Compulsory attendance
Yes.
Admission requirements
Bachelor’s degree obtained, admission to the RMA-programme.
Description
This seminar is situated at the heart of ongoing research in the specialisation, focusing on the archaeology, history and anthropology of indigenous American cultures. RMA-students as well as PhD-candidates work on their theses in focused groups, formed according to region (or theme), and receive specialised instruction in tutorials focusing either on the Caribbean/Amazonian region or on Mesoamerica and the Andes. For general topics these groups may be combined in common sessions. Students identify and evaluate the most important publications, especially relevant articles in recent issues of leading journals, and write a review of a monograph that is crucial for their thesis research.
RMA-students give detailed presentations on the progress of their research and on their theoretical reflections. Needless to say, RMA-students are expected to attend all guest lectures of the specialisation programme (to be announced during the year). In addition, RMA students are expected to present a paper or poster on their thesis research at an international meeting, or to submit an article to an international journal.
Course objectives
Knowledge of the state of the art regarding the region and discipline of thesis research;
Ability to formulate a research topic in the framework of modern scholarly discussions;
Exercising analytical and library research skills;
Preparation and elaboration of the thesis project exercising skills of oral presentation, discussion and writing;
Ability to draft a research proposal and plan concrete fieldwork and other research activities.
Timetable
Course schedule details can be found in the RMA time schedule.
Mode of instruction
Seminar with student’s reports, commenting on the structure of research and thesis, with analytic discussion of recent publications.
Assessment method
Active participation in the seminar;
Written assignments;
Analytical presentation of recent literature related to the topic of the thesis, and a presentation of the thesis research results to an international forum.
Papers shoud be handed in during the exam week following the course block.
Reading list
Partly indicated during the seminar, partly to be identified by the students themselves.
Registration
Register for this course via uSis.
Instructions for registration can be found in the uSis manual.
Contact information
For more information about this course, please contact prof. dr M.E.R.G.N. Jansen.
Remarks
The separate tutorials mentioned in the description are Communicating communities (Caribbean) and Intercultural communication (America/Andes).