“Teaching to the Network: Digital Humanities and Public Pedagogy” Matt Gold Gives Talk at Fordham

In part 2 of the FGSDH Group’s Teaching and Research with Technology Series, Matt Gold, from the CUNY Graduate Center and editor of Debates in the Digital Humanities, will give a talk over lunch. It is entitled, “Teaching to the Network: Digital Humanities and Public Pedagogy.” Graduate students, faculty, staff, and anyone else with an interest in teaching and the digital humanities, are welcome.

The details:

May 1, 12:00-2:00, Walsh Library, O’Hare Special Collections (fourth floor).

Please sign up here for the event through your Fordham email account, so we know how many people will be there for lunch.

This event is made possible by Fordham University’s Center for Teaching Excellence.

Omeka Workshop Was A Success

The vast digital humanities tent can seem overwhelming at times. The easier path would be to sit by the pleasant campfire at the site next door and toast marshmallows. But as 15 Fordham University faculty and graduate students learned during the Omeka workshop on April 3, the barrier to entry into the tent is quite low. Alex Gil, Columbia University’s Digital Scholarship Coordinator, did a terrific job leading the workshop.

Alex Gil, Digital Scholarship Coordinator, Columbia University
Alex Gil, Digital Scholarship Coordinator, Columbia University

Omeka, as Wikipedia defines it, is a free, open source, content management system for online collections. It was developed by the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University, and was given a technology collaboration award by the Andrew Mellon Foundation.  Omeka is used by researchers, archivists, museum curators, students, and teachers.

For this workshop, Alex showed us a few notable sites–or exhibits, as they’re called–that use Omeka, including “Lincoln at 200,” a collaborative project involving the Newberry Library, the Chicago History Museum, and the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission. Then he carefully walked us through the procedure for creating an Omeka exhibit. Workshop participants brought a diverse collection of material to work on: from medieval manuscripts to pre-Columbian art to personal photographs.

The group felt so enthusiastic about Omeka, that a few participants have decided to reconvene in a few weeks and help each other develop their work. Marshmallows will be served. If you missed the workshop and want to learn more about Omeka, you’re welcome to join us. More details coming soon.

The Omeka Workshop was sponsored by the Center for Teaching Excellence and the Fordham Graduate Student Digital Humanities Group.

Omeka Workshop Participants
Omeka Workshop Participants

Omeka Workshop, April 3

The Graduate Student Digital Humanities group is organizing a 90-minute workshop on the digital content management system Omeka. The workshop will be led by Alex Gil, Digital Scholarship Coordinator at Columbia University. It will take place April 3, from 11:00-12:30 in Keating 318. This workshop does not require you to be a digital expert. Simple familiarity with common tools like Microsoft Word, Google or WordPress will suffice. Sign up here with your Fordham email address. Space is limited.

Workshop description:
In this workshop you will learn how to create and organize a digital archive using Omeka, an open-source tool designed to manage and display collections of cultural objects in digital formats (images, video, documents, sound, etc.). Omeka is used by researchers, archivists, museum curators, students and teachers. As you explore this user-friendly but powerful tool, you will learn about its functions and design. Participants will use the free version of the software provided at omeka.net.  Bring to the workshop a small collection of files that you would like to collect online. These can be .mp3′s, .pdf’s, .jpg’s, .txt’s, or any other common file format. For examples of humanities projects that use Omeka, look at the Showcase.

Looking ahead:We are excited that Matt Gold, from the CUNY Graduate Center and editor of Debates in the Digital Humanities, will give a talk entitled “Teaching to the Network: Digital Humanities and Public Pedagogy.” May 1, 12:00-2:00, Walsh Library, O’Hare Special Collections. A light lunch will be served.

Both events are made possible with funds from the Center for Teaching Excellence.

Fordham's Citizen Cartographers

What do you do with a growing collection of international maps that contains over 433,000 sheet maps and 20,000 book atlases, some of which date back to the 15th century? As twelve graduate students and one post-doc from Fordham University recently learned, you digitize it, of course. At the New York Public Library’s Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division, that effort has begun with some of its New York City and antiquarian maps. But more than just make high-resolution images of these maps, the library also developed “Map Warper,” a tool which allows anyone with a computer and an internet connection to digitally align (also known as “rectify”) these maps to match today’s precise maps, such as OpenStreetMap and GoogleEarth. The project joins “What’s On the Menu,” another fabulous crowdsourcing project at the library.

IMG_0198
Mishka Vance, a library technical assistant, shows Fordham University graduate students Tara Foley, Christy Potroff, and Melissa Whalen some maps in the NYPL’s collection at the Map Division.

