2023-2024 / HIST0270-1

Specialized heuristics and introduciton to bibliography: the Middle Ages

Duration

15h Th, 15h Pr

Number of credits

 Bachelor in history5 crédits 

Lecturer

Florence Close

Language(s) of instruction

French language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the first semester, review in January

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

The four Heuristics courses offer students the opportunity to discover the specificities and methods of historical research for the four periods of history (typology of sources and works specific to each period; introduction to bibliographical research and the use of the main working tools). In B3, each student will thus be able to choose, with full knowledge of the facts, the two periods in which he or she wishes to specialise and to carry out his or her first major work independently (including the TFC).

Students will have acquired some research skills, exercised their critical thought and improved the quality of their scientific writing.

 

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

At the end of this course, students will be able to

  • conduct detailed research (chronologies, dictionaries and encyclopaedias, specialist atlases)
  • carry out rigorous bibliographical research
  • distinguish between the different types of source (material, written, immaterial) available to the medieval historian
  • identify a narrative source by taking a critical look at the information provided by bibliographical directories of sources (circumstances of writing, manuscript tradition and critical editions)
  • report orally or in writing on the research of others (issues, methods and means)
  • communicate the results of his/her research in clear and precise scientific French, either orally or in writing

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

Corequisite courses

  • HIST0082-1
  • HIST0040-1

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

This course should give students the opportunity to discover the reality of research in the field of medieval history. There will therefore be an alternance between the theoretical sessions needed to make students aware of the specific nature of the study of this period of history and practical and dynamic sessions, designed according to the flipped classroom pedagogy. These sessions will be given at the QI on Mondays from 2pm to 4pm (Prof. Fl. Close).

An initiation to bibliography will be given at the same time to enable students to familiarise themselves with the works and to become increasingly involved in the construction of collective knowledge. These compulsory sessions will take place on 4 Wednesdays (20/9; 4/10; 11/10) from 4pm to 6pm in R100 (G. Beyens, Assistant).

Optional but highly recommended bibliographic practice will be organised by student monitors on a weekly basis according to the timetable communicated during the course.

Self-study bibliographic exercises will be available on eCampus.

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Face-to-face course


Additional information:

In case of reconfinement, the course would switch to virtual live in the classroom linked to the course on eCampus.

Recommended or required readings

Bibliography Syllabus 2023-2024 to download (eCampus)

 

Exam(s) in session

Any session

- In-person

written exam


Additional information:

Exam(s) in session

Any session

- In-person

written exam ( open-ended questions )


Additional information:

Submission of all (compulsory) formative work by the deadline is a sine qua non for admission to the certification test.

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

First class :  Monday 18 September at 2pm.

This course is structured as a collective research project. The variation of themes from one year to the next leads to the mobilisation of different knowledge and working tools and to the diversification of learning activities. In short, the course is never run in exactly the same way twice, which is why everyone is expected to participate actively and regularly.

Contacts

Enseignant titulaire : Florence Close, Professeur PhD
Département des Sciences historiques - bat A4
Quai Roosevelt 1B
4000 Liège
04 366 54 47
fclose@uliege.be


Assistant : Grégoire Beyens : gbeyens@uliege.be 
 

Étudiant-moniteur : 

Bastien Vanoverschelde (M1) Bastien.Vanoverschelde@student.uliege.be 

Antoine Leblanc (M2) Antoine.Leblanc@student.uliege.be 
 


 

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