Library Carrel Applications will be available from Wednesday, August 19th at 9AM – Wednesday, September 16th at 4:30PM. You can apply at: hamp.it/carrel
Click on this link for more details and the application: https://www.hampshire.edu/library/carrel-request-process
Div III Student Blogs and Websites
Many students create blogs or websites as part of their Division III work. Please add yours to the mix for your peers and future Div III students to learn more about your Div III experience! Send the link and a brief description to archives@hampshire.edu. It will be posted to the Div III Blog Showcase page on this site.
Submit Your Div III to the Library!!!!
Once you think you are done, there is really one more step – publishing your work!
Preserve your Div III and make it accessible to future Div III students by submitting a copy to the library’s Division III Archive.
The Division III Archive, maintained by the Harold F. Johnson Library at Hampshire College, preserves and provides access to Division III works in perpetuity. Works are submitted by their creators. The digital Division III Archive contains works from 2006 to the present. (Print copies of text-based Division III projects submitted to the library by students from 1971-2014 are available on the second floor of the library, or in the Div III Showcase on the library’s main floor)
Read the The Division III Archive: Submission Instructions on the web, or download them (pdf).
Preparing the final version of your written Div III
We’ve created a formatting guide for students whose Div III project takes the form of a thesis (or has a significant written component). The guide, Div III Formatting Help, offers resources for arranging your manuscript, citing sources, adding visuals, creating a table of contents, writing an abstract, making a cover page, and submitting the final document to the Hampshire College Archives.
We compiled this guide based on questions we received from Div III students last year. If there’s a step, an issue, or a process we missed, please comment and we’ll look for more helpful content to add to the guide.
If you have questions about archiving your Div III, or just want to learn more about what that process entails, the Library is offering an “Archiving Your Div III” workshop on Thursday April 23 at 3:30PM in the Hill-Urbina Room (Library 3rd floor).
Write an abstract for your Div III
An abstract helps orient your reader to your Division III. Here are a few helpful resources for writing an abstract.
From the Commonwealth Honors Program at UMass: https://www.honors.umass.edu/capstone-experience-guidelines-abstract-writing
From the University of Wisconsin-Madison, examples of abstracts from different fields (including the arts): http://writing.wisc.edu/Handbook/presentations_abstracts_examples.html
From OWL Purdue: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/656/01/
Every Div III Paper Deserves a Title Page
Make sure your Div III has a title page! It is helpful to your faculty, but is especially important if you are sharing your work beyond the committee. You can download a Word document that can act as a template here: DIVIII_TitlePage
Fulbright Info Session
Did you know that in 2014, four Hampshire students won Fulbright awards to spend nine months either teaching English or conducting research in Bulgaria, Mexico, South Korea, and Thailand?
The Fulbright U.S. Student Program is the largest U.S. exchange program offering opportunities for students and young professionals to undertake international graduate study, advanced research, university teaching, and primary and secondary school teaching worldwide. The program currently awards approximately 1,900 grants annually in all fields of study, and operates in more than 140 countries worldwide. Read more on the CORC website!
The application cycle for a 2016-17 grant begins this spring and culminates with deadlines in the fall of 2015. Come explore this amazing opportunity at the upcoming Information Session at CORC. Carin and Jena, Hampshire’s Fulbright Program Advisers, will review grant types as well as application requirements and timelines–and, of course, answer your individual questions.
DATE: Monday, March 2
TIME: 5:00-6:00pm
WHERE: CORC Office, 3rd floor of the library
Digital Humanities Student Workshop
Come for a workshop with Professor Sonya Donaldson
Friday, February 20th, 9:30am-12:00pm
This workshop for students will provide an introduction to digital humanities tools and discourses. Professor Donaldson will give an overview of the digital platform, Omeka, and discuss possibilities for working with other social media tools to represent student work. This workshop is appropriate for students interested in discussing digital humanities as praxis, for students with emerging knowledge of these discourses and tools, as well as students who are new to digital humanities tools and discourses. Interested students should contact Jackie Jeffery at jmjDO@hampshire.edu to register.
Using Styles in Word
You are likely in writing-like-crazy mode. Save yourself some time and help yourself stay organized by using “styles” in Word. These will help you with formatting, with navigation through your document, and with creating a table of contents! Watch this video to learn more!
Global Connections Event
Postponed to Monday February 16th 3:30 – 5:00
The Global Education Office’s second annual Global Connections event in the Prescott Tavern. This event brings returning study abroad students and international students together to share their intercultural personal experiences and perspectives. There will be a series of large and small group activities that encourage reflection, foster connections, and give attendees a space through which they can begin to translate what they have learned.
Finalist photographs from the 2014 GEO See(n) Photo Contest will also be on display. Light refreshments and snacks will be provided.