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15.2: The Classroom Lecture and Activity

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    248702
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    Discovering Experts and Examining Authority

     While searching for sources for your profile essay, you might come across a source that seems secondary because the author is critiquing an issue and referring to other research. For instance, maybe the author is a journalist. However, if the author is the focus of the essay, the source is part of their contribution to the field and is considered primary. By looking at publications from the expert, you can see how their work has evolved, learn their opinion on issues, and often hear their voices in panel discussions, interviews, speeches, and documentaries.

    Therefore, this will allow you to summarize their main points and explain how that has added to their field of study. It may make it easier to then compare one expert’s work with other experts. This gives you a stronger foundation for putting sources into conversation with each other. Not only will it help you develop your essay, but it is a source that you may use later in your research essay.

    Activity 1: For the purposes of this class activity, we will be using the topic of race and inequalities in Chicago Public Schools as a research topic. As a class, read the biography about Natalie Moore from WBEZ’s website to learn who she is. https://www.wbez.org/author/natalie-moore

    Then, watch a video where Natalie Moore is used as a expert. 63 Boycott. (Available at the Harold Washington College Library) This means she was interviewed for the film along with other experts because the producers and directors valued the conclusions she drew from the evidence she collected over the years. (30 minutes)

    Next, watch the media burn footage of her full interview. This footage is long, but since it is the raw footage, you can fast forward past many of the breaks. https://mediaburn.org/video/natalie-moore/

     

    Journal: Just from watching the videos, what have you learned about this expert? Would it be easy or difficult to find articles and books that she has written? How do think reading a couple of her published works would help you understand her contribution to her field and to this topic?


    15.2: The Classroom Lecture and Activity is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 1.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.