The Academic Research and Writing Camp: Collaborating on an Intensive Thesis Workshop for Graduate Students

Start Date

3-18-2026 1:30 PM

End Date

3-18-2026 2:00 PM

Author(s) Bio

Stephanie Crowe (she/her) is the Associate Director of Academic & Research Engagement at the University of North Carolina Wilmington Library. She earned a BA in History from the University of Maryland, an MA in Public History from North Carolina State University, and an MS in Library Science from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. She is the co-editor of Games and Gamification in Academic Libraries (ACRL, 2020). Her current research interests include relational work in library-campus engagement and person-centered library leadership and management. Sam Nesbitt Zelick (she/her) is a sciences librarian at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. Zelick holds a BS in Chemistry from the University of Oregon and an MLIS from the University of Pittsburgh, and is currently an MS student in Instructional Technology at UNCW (expected 2026). Zelick strives to incorporate her experiences and identities throughout her work as a liaison librarian, colleague, and graduate student. Her research interests include disability support in libraries, games and storytelling, inclusive and critical pedagogy, and media literacy and mis/disinformation, among others.

Keywords

thesis and dissertation workshops, campus collaboration, needs analysis, hybrid events

Description of Proposal

Academic libraries at master’s and PhD-granting institutions frequently end up fielding questions about thesis and dissertations that we are often missing context to answer thoroughly. These sorts of questions can be more frequent at institutions such as ours, which is a relatively new high-research activity (“R2”) campus that is still in the process of developing supports for graduate-level research.

Having seen this need in our own context, the University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW) began a semesterly Academic Research and Writing Camp workshop in Spring 2025 as a partnership between UNCW Library, the University Learning Center, and the Graduate School. This day-long conference style event was envisioned as a workshop to help graduate students working on long-form academic research and writing projects such as theses, dissertations, and scholarly articles. Sessions focused on a variety of high-demand topics gathered via surveys of graduate students themselves as well as graduate program coordinators and covered such wide-ranging areas as getting started with research, managing citations, and storytelling as a form of research synthesis. We solicited presenters among library faculty and University Learning Center staff as well as campus faculty and instructors who specialized in relevant topics. The original event had two concurrent tracks, and following feedback from the camp attendees as well as the project team, the second iteration in Fall 2025 was streamlined to a single synchronous track. The Camp was envisioned as a hybrid event and is committed to remaining hybrid to better serve our large population of distance learners as well as benefiting those with busy work schedules, care commitments, and accessibility needs. A campus digital badge project was also developed for the Fall 2025 iteration of the Academic Research and Writing Camp to incentivize participation in the full event. The third camp will take place in January 2026.

Our presentation details the iterations of the camp, from needs analysis and information gathering through the cycles of feedback and redesign. We will also discuss how the library’s partnership with the Graduate School and the University Learning Center has evolved and what part those offices play in the management of this project, and we will give attendees the opportunity to apply what they have learned to their own institutional contexts.

What takeaways will attendees learn from your session?

  • Attendees will learn best practices for collaborating with campus partners on planning, financing, and marketing large-scale research and writing events for graduate students;

  • Attendees will brainstorm the first steps in planning for a graduate student thesis and dissertation camp for their own institutions;

  • Attendees will understand how to use pre- and post-event student feedback to iterate on future events

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Mar 18th, 1:30 PM Mar 18th, 2:00 PM

The Academic Research and Writing Camp: Collaborating on an Intensive Thesis Workshop for Graduate Students

Academic libraries at master’s and PhD-granting institutions frequently end up fielding questions about thesis and dissertations that we are often missing context to answer thoroughly. These sorts of questions can be more frequent at institutions such as ours, which is a relatively new high-research activity (“R2”) campus that is still in the process of developing supports for graduate-level research.

Having seen this need in our own context, the University of North Carolina Wilmington (UNCW) began a semesterly Academic Research and Writing Camp workshop in Spring 2025 as a partnership between UNCW Library, the University Learning Center, and the Graduate School. This day-long conference style event was envisioned as a workshop to help graduate students working on long-form academic research and writing projects such as theses, dissertations, and scholarly articles. Sessions focused on a variety of high-demand topics gathered via surveys of graduate students themselves as well as graduate program coordinators and covered such wide-ranging areas as getting started with research, managing citations, and storytelling as a form of research synthesis. We solicited presenters among library faculty and University Learning Center staff as well as campus faculty and instructors who specialized in relevant topics. The original event had two concurrent tracks, and following feedback from the camp attendees as well as the project team, the second iteration in Fall 2025 was streamlined to a single synchronous track. The Camp was envisioned as a hybrid event and is committed to remaining hybrid to better serve our large population of distance learners as well as benefiting those with busy work schedules, care commitments, and accessibility needs. A campus digital badge project was also developed for the Fall 2025 iteration of the Academic Research and Writing Camp to incentivize participation in the full event. The third camp will take place in January 2026.

Our presentation details the iterations of the camp, from needs analysis and information gathering through the cycles of feedback and redesign. We will also discuss how the library’s partnership with the Graduate School and the University Learning Center has evolved and what part those offices play in the management of this project, and we will give attendees the opportunity to apply what they have learned to their own institutional contexts.