On a grey February day, this group from Fordham assembled at the library to learn how to use MapWarper and become what the library calls “Citizen Cartographers.” The patient and delightful Mishka Vance, a technical assistant at the library, used a digitized, early twentieth-century Bronx fire map to demonstrate how to trace buildings, add information (brick, wood, or stone? residence or business?) about them to the database, and rectify the old map with a contemporary one.

Participants then proceeded to trace and rectify maps of their own choosing from the library’s digitized collection. Among the maps rectified that day were an early postal map from the Midwest, an ancient map of Cyprus, and a 1916 survey of Morningside Heights.

The people who attended this workshop hailed from several departments, including English, Classics, Theology, and Medieval Studies. They came for reasons that ranged from using Map Warper in their research, to using it in their teaching, to simply adding to their knowledge base of digital tools.

This spring, the Fordham Graduate Student Digital Humanities Group continues its efforts to make more opportunities like the Map Warper workshop available. Our next event will be a roundtable organized by Sarah Cornish and Jane Van Slembrouck called “Digital Traces.” It takes place on March 2 at the Graduate Student English Association’s Conference, “Remembering, Forgetting, Imagining: The Practices of Memory.” On March 6, HASTAC Scholar Patrick Burns leads a  discussion of Stephen Ramsay’s Reading Machines. See the Events page for more details on these and other spring programs.

The events sponsored by the FGSDH Group are open to all members of the Fordham community, no matter their level of technological expertise. With limited formal opportunities on campus for humanities students to learn how to incorporate technology with their coursework, research, and teaching, this group aims to at least partially fill that gap by teaching each other and learning together.

Citizen Cartographers are a happy bunch!
Citizen Cartographers are a happy bunch!

Learn about Digitally Rectifying Maps at the NYPL

Wednesday, February 6, 2:00-4:00PM.
New York Public Library, 42nd St and 5th Ave.

The New York Public Library has kindly agreed to offer a workshop to Fordham Graduate Students who wish to learn how to use the digital mapping tool, Map Warper. Space is limited and available on a first come, first served basis. The NYPL Map Warper is a tool for digitally aligning (“rectifying”) historical maps from the NYPL’s collections to match today’s precise maps. This workshop is for anyone interested in learning a new digital tool, particularly for people using maps in their research. Sign up by following the link below.
http://www.doodle.com/9kt3hhz7gkw9zic7

Follow the Fordham Graduate Student Digital Humanities on Facebook.

NYPL Map Warper

Final FGSDH Meeting on 12/4 from 2:00-3:45

12/4 2:00-3:45 Dealy 208A. Join us at the final meeting of the semester. This will be an important organizational meeting to make this group better than ever. Here’s your chance to take a lead in planning the FGSDH’s future, as well as find out the exciting things already in the works for next semester.

Here’s your chance to take a lead in planning this group’s future. Volunteers are needed to

  • Assume a more active role in the FGSDH: Social media. Web design. Meeting planning. Marketing.
  • Plan DH-related events to take place at Fordham.
  • Help plan “Teaching and Research with Technology Day” in the spring, a day of discussion and workshops with special guests from the NYC DH community and beyond.
  • Lead or organize a mini workshop on coding, digital pedagogy, and designing born-digital research.
  • Help draft a request to the administration that Fordham University should offer institutional support to all graduate students wishing to pursue research and teaching in the digital humanities.

Learn more about the early winter trip to the New York Public Library’s map room for a workshop on the “map warper tool.”  This free workshop will be especially tailored for our group. At the 12/4 meeting, share what would you like to discover about digital mapping at the library.

Give your input (become the organizer!) for a possible spring reading and discussion group. Texts we’re considering are Stephen Ramsay’s Reading Machines and Howard Rheingold’s Net Smart: How to Thrive Online. Is there a book you would like to read with group? Share your suggestions on 12/4. Using FGSDH funds, free books will be provided to all reading group participants.

THATCampNY 2012: Following Up with Fordham Students

 

Reflections on the recent THATCamp NY (The Humanities and Technology Camp) by three of Fordham’s graduate students appear after the following report.

From digital pedagogy to text mining to library support for digital scholarship, THATCampNY 2012, which took place at Fordham University’s Lincoln Center campus on October 5-6, included almost thirty sessions related to the digital humanities. At least 95 students, faculty, librarians, and staff came from CUNY, Columbia University, the New York Public Library, Rutgers University, Cornell University, as well as from Michigan and beyond. THATCampNY 2012 was organized by Elizabeth Cornell, Pre-doctoral Fellow in Fordham’s English Department, along with Jonathan Cain, Reference and Instruction Librarian, Hunter College, and Tatiana Bryant, Reference Associate, NYU Libraries.

