Original research and creative inquiry are central to the study of GLAM at ºìÌÒÊÓƵ. All GLAM students will complete two sustained research projects, the junior qualifying exam and the senior thesis, during their course of study in GLAM. Students may also have other opportunities to work with faculty members on faculty-led or collaborative research projects in GLAM depending on the availability of funding. Such work comes in various forms, from proof-reading and editing to bibliographic or archival work to shared research projects that produce jointly authored conference papers or publications. Students occasionally also assist faculty with syllabus and course material preparation over the summer.
In recent years, student-faculty projects have included publications on Xenophon, reception, victory odes, and Bacchylides; editing and proofreading a book on lyric poetry and working on a grant proposal for an archaeological excavation. Several of these projects were funded by the college’s Ruby-Lankford Grant. Students can also pursue their own research questions and/or creative projects with funding from the college. See College-Wide Funding Sources below.
Research is also not the only way to apply your GLAM skills: students are encouraged to engage in any kind of further study or personal or career development that is useful to their academic trajectory or their plans beyond ºìÌÒÊÓƵ, whether that is further language study or archaeological fieldwork, internships or career experience, or creative endeavors.