Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

40
Welcome to the Digital Scholarship Seminar: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers • Please run the Audio Setup wizard found on your tools menu. – Tools > Audio > Audio Setup Wizard • Introduce yourself in the Chat Box

description

This session is designed for scholars, broadly conceived, who are interested in joining the national (and international) conversation on the digital humanities. In particular, the organizers hope to provide a forum specifically targeted to those who might not have digital humanities resources on their own campuses or in their own regions, and those who might not have a sense of where to get started learning about the people and practices associated with the digital humanities. Recognizing that the digital humanities has a long history of practice, the panelists will introduce participants to a variety of online communities in which the digital humanities are discussed, conferences where one might be exposed to relevant conversations, and centers that focus on developing familiarity and fluency with digital humanities tools. Jentery Sayers, an advanced doctoral candidate at the University of Washington, will talk about the role of digital humanities development opportunities, focusing on the Digital Humanities Summer Institute at the University of Victoria as a case study. Dave Lester, the Associate Director of the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities, will be talking about getting started with digital humanities conferences, focusing on THATCamps as places for DH newbies to dip their toes into the field. Jason Jones, an associate professor of English at Central Connecticut State University, will discuss electronic DH communities, focusing specifically on ProfHacker and DHAnswers as sites that bring together communities of practice tackling specific issues.This Digital Scholarship seminar will be facilitated by Ryan Cordell, Assistant Professor of English at St. Norbert College, and Daniel Chamberlain, Director of the Center for Digital Learning and Research at Occidental College.

Transcript of Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Page 1: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Welcome to the Digital Scholarship Seminar:

Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation:

Communities, Conferences, Centers

• Please run the Audio Setup wizard found on your tools menu.– Tools > Audio > Audio Setup Wizard

• Introduce yourself in the Chat Box

Page 2: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

1. Fellow participants

2. Raise your hand

3. Emoticons

4. Polling

5. Chat

6. Audio• Audio set-up wizard on the tools menu:

Tools > Audio > Audio Set-up Wizard

How to Participate

Page 3: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Video Window

Push “Transmit” to turn on your video.

Use the drop down menu here to select video quality.

Six video streams at a time.Turn off video to conserve bandwidth.

For technical problems please contact Rebecca Davis, NITLE, by private chat, email ([email protected]), or phone (512.863.1734 or 512.864.5664).

This session is being recorded; the video will be available on the NITLE website.

Page 4: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers• Jason Jones, Associate Professor of English at Central

Connecticut State University• Dave Lester, Associate Director of the Maryland

Institute for Technology in the Humanities• Jentery Sayers, advanced doctoral candidate,

University of Washington• Moderators: Ryan Cordell, Assistant Professor of

English at St. Norbert College, and Daniel Chamberlain, Director of the Center for Digital Learning and Research at Occidental College

Page 5: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

ProfHacker

• Jason B. Jones (@jbj)

• NITLE: “Joining the National DH Conversation”

• October 2010

Page 6: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

• http://www.profhacker.com (or, http://chronicle.com/blogs/profhacker )

• http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/

. . . only 1 of these is a “DH” site

Page 7: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers
Page 8: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Most days, a class’s LMS looks like this.

Page 9: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Many faculty work like this!

Page 10: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Tangled networks are a problem & an opportunity.

Page 11: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Many hands, common problems.

Page 12: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers
Page 13: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers
Page 14: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers
Page 15: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers
Page 16: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers
Page 17: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/

http://www.profhacker.com

Page 18: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Photo credits• Tumbleweeds: Flickr user Nogwater / http://www.flickr.com/photos/nogwater/7450188• Network: Flickr user D'Arcy Norman: http://www.flickr.com/photos/dnorman/3263654347/• Pecha Kucha image by Marco Raaphorst http://www.flickr.com/photos/raaphorst/3971612696• Google image from Search Engine Watch: http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/080407-113209• iOS: Yutaka Tsutano: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ivyfield/4486938457• Writing: Markus Rodder http://www.flickr.com/photos/subcess/3723699858/• teaching: akeg http://www.flickr.com/photos/akeg/417524495• jogging: espinr http://www.flickr.com/photos/martinalvarez/2167608217/• lunch: chidorian http://www.flickr.com/photos/chidorian/106713617/• experiment: Jurvetson http://www.flickr.com/photos/jurvetson/2798315677/

Page 19: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

• the what, who, and why

Dave Lester, Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH)Presented 3/25/2011, NITLE Digital Scholarship Seminar

(and other DH conferences)

Page 20: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

THATCamp is..• a free, open

“unconference” where humanists and technologists meet

• a self-identifying community that’s active on Twitter (#thatcamp)

