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Get insights from history graduates on managing projects, utilizing resources, engaging archivists, and more. Discover valuable tips and tricks for navigating research in the historical field.
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1. Sense of Perspective • Make sure your project is manageable: you’ve only got a few years! • Play to your strengths: what do you know, and what makes you excited? • Organising your ideas: sources and concepts
2. Getting Around • When and where will your research be conducted? Plan ahead (think about applying for research and travel grants!) • Use the Long Vacation: there’s more time, and also more money for travel grants and expenses
3. Archival Awareness • Make sure when planning a visit that you know their rules (pencils/laptops only, please!) • Phone ahead, email (archivists have lives too). • Use the archivists’ knowledge! Stalls 12, 13,14, 15 & 17
4. Online resources • Archives come in many forms: online databases can save your life • Use the British Library and the US Library of Congress catalogues; they’re great for locating primary and secondary sources • Use COPAC to check holdings in other UK libraries; use Oxford e-resources; keep on top of the journals
5. Bibliography • Start this a.s.a.p • Use software or SOLO but use Word too • Psychologically, a long list of books read can be of immense value when you’re staring at a blank page Stall 23 Information Skills
6. Note-taking • It really pays to be anal about this • Don’t kill the trees • Work out your system and abbreviations at the start • If in doubt, attribute everything and keep the quotation marks; synthesise when you’re writing up Stall 23 Information Skills
7. Computing • Find out what OUCS can do for you. They offer computer support, a wide range of courses and great facilities. • Single-Sign-On (SSO) makes things far easier. But the internet can be temperamental, so keep your VPN. BACK UP YOUR WORK!!!!!!!!!
8. When to write • Writing can help the thinking process • Whatever works for you, but remember: a thesis should demonstrate a clear and consistent argument • Write up at the end? Or write as you go along? • Your supervisor or tutor can be your Yoda.
9. Making contact with other humans • http://www.history.ox.ac.uk/faculty/events.html Seminars and conferences • Don’t be afraid to go outside the Faculty and outside Oxford; most people will talk to you. Schama’s a bit scary, mind.
10. Seminars • Find out what seminars are going on both in Oxford (check faculty websites) and elsewhere (such as the IHR). • Seminars can be a great way of making contact with other graduates and researchers. • Listening to other people’s work can help you think about your own research in different ways.