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393 Field Notebook
Thirty
percent of your grade derives from the quality of your field notebook. YOU MUST
SUBMIT THE FIELD NOTEBOOK THAT WE PROVIDE YOU, REGARDLESS OF ITS CONDITION; WE WILL ACCEPT
NO ALTERNATIVES.
Label
whether Geography or Geology on the first page.
Field
notebooks have no universally acceptable format, content, or data/computation
requirements, nor can they. The guiding rule that I suggest is that
Your purpose is to record detailed evidence.
I
suggest that, in addition to writing your identification info (name, address, phone,
e-mail, etc.), you should also write your SPECIFIC research question on the very first
page of your notebook. Refer often to this to keep focus.
I
often receive field notebooks so ornate and finished in appearance that they would shame
Michaelangelo. These are immediately suspect. A field notebook is your record
of on-site observations, often made under conditions of haste, inclement weather,
distraction, and fatigue. Although your field notetaking should meet the objectives
below, it is unrealistic that you will have polished appearance and form. In field
notebooks content is what counts most , not "prettiness". As an example of
how raw these can (or should?) look, below is an excerpt from my own PhD dissertation
field notebook:

Pretty
sloppy, but what can you expect from a note taker carrying gear and recording data for five
hours, over seven miles, and across 2300 feet of relief? "Scribbly" notes
were still useable to me, so you need not attempt to be Mr. or Ms. Clean yourself. [BACK]
Content
By
the diversity of topics it is difficult to give generic advice about what any particular
student should seek for content. For each of the visit sites we have provided some
suggestions for what you should watch for and take notes about, but please do not simply
parrot our precise words or limit yourself to the concepts we describe on the "watch
for" list--it is very likely (and quite valuable) when students record observations
of additional phenomena in their own words.
However,
certain content characteristics
warrant your attention. These should include:
a
prose description of the landscape, including paraphrasing of relevant displays/exhibits.
Describe also your objectives and purposes.
any
measurements that you make (including
GPS),
and
the procedures you used to make them. It probably is
a good idea to also note why these measurements were worthwhile to your research question.
Note any measurements, regardless of quality, but if suspect note why you have
reservations about them. Indicate any computation methods that you used in the
field, why you used them, whether they worked, and especially if you used them to make
further field data decisions (type, method modifications, etc.).
a
description of your methods, why you used them, and when you used them. Also, when
they failed.
summarization
of local personnel presentations
draw
sketch diagrams (maps, landscape profiles)
What
the field book should NOT be is a "Dear Diary" record of gossip and complaints.
Unless necessary to reconstruct matters pertaining to your project objective,
itemization of "who said what about whom" are frivolous and inappropriate.
You SHOULD, however, record the name of another person if they have obtained
information (photos, books, etc.) that you may later want to borrow. [BACK]
Format
use
pencil (erases if necessary, but not run or fade)
record
date, time, location, personnel, etc. at top
organize
measurements by column & row; LABEL!
indicate
special data (photos) time/location in notes
classify
& use multiple colors (in PENCIL) in notes
label
everything on sketch diagrams
[BACK]
Inclusions
[Please
also provide ALL photos in digital form (CD ROM, etc.) to the instructors]
maps;
reference any in use by name & purpose
sketch
copies of relevant exhibit diagrams
document
(site, date, significance, etc.) ANY sample
[BACK]
References
FULLY
record references (guides, maps, date, etc.)
record
discussants (name, address, topic, date)
collect
& record literature (brochures, etc.)
if
in doubt, cite the source!
[BACK]
You
of course are welcome to show your notes and seek consultation from the instructors and
your peers during the trip. Keep very careful track of your notebook's location,
but should it turn up missing inform an instructor IMMEDIATELY--we will
dispatch a retrieval party if the loss is within the past few hours.
Heywood
[email] maintains this page, last updated 23NOV07. We
monitor our cell phone from 6 to 8 PM CST when in
range.
That number is (715)
459-8181. |