Call for Participants in Research Study about Historians’ Digital Skills
Announcing a call for participants in the research project, ‘The Lifelong Researcher: Supporting Doctoral Students’ Development of Digital Literacies’, which has been funded by the AHRC-RLUK Professional Practice Fellowship Scheme for research and academic libraries.
About the project: Digital skills are a fundamental part of historical research in the twenty-first century: historians produce, consume, and interact with all manner of information in online environments. This project will investigate the development of digital skills for research by doctoral students in history, through a series of interviews with PGR students themselves and the supervisors and librarians who support them. These conversations will explore what students, supervisors, and librarians regard as instances of successful or effective training and development, instances where current training and development has gaps, and possible future directions in digital skills training and development.
The study is being conducted by Dr Hope Williard, a historian and Academic Subject Librarian at the University of Lincoln, UK.
WHO CAN PARTCIPATE?
1) PhD Students who are currently enrolled on or recently graduated from a doctoral programme in history
2) Academic librarians who support doctoral students and researchers in history and humanities
3) Academics who supervise PGR students in history
WHAT DOES PARTICIPATION INVOLVE?
A 30-45 minute interview, via Teams or Zoom, in which you will be asked questions about your experiences and opinions of digital skills training and development.
FURTHER INFORMATION
To see and share a copy of this information in the form of a poster, please visit https://lncn.ac/researcher
This study has been reviewed and given favourable opinion by a University of Lincoln Research Ethics Committee.
Ethics reference: UoL2022_10058.
To take part or learn more, please email hwilliard@lincoln.ac.uk
Story submitted by Hope Williard
hwilliard@lincoln.ac.uk