120 · Representative Documents: Workshops and Tutorials
UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
FIRE Talks: Ethics and Dissemination
http://koerner.library.ubc.ca/services/research-commons/fire-talks/2012-2013-fire-talks/research-ethics/
Ethics and Dissemination |Koerner Library
http://koerner.library.ubc.ca/services/research-commons/fire-talks/2012-2013-fire-talks/research-ethics/[8/19/13 11:03:19 AM]
Sarah Rudrum’s doctoral research is an institutional ethnography of maternity care and childbirth in a rural northern
Uganda community. This talk examines ethical dimensions of research in difficult settings, and addresses the following
questions: (How) Does working in a difficult setting influence research design? What is your responsibility to
participants who are experiencing pressing needs?
Knowing Your Audience: Acculturation of Speech Genres as a Method of Support for Disseminating
Knowledge
By: Matthew Waugh
Bakhtin (1986) conceptualized speech genres as our utterances and chains of utterances in our formal and informal
language as having typical kinds of function and expression arising out of situated, social interactions. These
interactions occur within classroom dialogue between teachers and students, among community members during round
table discussions or brief exchanges between colleagues at the office. Speech genres are not only embedded in our
oral communication but our literary work as well, including essays and journal articles and even the quick email. Within
daily discourse there are speakers and listeners, writers and readers with various speech genres being utilized in
purposeful and dynamic social interactions embedded in particular contexts and spheres of activity. This brief
presentation will discuss why dissemination of research and mobilizing knowledge within communities our research is
geared towards necessitates researchers to undergo an acculturation process of the speech genres our audience
reads, writes, listens, and speaks.
A New Model for Scientific Communication Based on Open Access and Crowdsourcing
By: Sina Shahandeh
Why present?
Practice presenting your research to an interdisciplinary audience
Network with graduate students from across campus
Receive feedback on your research in a low stakes setting
Useful Information
Date: 21 March 2013
Time: 2:00 pm -4:00 pm
Location: Koerner Library, Room 216
Submission Deadline: 18 March 2013
source: http://wiki.ubc.ca/Documentation:Research_Commons/FIRE_Talks/(Research)_Ethics
Last updated on March 4, 2013 @2:40 pm
Staff Site |Copyright Guidelines |Policies |Contact Us UBC Library
Info:604.822.6375
250.807.9107
Emergency Procedures |Accessibility |Contact UBC |© Copyright The University of British Columbia
Previous Page Next Page