Dr. John Archer Library Award
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/10294/5336
The Dr. John Archer Library Award was established in 2011 through funding from the library for an undergraduate student who demonstrates written evidence of significant inquiry using the Library’s resources and services along with learning about the research and information-gathering process for their graded research project. The award is for $1,000 and the winner must have written a 250 to 500 word reflective essay describing their use of the library. Librarians normally choose a recipient near the end of regularly scheduled classes in the Winter Semester.
Details about the award are on the library's website Library Award page.
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Item Open Access Analysis of Pharmaceutical Policy in Canada(2012) Mailhot, JohnItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2016 - Reflective Essay(University of Regina Library, 2016-04-21) Kotylak, CarrieItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2016 Photograph 1(University of Regina Library, 2016-04-21) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2016 Photograph 2(University of Regina Library, 2016-04-21) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2016 Photograph 3(University of Regina Library, 2016-04-21) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2016 Photograph 4(University of Regina Library, 2016-04-21) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2017 - Reflective Essay(University of Regina Library, 2017-06-20) Gerbeza, TeaIn Dr. Susan Johnston’s J.K Rowling (English 304) class last Winter term, one aspect that she made blatantly clear was that the class will require a lot of reading, theorizing, and reflective thought. It was not going to be easy just because the class is about Rowling’s Harry Potter series, and boy was she right. Approaching our final projects, I thought to myself, “I have to do something cool, something creative, something to really impress,” and I realized that my thoughts always came back to thinking about wands, the function of them and how fate played a role in what wand chose which wizard. Thus, I decided to do a research project about wand lore, which included different types of wood, sacred trees, and sacred animals.Item Open Access Archer Library Award 2017 Brochure(University of Regina Library, 2016-04) University of Regina LibraryItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2017 Photograph 1(University of Regina Library, 2017-06-20) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2017 Photograph 2(University of Regina Library, 2017-06-20) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2017 Photograph 3(University of Regina Library, 2017-06-20) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2017 Poster(University of Regina Library, 2016-04) University of Regina LibraryItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2018 - Reflective Essay(University of Regina Library, 2018-01) Burki, SaadiaMary Chipanshi introduced me to the Archer Library and its services via my INHS 100 class. She discussed and demonstrated how to use Quick Find to find useful research. I planned to write about the health concerns of Aboriginals. When I typed in the keywords, such as “Health” and “Aboriginal” into Quick Find, I got more than 51,000 results. This proved to be too broad a topic so she advised us to break it down and focus on smaller topics. That is how I decided on a more specific research topic of the prevalence of diabetes within the Aboriginal community.Item Open Access Archer Library Award 2018 Brochure(University of Regina Library, 2017-04) University of Regina LibraryItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2018 Photograph 1 (University of Regina Library, 2018-05-17) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2018 Photograph 2(University of Regina Library, 2018-05-17) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2018 Photograph 3(University of Regina Library, 2018-05-17) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2018 Photograph 4(University of Regina Library, 2018-05-17) University of Regina Photography DepartmentItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2018 Poster (University of Regina Library, 2017-04) University of Regina LibraryItem Open Access Archer Library Award 2019 - Reflective Essay(University of Regina Library, 2019-01) Leeper, JessicaFrom September 2018 to November 2018, I made significant use of the University of Regina’s Library resources and services to help me complete research for a scholarly edition in Dr. Susan Johnston’s English 349: Methods in Literary History. I researched a Pre-Raphaelite painting titled Isabella and the Pot of Basil composed in 1866-7 by William Holman Hunt. My goal for choosing Hunt’s painting was to represent a possible trajectory, or timeline, of adaptation.