“I hope Fordham will continue to host and support such innovative, interdisciplinary, and collaborative events as they will only serve to strengthen our community’s research and pedagogy.” –Sarah Cornish, English

Several workshops were offered. Kristen Garlock, Associate Director of Education and Outreach at JSTOR, the online library database, introduced participants to a set of web-based tools for selecting and interacting with content using JSTOR’s “Data for Research” tool. Alex Gil, Digital Scholarship Coordinator at Columbia University, led a workshop on Omeka, a tool for the management of collections of digital assets. Chris Sula Assistant Professor of Information and Library Science from the Pratt Institute, led a workshop on Gephi, an open source program for network visualization and analysis.

“As with any great gathering of university folk, I left energized and excited, because I’d experienced a new, unexpected way of thinking about what I do.” –Kem Crimmins, Philosophy

Discussion sessions had a more informal structure than workshops, but were no less dynamic. Roger Panetta, Visiting Professor of History at Fordham, directed an information-gathering session on ways to take online student work beyond sophisticated blog posts. Kimon Keramidas, from the Bard Graduate Center, led a discussion on platforms and best practices for online scholarly publishing. Lucy Bruell, who oversees NYU’s Literature, Arts, and Medicine database, had a working session on how to overhaul this vast resource. Jared Simard offered an introduction on platforms available for mapping and timelines, and he explored questions of how the DH community can facilitate acquisition of programming tools. Other sessions dealt with the logistics of collaboration among researchers spread out across the globe.

“What do we mean when we encourage interdisciplinarity and collaboration?” –Alan Kline, Medieval Studies.

THATCamp is a series of free “unconferences” devoted to hands-on work and discussion of the intersection of technology and the humanities. It is hosted by research and cultural institutions multiple times a year. THATCamp participants include researchers, students, librarians, archivists, curators, educators, technologists, and others interested in using technology to produce humanities scholarship. Popular with both scholars and practitioners, there were over forty-five THATCamps worldwide between 2008 and 2011, and over twenty are planned for 2012.
(A version of the above also appears on Fordham’s English Connect.)

What did Fordham’s graduate students think of THATCampNY?

 Sarah Cornish, PhD candidate in English:

As a recent initiate into the world of digital humanities and on my way to attend the first day of THATCampNY, I had no idea of what to expect. An unconference? No schedule posted? No panels? This was new, and as a volunteer representing Fordham’s Graduate Digital Humanities Working Group, I worried I was ill-equipped to be there. But, as a PhD candidate who is working on representations of city space in literature, I was also enticed by the possibility of learning about platforms that might be useful for my research and pedagogy. On that first day, I was treated to a series of “lightening talks” in which professors, research librarians, independent scholars, and graduate students presented the ways in which they employ (and in many cases, build) DH tools to enhance their work. I learned about CUNY Graduate Center’s Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy, an online publication and forum for creative and critical approaches to including technology in the classroom and beyond. I was inspired by a talk on digitizing treasures found while doing archival work and making them available for other researchers. Through listening to the various presentations, I was amazed at how much I don’t yet know, but also able to envision ways that my own work will benefit through digital tools. I hope Fordham will continue to host and support such innovative, interdisciplinary, and collaborative events as they will only serve to strengthen our community’s research and pedagogy.

 Alan Kline, MA student, Medieval Studies:

For me, fundamental questions are the most fun. My favorite session at THATCampNY dealt with text mining, which brought up a number of fundamental questions. Before we sort, collect, and explain data, how do we define data? What gets left out after settling on a definition? How should we account for omitted data? Those familiar problems take on a new dimension in a digital context: programming is a tool that enables a researcher to collect and visualize a vast amount of data, but that fact generates its own well-documented problems. Supplementary digital tools not only enable us to sail the oceans of digitized literature faster than ever before, they also provide an excellent opportunity for expansive collaboration. Given that many humanities programs emphasize interdisciplinary scholarship, it seems a little ironic that students and faculty must rely principally on themselves to pursue their interest in digital literacy and its consequent research functionality. Nearly every one of my professors has made it a point to destroy the myth that a scholar’s work is solitary, yet most of the participants at the text mining session with knowledge of basic programming were self-taught. What, then, do we mean when we encourage interdisciplinarity and collaboration?

 Kem Crimmins, Philosophy:

This was my first THATCamp. Although I had followed a few previously on Twitter, the live tweets do not do these events justice. Not your traditional conference, THATCamp is full of energetic, to eenthusiastic and supportive academics who embrace technology to further their research and develop an innovative and effective classroom.

I attended three sessions, and, interestingly, they all shared a theme: presenting humanities research visually. Whether mapping the relationships among ideas or thinkers, using Prezi to organize data rather than simply as an alternative to Powerpoint, or building online, visually enhanced archives in the classroom,the THATCamp participants were keen to dig deeper and and to build new platforms that would lead to new, potentially paradigm-shifting insights both for themselves and their students. As with any great gathering of university folk, I left energized and excited, because I’d experienced a new, unexpected way of thinking about what I do.

