Only one abstract per presentation is necessary. A basic abstract of 250-500 words is required to participate. Your abstract should address the five elements described below.
In order for your abstract to be considered for an award, you must submit an extended abstract of 500-700 words. Sample abstracts and judging rubrics are provided on the website to assist in creating a successful abstract and presentation. Your extended abstract should address the following five elements.
The creation and production of live performance (dance, theatre, music, etc.) and works of visual and media art (musical compositions, film, photography, paintings, sculptures, costume and set designs, etc.) are valid scholarly contributions. Creative work falls under a category of research known as the “scholarship of discovery,” which is central to the education of students in the visual and performing arts. A successful abstract for a creative work proposed for inclusion in the Whalen Symposium will include:
1. The artist’s initial questions of investigation – (Why did you create the piece?)
2. Brief articulation of artists, forms, theories, methods or movements inspiring or informing the creative work (Research – techniques – how those techniques are manifested within the work and research that was done (regarding various composers, representing various cultures, etc.)
3. How the work will be presented to the audience (If performing or presenting a piece of visual art in conjunction with your presentation, indicate the necessary space requirements)
4. Proposed significance to the field (What is new or revelatory about your creative work?)
5. A bibliography/list of references and works cited (If you cited any sources of information— articles, books, book chapters, websites, and personal communications) MUST be included. These items are not included in the 500-700 word limit. It may be helpful for students to consider this a shorter version of their final presentation. Supporting materials including charts, graphs, images, choreography documentation or musical scores are encouraged, but not necessary. These items are not included in the 500-700 word limit.
Abstracts that have been submitted for awards will be approved by two separate faculty or staff abstract reviewers who have experience in a related field. The reviewers follow a rubric to rate each abstract, which can be downloaded for reference here. Abstracts which score an average of 12 or higher will be considered for award.
Students who are still being considered for award will be evaluated live by judges when they present their research during Whalen. Students will be judged on their presentation of their research's purpose/originality, their methods and framework, their results and conclusions, and the visual and logical organization of presentation. Once presentations have all been delivered, the judges deliberate using the presentation evaluations to decide on.