Logistics for Grassroots History

 

This page describes what type of course the seminar is and how it is adapted to delivery via the Internet.

 

What Is a Seminar?

 

Prof. Isern's thought on this question is shaped both by personal experience in teaching and by the writings of two monumental predecessors in the field, Herbert Baxter Adams and Walter Prescott Webb. A seminar is a company of developing scholars working under the leadership of an established scholar. Participants in a seminar are not just students, they are members, and contributors. In a seminar,

 

·        The members are self-motivated to pursue their studies, from which they contribute knowledge and insights for the benefit of the group.

 

·        The role of the professor is that of guide, counselor, and scholarly model, not font of knowledge.

 

·        All participants are committed to the success not only of themselves but also of their colleagues and of the seminar overall.

 

These principles are stated here because they embody the spirit of a seminar and the expectations of seminarians. If this is what you want, come on in!

 

Adapting the Seminar to the Internet

 

The seminar, as much as any standard form of instruction in History, is adaptable to the Internet. Yes, something is lost in that we do not physically assemble at a table to talk, jest, and enlighten one another. On the other hand, things are gained by using this medium. Obviously, the Internet takes the seminar to people who otherwise could not participate. It overcomes the traditional tyranny of distance in life on the plains. Moreover, this spatial distribution, incurred as a matter of necessity, itself becomes a virtue. We all enrich one another the more because we are in different places, researching and writing from different perspectives. It is a fascination as well as an education to meet, virtually, with colleagues scattered from Medicine Lodge to Medicine Hat. Here, then, are the elements in the adaptation of the seminar to the Internet.

 

1.      The seminar on the Internet is an asynchronic course. Everyone in it is at a different point of progress toward completion. Any new member joins a company of scholars who are farther along in the course and who can offer encouragement and guidance.

 

2.      The framework for study is provided by this website. It is more than a syllabus; it is the course of study and point of common reference.

 

3.      All work done for the seminar is submitted to colleagues, including me, via the e-mail discussion list, the Pastime, and via posting to the weblog, the Pastime Annex. We all read one another's work and comment on it. The list is where community emerges in the seminar.

 

Stuff You Need for "Grassroots History"

 

The technical requirements are nothing unusual. You need

 

·        Routine access to the World Wide Web, because the website is the framework for the seminar.

 

·        An e-mail account, in your own name, so that you can communicate with me and participate in Pastime discussions.

 

·        Microsoft Word, for word processing. We need to be on the same page for software, because we will be distributing papers to one another as digital files.

 

What about access to research materials, since this is a research seminar? Remember the basic scheme of the course—studying the history of the Great Plains on a local level. The presumption is that you will choose a topic for which sources will be readily available. On the other hand, however local the topic, it will be necessary to review more general literature in order to set your findings into context. So you will need library services.

 

Virtual Seminar Table – the place to meet your colleagues

Two Important References for Communications in the Seminar

Pastime – the place to talk about your work

 

HIST 710