Learning to Think Archivally: Thesis Research in the Archival Studies Program at the University of Manitoba

  • Tom Nesmith

Abstract

This article outlines the role of the thesis in the approach to archival education of the master’s program in archival studies at the University of Manitoba. The article discusses the role of the thesis in educating students to think archivally, or to enable them to identify significant work problems, conceptualize their issues, research the relevant sources, analyze and assemble the resulting information, and share it with others. The author maintains that this research ability is vital in the increasingly complex archival workplace of the twenty-first century.

RÉSUMÉ
Cet article décrit le rôle des thèses dans l’enseignement de l’archivistique au sein du programme de maîtrise en études archivistiques de l’Université du Manitoba. L’auteur soutient que les thèses jouent un rôle important en apprenant aux étudiants à penser de façon archivistique ou en leur permettant d’identifier les problèmes significatifs, à conceptualiser leurs questions, à faire des recherches dans les sources appropriées, à analyser et rassembler les informations pertinentes et à partager les résultats avec les autres. Il fait valoir que cette capacité de recherche est vitale dans le monde de travail de plus en plus complexe des archivistes en ce XXIe siècle.

Author Biography

Tom Nesmith
Tom Nesmith is an Associate Dean of Arts at the University of Manitoba and the founder and director of the university’s master’s program in archival studies in the Department of History. Prior to joining the faculty of the University of Manitoba, he was an archivist at the then National Archives of Canada from 1978 to 1990. He was editor of Archivaria from 1984 to 1986 and, among other editing and publishing activities, he edited and contributed to Canadian Archival Studies and the Rediscovery of Provenance (1993), a joint publication of the Association of Canadian Archivists and the Society of American Archivists. He was a member of the SAA’s Committee on Professional Education and Development. He is on the editorial board of Archivaria, the ACA’s Education Committee, the City of Winnipeg’s Records Committee, and the Saskatchewan Archives Board. He obtained undergraduate and master’s degrees in History at Queen’s University and a doctorate degree in History at Carleton University.
Published
2003-05-01
How to Cite
Nesmith, Tom. 2003. “Learning to Think Archivally: Thesis Research in the Archival Studies Program at the University of Manitoba”. Archivaria 55 (May), 103-7. https://archivaria.ca/index.php/archivaria/article/view/12408.
Section
Abstracts of Master of Archival Studies Theses at Canadian Universities

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