3. How do we integrate students?
What are the benefits for students?
4. Undergraduate Research
• Student-faculty collaborative research
• Tasks in expertise range of students
• Meaningful contributions
Chris Blackwell & Tom Martin,
“Technology, Collaboration, and
Undergraduate Research.” Digital
Humanities Quarterly 3, no. 1
(2009).
5. Liberal Education:
Essential Learning Outcomes
• Intellectual and practical skills, like
– Inquiry and analysis
– Critical and creative thinking
– Written and oral communication
– Quantitative literacy
– Information literacy
– Teamwork and problem solving
• Knowledge of human cultures and the physical and
natural world;
• personal and social responsibility, including civic
knowledge and engagement both locally and globally;
• integrative and applied learning.
6. • First-Year Seminars and
Experiences
• Common Intellectual
Experience
• Learning Communities
• Writing-Intensive
Courses
• Collaborative
Assignments and
Projects
• Undergraduate
Research
• Diversity/Global
Learning
• Service Learning,
Community-Based
Learning
• Internships
• Capstone Courses and
Projects
High Impact Practices (Kuh)
7. Digital Humanities as
Liberal Arts Mission
• Undergraduate research
• Pedagogy
– active & collaborative learning
– project based & applied learning
• Preparing citizens in a networked world
• Interdisciplinary work & integrative
learning
• Civic engagement & place-based learning
9. Students & Jobs
• What employers want
– AAC&U employer survey
– Pannapacker, William. “No More Digitally Challenged
Liberal-Arts Majors.” The Chronicle of Higher
Education, November 18, 2013.
http://chronicle.com/article/No-More-Digitally-
Challenged/143079/.
• Teamwork
• Professionalization
10. Group Work
• Small groups
• Choose one group member and come up with a
digital project for their class.
• Work through the following checklist.
• Report out on model, challenges, insights, etc.
11. Process Checklist for Integrating Digital
Humanities Projects into Courses
1. Connecting Course and Project
2. Scaffolding and Chunking
3. Collaborative Teaching
4. Logistics
http://rebeccafrostdavis.wordpress.com/2012/09/1
3/process-checklist-for-integrating-digital-
humanities-projects-into-courses/
12. Thank you
St. Edward’s University
Thank you.
St. Edward’s University
Thank you.
St. Edward’s University
Thank you.
St. Edward’s University
Thank you.
St. Edward’s University
Notes de l'éditeur
Struck by how what this approach has in common with crowdsourcing. (poll audience)
Overall, digital humanities works at liberal arts colleges because it has been adopted to the liberal arts mission, practices, and pedagogies. These include:
In addition to increased levels of collaboration (a core DH value), also note the increasing expertise—we need to scaffold student projects into the curriculum—not just in one class, as Kathryn does, but across a series of courses.
Students use digital resources—perhaps generative scholarship like the Visualizing Emancipation project.
They contribute to digital resources—perhaps starting with crowdsourcing or working with local faculty
They move on to produce their own resources like Enduring Women or History Harvest
They have become knowledge creators in a globally networked world.
----- Meeting Notes (1/9/14 11:38) -----
Are there tools for transcribing