• fun, productive, collegial

Page 21: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

what campers have said

Page 22: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

founded at George Mason University

Page 23: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

THATCamp events• Regional: Victoria, Saigon, Great Lakes,

Jersey Shore, Florence, Texas, New York, Cyprus, Florida, Chicago, Bay Area, Paris, Southern California, Austin

• Topic or Community-Focused: Liberal Arts Colleges, Museum Computer Network

Page 24: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

unconference scheduling

Page 25: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

informal

Page 26: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

non-hierarchical and open

Page 27: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

lightning talks aka “dork shorts”

• brief presentations, often during lunch and lasting only a few minutes that allow campers to give a pitch for a project, idea, or question

Page 28: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

bootcamps

• introductory workshops in various digital skills that take place at a THATCamp.

• We think newbies and experts alike will benefit from cultivating “beginner’s mind” in these workshops, but believe it’s especially beneficial for “analog” scholars and museum professionals to learn alongside passionate and expert technologists.

Page 29: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

bootcamp fellowships• Awarded in the amount of $500 (USD), participants begin acquiring

digital skills at THATCamp• Faculty in the humanities and art professionals are eligible to apply

for fellowships, along with grad students, postgraduate fellows in Arts and Humanities as well as Museum Studies

Page 30: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

THATCamp covers all of DH

• participants that are humanities scholars, librarians, archivists, museum professionals, software developers

• session topics ranging from text mining, libraries and web 2.0, mobile, publishing, digital storytelling, library and university collaboration, annotation, crowdsourcing, teaching online

Page 31: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

more information about THATCamp

• http://thatcamp.org• [email protected] (Amanda French)

• my info: Dave Lester (@digitalhumanist)

Page 32: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Digital Humanities Summer Institute

Jentery SayersUniversity of Washington

[email protected] / @jenterysayers

with contributions from Ray Siemens and Cara Leitch

University of Victoria

NITLE Digital Scholarship SeminarMarch 25, 2011

Page 33: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

DHSI History & Method

• Annual event since 2004• One week in June at the University of Victoria, BC• Participants help shape curriculum, speaker and instructor

selection, and how the institute is organized• Development driven by participant feedback• Accreditation model (certificate for completion) • Tuition scholarships offered• Known for its relaxed atmosphere• DH summer camp: social event meets vocational training

meets conference meets unconference 

@jenterysayers

Page 34: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Forms of DH Curricula

@jenterysayers

Page 35: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

DHSI in a "Sweet Spot"

@jenterysayers

Page 36: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

2011 DHSI Courses

Fundamentals: (1) Text Encoding  (2) Digitisation

Tools & Methods: (1) XLST, (2) Multimedia Design, (3) SEASR in Action: Data Analytics, (4) Geographical Information Systems, and (5) Data Discovery, Management, and Presentation

Seminars & Consultations: (1) Large Project Planning and Management, (2) Digital Editions, and (3) Out-of-the-Box Text Analysis

@jenterysayers

Page 37: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

2011 DHSI Events

Graduate Colloquium: opportunity for students to share work (e.g., ten-minute talks) with a friendly audience, who can learn about new developments in DH

THATCamp Victoria: DHSI's first (at conclusion of the week, with at least 50 participants anticipated) 

Keynote: Matthew Kirschenbaum (University of Maryland) 

@jenterysayers

Page 38: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Value of DHSI

• Has been called the "gold standard of digital humanities training events"

• Instructors and speakers are leaders in their field• Learning doesn't stop at 4:00 p.m.: there are opportunities for

people to keep talking and collaborating after class meetings• Participants are major strength: smart, driven people with a

desire to learn and share what they know• Track record helps maintain and recruit sponsors (UVic

Libraries, UBC Libraries, U of Guelph, EMiC, INKE, Texas A&M, Acadia U, SFU Libraries), who choose DHSI to train their researchers

@jenterysayers

Page 39: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

Why DHSI for Beginners

• Get a rich sense of the "big tent," including how DH is practiced differently and why

• One-week course: great, low-risk way to become familiar with unfamiliar methods / content

• Extremely well-organized (the social events, the courses, the colloquium, and the talks included)

• You will learn plenty to communicate and teach to those at your home institution or organization.

• Rich sense of community, with plenty of return participants• You won't be the only beginner. Many come to get their feet

wet.• It's a lot of fun!

@jenterysayers

Page 40: Joining the National Digital Humanities Conversation: Communities, Conferences, Centers

More?

The Digital Humanities Summer Institute website: 

dhsi.org

THATCamp Victoria website: 

victoria2011.thatcamp.org

@jenterysayers

Thanks!