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*Archives and Records: The Journal of the Archives and Records Association*

*Now welcoming Submissions for a Special Issue on Archives and Education:
New Pedagogies and Practice.*

This special issue of Archive and Records seeks to explore innovative
pedagogical approaches to engagement with archival collections at higher
education institutions. Of particular interest are submissions that
explicate change through pedagogical practice in both institutional
strategy and the engaged population. The issue aims to facilitate a
dialogue between researchers, practitioners, archivists, curators, users,
educators and scholars and to address questions such as the following:

•        What are the most pressing pedagogical demands being placed on
archival collections at higher education institutions and how has this
impacted on short, medium and long terms engagement strategies?

•        How have archival teams attempted to engage with their target
demographics and what successes have been achieved in the attraction of new
audiences?

•        How has pedagogical design been integrated into the development of
existing and/or new engagement strategies?

•        What are the technological challenges associated with such
pedagogical engagement and how has fusion of traditional archival practice
with pedagogical design enhanced the learning experience for all involved?

•        How have archivist/teachers developed and embedded critical
thinking and archival literacy skills into key partnerships for new impacts
in teaching and learning?

•        How have academic archive repositories expanded their user base
into non-traditional user groups?

•        How have material culture and digital pedagogies combined within
the learning space?

•        What has been the impact of the application of learning theory in
practice on the archival teams?

•        How can archival teams begin to think about supporting students
across a wide variety of disciplines through pedagogical design and
practice?

•        What are the challenges that archival teams are facing in the
future and how can relationships with educational/designers help to develop
programmes that respond to the needs of the students population with a
measurable impact?



Academic libraries are being refocused and repositioned within the
traditional infrastructure of higher education and learning. Library and
archive repositories are the engine room of such higher education
institutions, fibrously connected to the objectives of impactful and
innovative learning, teaching research. Such archive resources support and
inspire students in response to a wide variety of demands. Increasing
pressure on academic libraries and archival collections in particular, to
demonstrate impact, is prompting institutions to evaluate established
practices, respond to demand and to plan for the future.

However, in the last thirty years these demands have changed along with a
rapid, although not in parallel, evolution of technology, provoking debate
amongst this community around how to pedagogically support engagement with
collections with demonstrable output. New developments in pedagogical
design for student engagement also predominate, responding to the need for
the development of 21st century skills that students require to make a
successful transition into employment. The digital archive is becoming
ever-more integrated into the digital classroom – but what are the
implications for this as regards learning through and with tangible objects
and the physical record? The role of ‘archivist-as-teacher’ and mediator of
the educational experience is taking greater prominence. The reading-room
becomes an extension of the lecture theatre.

Current discourse and evidence places high prominence on transferable
graduate attributes – those who can learn and work co-dependently as well
as independently. Society today, owing to recent global economic and
political changes, maintains a cautious position and distrust towards
information and data. Documented evidence and testimony has become
weaponised. The faculties of critical thinking, evaluation, analytical
skills and academic/argumentative writing can be learnt directly from
creative engagement with learning through encountering archive collections.

Academic libraries underpin such learning experiences and skills
development through archive literacies. There is a need, therefore, to
develop a better understanding of how the library and archival collections
of higher education institutions can meet the expectations placed upon them
while concomitantly meeting the expectations of increasingly dynamic
pedagogical environments.

We invite papers on any aspect of pedagogical engagement with archival
collections. Submissions to this special issue might consider, although are
not limited to, the following themes:



•        Archival collections and the educational practitioner

•        The archivist and the 21st century student

•        Archives and material culture in the digital era – learning
through encountering

•        Archival collections and technological enhanced learning
experiences

•        Pedagogical design for engagement with archival collections

•        21st century skill development in the archival environment

•        Educational theory in archival practice

•        Managing and facilitating pedagogical engagement with archives

•        The impact of evolving technology on short, medium and long term
planning



*Further details:*

Prospective authors are invited to contact the Guest Editors, in order to
discuss proposed articles for this special issue of *Archives and
Records* which
will be published in Spring 2020.

Dr. Paul Flynn, Lecturer in TechInnovation (NUI Galway)
[log in to unmask]

Barry Houlihan, Archivist (NUI Galway) [log in to unmask]



Timelines:

The deadline for expressions of interest is 31 November 2018. All
submissions will be double blind peer-reviewed and should be presented in
line with the Archives and Records style guidelines
<http://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?journalCode=cjsa20&page=instructions>
.


The final deadline for article submissions is 30 June 2019.



*Archives and Records* is an international peer-reviewed journal which
publishes original research contributions to the fields
of archives and records management and conservation. Published on behalf of
the Archives and Records Association <http://www.archives.org.uk/> and
originally
published as *The Journal of the Society of Archivists*, it deals with the
very latest developments in these fields, including the
challenges and opportunities presented by new media and information
technology. As well as being issued to ARA Members, *Archives and Records* has
over 3,000 Institutional and Individual subscribers around the world. The
journal is published in hard copy and online by Taylor & Francis twice
annually. Topics of recent and forthcoming special issues include ‘Archives
and Museums’, ‘Archives and the visual arts’, ‘Born digital description’,
‘The local record office in the UK’ and ‘Archives and public history’.

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