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Bonnie W. Oldham Library Research Prize

Bonnie W. Oldham Library Research Prize

The Bonnie W. Oldham Library Research Prize is designed to attract outstanding research projects from courses taught in departments across The 51做厙 campus. It recognizes excellence in research projects that show evidence of significant knowledge in the methods of research and the information gathering process, and use of library resources, tools, and services.

Eligible Students

Any 51做厙 student(s) at any class level in any discipline who has completed a research project in any format for a credit course at The 51做厙 during the Summer 2024, Fall 2024, Intersession 2025, or Spring 2025 semester is eligible to participate in the 2024-2025 competition. Please note that only one project per course may be submitted by each student.

Three prizes will be awarded to an individual student or group of students whose projects fall in the following three categories: Undergraduate Foundational (100-level courses), Undergraduate Upper-level (200- to 400-level courses), and Graduate.

Application Procedure and Forms

Application must include the following:

  1. Completed application form where all components of the application package will be uploaded.
  2. Description of Research: A 500-700 word description of the research methods and information gathering process used. Include also how you used library resources, tools, and services to complete the research project. Group projects should only submit one Description of Research for the application. Read our tips to help you describe your research.
  3. A final version (or almost complete draft if necessary) of the research project.
    • Written projects: Submit your document.
    • Media projects: Submit the research project in its media format (e.g. the PPT file of your poster slide or slide deck), or the URL in a Word document if a Web project.
  4. A statement of faculty support from the instructor who assigned the research project submitted by the faculty through the faculty support form.
    • It is your responsibility to share this form with the course instructor who assigned the project. Students waive their right to read the statement of faculty support for their project.
  5. A bibliography or other appropriate listing of sources consulted.
    • Use bibliography format and conventions appropriate to the discipline.
    • Visit our Citation Help resources for more guidance.

Deadlines for Submissions

Submission Deadlines:
  • Monday, December 9, 2024 at 4:00 pm for projects completed in courses during Summer or Fall 2024
  • Monday, May 5, 2025 at 4:00 pm for projects completed in courses during Intersession or Spring 2025

NOTE: When submitting an application for a multi-semester research project, please use the submission deadline for the date that the project is “due.” Although there are two different dates to submit an application, only one judging will take place.

Other Dates to Remember:
  • Winner Notification: Monday, May 12, 2025
  • Awards Ceremony and Reception: Friday, May 16, 2025 at 1:00 pm in the Library’s 5th floor Charles Kratz 51做厙 Heritage Room

Selection Criteria and Judging

A judging panel composed of 51做厙 faculty and staff will judge entries on the evidence provided in the application package. Expectations for achievement will be commensurate with the applicant's class year, the course level of the project (e.g., 100-level, 200- to 400-level, or Graduate level), and the requirements of the discipline. Judges will be invited from the faculty in each of the University's three colleges, the Library faculty, the Library Advisory Committee, and both the Center for Teaching Excellence and the Office of Student Support & Success.

Submissions will be evaluated based on how well they provide evidence of the following criteria:

  • Demonstrates use of library resources, including collections, services, and/or spaces.
  • Demonstrates through use of sources appropriate levels, types, and breadth of scholarship for research need.
  • Demonstrates personal learning and understanding of the research process.
  • Demonstrates an Ignatian dimension to research through topic, methodology, findings, and/or reflection on the research process that represents one or more Ignatian characteristics applied to research.

View the full judging rubric to better tailor your application to the selection criteria. You can also read our tips to help you describe your research.

In the event the judging panel determines that none of the applications submitted for the research prize is meritorious, then no prize will be awarded.

Award

Three prizes of $500.00 each will be awarded to the winning individual student or group of students in the following categories: Undergraduate Foundational (100-level courses), Undergraduate Upper-level (200- to 400-level courses), and Graduate. If won by a group, then the award will be split equally among the group members. Monetary awards are subject to taxes.

Winning projects and essays may be publicly displayed in the Weinberg Memorial Library and will be preserved in the Library’s Digital Collections, with access open to the public.

Photographs of winning students and their faculty mentors will be taken at the Awards Ceremony and Reception and published in Library promotional materials.

Previous Prize Winners

Applicants may want to review the essays of previous winners.

Library Research Prize Planning Committee

The Bonnie W. Oldham Library Research Prize is coordinated annually by the Library Research Prize Planning Committee.

2024-2025 Library Research Prize Planning Committee:

Donna Witek, Chair
Kate Cummings
Colleen Farry
Ian O’Hara
Sheli Pratt-McHugh

About Bonnie

Professor Emerita Bonnie Oldham came to the University in 2004 as one of the evening reference librarians in the position of Coordinator of Distance Learning Services and transitioned to a daytime schedule in 2009 when she became Information Literacy Coordinator. In that capacity, her main responsibility was to oversee the Information Literacy Program in support of the learning needs of students as well as the teaching and research needs of faculty and staff. Bonnie was instrumental in the creation of the Library Research Prize, established in 2011. This prize recognizes excellence in research projects that show evidence of significant knowledge in the methods of research and the information gathering process, and use of library resources, tools, and services. The award was named in honor of Bonnie at her retirement in May 2017. Upon her untimely death in September 2017, Bonnie established an endowment fund for the research prize so that it will exist in perpetuity. Bonnie earned an A.B. in History from Chestnut Hill College, an M.L.S. from Kutztown University, and an M.S. in Organizational Management from Misericordia University.

Acknowledgment

The Weinberg Memorial Library thanks the DiMenna-Nyselius Library at Fairfield University for their guidance in the initial development of our Library Research Prize for undergraduate students.

Questions?

Contact the Library Research Prize Planning Committee at libraryresearchprize@scranton.edu.

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