From Public Course Blogs to Grand, Aggregated Experiments

SAVE THE DATE!

10/23 FGSDH Meeting, Walsh Library Computer Lab 047
>>”Markup Basics: Build an Online CV in 45 Minutes” A workshop on HTML led by Patrick Burns.
>>Group members who attended THATCampNY will briefly share their experiences.
>>”Brainstorming an Appeal for More DH at Fordham for Graduate Students in 45 Minutes” The group will begin research and collaboration to create a document to be presented to Fordham University requesting that a program for basic digital literacy be implemented for graduate students. The appeal will also outline what such a program would entail.

Here is Will Fenton‘s Prezi from Tuesday’s meeting on digital pedagogy.

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Five Easy Ways to Incorporate Digital Tools into the College Classroom

Elizabeth Cornell
Here are some notes on my talk at the last FGSDH meeting on teaching with digital tools. Please share your experiences with these tools in the comments.

The students in my “Tales of Gotham: NYC in Fiction” are reading some great books this semester, among them Mark Helprin’s A Winter’s Tale and Toni Morrison’s Jazz. They’re also developing expertise with digital tools they’ll likely need to know how to use in the real world and that they can use in other classes, too. These include  WordPress, Zotero, Prezi, archives and databases, basic text analysis tools, mapping, and the rich resources for writing and collaboration on GoogleDrive.

Who’s teaching them how to use these tools? Not me. They’re teaching each other while they also think and talk critically about the texts we’re reading. All I did was divide them up into small groups of three and four, and assigned to each group one of the following roles described on the Infographic below. For the groups assigned a particular tool, such as Prezi or WordPress, they taught the class how to use it. The Discussion group not only taught the class how create a Prezi, they collaborated on one to support a discussion on the semester’s first reading, poetry by Walt Whitman. In addition to demonstrating how to use WordPress, the Blogging group had to explain good academic blogging practices. They then modeled those practices with posts about Whitman’s poetry. Other groups, such as the Activity and Wild Card groups, were given free range to explore digital and nondigital ways to engage the class with course material. So far, this approach has been successful: my students are animated in class and we’re having fun as we learn together. No boring lectures about literature from Prof. Cornell. Right now, two of my classes are using GoogleDrive’s presentation software for collaboration on an annotation project for A Winter’s Tale.

In their written reflections to me on the first round of group work (groups rotate roles), many students admitted to initially having strong reservations about working together, only to discover how much they enjoyed it. This was due in part to their online collaborations. That is, not everyone had to be in the same room at the same time for work to get done. For example, they’ve discovered the ease of communicating and sharing editable documents and presentations with each other (and me) using GoogleDrive. Moreover, they are pleased to be learning together ways to use digital tools that they may well need expertise in when they look for jobs. Finally, they like teaching each other and taking the lead in discussions and activities.

Here’s the Infographic describing each role that groups will undertake during the semester. Students have access to the graphic in the private space of the course website.

—Elizabeth Cornell

Digital Pedagogy: What Is It? How Do You Do It?

A Discussion and Workshop led by the Fordham Graduate Student Digital Humanities Group

~ ALL ARE INVITED TO ATTEND ~

September 25
3:00-5:00
Walsh Library Computer Lab 047

Eliminating the Handout: Paperless Teaching and the Less-Paper Reality
Patrick Burns will lead a conversation with the group on best practices and reasonable strategies for eliminating handouts and adopting eBooks in the classroom. He will share his experiences of the ups and downs he’s encountered this semester in his Intermediate Latin class of going paperless and using online material. During discussion, the group will share their own experiences and similar experiments with paperless teaching and computing in the classroom. In addition to instructors using online textbooks, this discussion may be of special interest to language teachers using online dictionaries and grammars, as well as for any teacher using out-of-print and out-of-copyright material mainly available online.

Five Easy Ways to Incorporate Digital Tools into the College Classroom
Elizabeth Cornell offers a hands-on workshop on easy ways to bring digital tools into your classroom. Use of these tools require little preparation on the teachers’ part except general knowledge of them. This approach not only develops students’ versatility with a variety of digital tools, it encourages them to become better communicators and collaborators.

Digital Pedagogy: From Public Course Blogs to Grand, Aggregated Experiments?
Will Fenton discusses aspects of the graduate-level course in digital humanities that he currently is taking at the CUNY-Graduate Center.

For more information about the interdisciplinary FGSDH,
check out our website, http://fordhamgsdh.wordpress.com/, and like us on Facebook.