflection Essay.
Meet with your subject librarian to discuss how to write an effective, award-winning Reflection Essay.
Each student application must include a Faculty Statement of Support as part of the application package. Your expert disciplinary assessment is an important consideration in the evaluation process. In your letter of support please specifically comment upon quality (including merit within the discipline and student ability); student engagement with library staff, services, and collections; and their collaboration with faculty, peers, and/or community experts in developing and completing the project.
We also ask that you commit to attending the Award Ceremony that will take place the week of March 30th, 2015 (TBD). At that ceremony student winners and their faculty sponsors speak about the research project and their experience of the research process.
Your letter should include:
The paper/project and Research Reflection Essay will be judged according to the evalutation criteria outlined on the ALURA Rubric.
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