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第一吃瓜网

Students Gain Research Experience with College檚 Special Collections

history students working with Special Collections material

History students working with Special Collections material (photo provided).

第一吃瓜网 students can gain first-hand research experience with primary source materials, thanks to the college檚 . The Special Collections archive spans hundreds of years and encompasses books, papers, manuscripts, maps, photographs, and miscellaneous artifacts.

淲orking with primary source evidence can be engaging and inspiring, says Joe Cope, professor of history and special assistant to the provost. 淚t檚 a chance to connect directly with people in the past by interacting with the documents and artifacts that they created or worked with. 

The Special Collections extend far beyond the college檚 historical archive, explains , Special Collections librarian. The eight collections include local history papers and photographs about the Genesee Valley and its early settlers, as well as more esoteric materials: writings on Henry David Thoreau, recordings of traditional music and dance in New York State, and the X Collection, a resource containing rare, fragile, or valuable books and other objects.

淧ortions from all the collections have found their way into 第一吃瓜网檚 classes and help enhance the coursework, says Argentieri. 淭he items don檛 circulate, so students come into the to get up close and personal with the materials.

students with MS leaves

There檚 a thrill that comes from touching something that檚 centuries old, says Yvonne Seale, an associate professor of history whose students use the collections regularly. 淏ut having the opportunity to study a book or a manuscript closely and figure out something that no researcher has before is a great way of sparking a budding researcher檚 imagination.

Students in Seale檚 course Hacking the Middle Ages, a research skills seminar, have joked that the course turned into CSI 第一吃瓜网. While digitizing and cataloging archival materials, they discovered and corrected errors made by an original cataloger.

淔iguring out what happened in the past shifts from being an intellectual exercise to an active endeavor in which they are involved, says Seale.

Special Collections materials are surprisingly wide-ranging. Devin Prine 23, a sustainability studies major from Avon, NY, accessed first-hand accounts of lion hunts in the mid-1800s for a paper on the impact and ethics of big game hunting. Matthew McMullan 25, a history major from Wading River, NY, discovered a book on the causes of the Mexican-American War, published circa 1853, that he needed for a historiography paper.

淲orking with digitally uploaded sources can change the tone and structure of my writing, McMullan says. 淭he ability to read an original edition of the book helped shape my paper and strengthen my analysis of the source.

Knowing how to work with primary source materials is a core skill for historians. Still, the skill translates to many other disciplines as well, and the collection gets use from a number of departments. Art history students recently conducted in-depth research on Brodie Hall檚 architect Edgar Tafel, and associate professor of English Ken Cooper collaborated with Argentieri to create the Open Valley course, a digital humanities project interested in ecology.

Student access to the collection supports the college檚 integrative and applied learning graduation requirement, says Cope, which facilitates hands-on work and research outside of the classroom, including internships with local museums, local historians offices, and cultural centers.

淭his research also gives students a sense of the skilled and valuable work of preserving historical objects, cataloging knowledge, and making it searchable and accessible for other people, says Seale. 淔or students who go on to careers in data analysis, library and archival studies, or non-profit administration, this is a really vital understanding.

Author

Robyn Rime

Senior Writer & Editor

(585) 245-5529

rime@geneseo.edu

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