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jatolbert

Trends in Digital Scholarship Centers | EDUCAUSE - 2 views

  • Although sometimes confused with digital scholarship centers, digital humanities centers are often specialized research centers led by a group of faculty and serving only select disciplines rather than a broad campus community. Also, libraries often play only a peripheral role in digital humanities centers.1 In contrast, libraries or IT organizations have a key role in digital scholarship centers.
    • jatolbert
       
      This is important.
  • Digital scholarship centers can build institutional capacity to address emerging and future scholarship needs.
  • Considering options for presenting or publishing completed projects
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  • A key attribute that distinguishes digital scholarship centers from more traditional research institutes (such as digital humanities centers) is that they are service organizations, staffed by individuals with specialized skills, who support work in the digital environment.
  • Whether a digital scholarship center needs a dedicated facility or can be a distributed set of physical spaces and services — or even a virtual service — are open questions. A physical center that brings together specialized equipment and services in one convenient place has the advantage of visibility and provides a venue for an array of programming, including workshops, guest lectures, and displays of completed projects. In other cases, an office or set of offices might serve as the hub for center staff, while equipment and services are dispersed in physically separate media production areas, GIS facilities, data visualization labs, and makerspaces.
  • The case studies also illustrate the importance of tailoring a digital scholarship program to the needs of the institution; there is no "one size fits all."
  • The Sherman Centre has taken a "design-build" approach: Spaces were rendered with maximum flexibility in mind — with minimal enclosed spaces and with a strong focus on moveable furniture and adaptable technology. Design work has continued long after the center was officially opened: Key service and space components have been added as the needs of the campus community have become more clear.
  • Thus, the Sherman Centre was not serving an established collection of self-identified digital scholars — it was growing its own.
  • First, we have learned the critical importance of clearly defining the Sherman Centre's scope and purpose for the campus community.
  • We often find ourselves having to turn people away when their work is not advancing the digital scholarship agenda. Saying no is not easy, but it must be done to protect the center's integrity.
  • Digital scholarship centers represent a model of engagement for libraries and information technology units. They both support and encourage new directions in research, teaching, and learning and provide the infrastructure (technical and human) to encourage experimentation in new areas of scholarship.
  • Experiences gained from existing digital scholarship centers can help uninitiated institutions better launch their own efforts and thereby increase support for the research, teaching, and learning needs of their campus communities.
  • Digital scholarship centers focus on relationships, extending the ways in which librarians and academic computing professionals relate to and work with faculty (and often students) and their scholarly practices.
  • Here, we examine centers that go by a variety of names — including digital scholarship center, digital scholarship lab, and scholars' lab — but that nonetheless share common features. These centers are generally administered by a central unit, such as the library or IT organization; serve the entire campus community (including undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty); and address the needs of a range of academic departments and programs.
Jennifer Parrott

Survey: Online learners are starting to resemble on-campus learners | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    Information about who is taking online courses and why
Leslie Harris

'Heat Maps' Give Michigan State a New View of Campus Climate - 0 views

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    Visualizations of survey responses show where students feel they belong, or don't Premium content for subscribers.
Todd Suomela

DSHR's Blog: Researcher Privacy - 0 views

  • There is a real lack of understanding, even among students and researchers, as to the extent to which their on-line activities are tracked. Libraries could do much more to educate the campus community as to the importance of ad-blockers, VPNs, and tools such as Tor and Tails.
Matt Gardzina

Rise in "flipped classroom" model, improvements apparent | The Chronicle - 0 views

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    Duke University student newspaper "As the use of the "flipped classroom" model rises on campus, students and faculty are taking time to adjust to the idea."
Todd Suomela

Beyond buttonology: Digital humanities, digital pedagogy, and the ACRL Framework | Russell | College & Research Libraries News - 0 views

  • Here are a few specific examples you can apply to your instructional design process to help learners with metacognition: Model the metacognitive process during instruction (or in one-on-one consultations) to ask and reflect on big picture questions such as: “What questions can you answer with this tool?” “What can you not do with this tool?” Keep in mind some answers may be simple (e.g., this tool can only work with data in this way, so it is excluded automatically). Also, “Did I get the results I expected? What could I have done differently?” Start with inquiry and build conversations based on the learner’s answers. “Is it the data that does not work? Or is the research question fundamentally wrong to begin with?” Collaborate with faculty to teach together, modelling your practices while demonstrating a specific tool. This could include thinking aloud as you make decisions so learners can self-correct assumptions. Also, be aware of your own expert bias so you can demonstrate how to clear obstacles. Ask learners to specifically define what is difficult for them during the process of instruction. Digital humanities tools are complex and are based on complex methodologies and research questions. By constructing opportunities for learners to self-question as they move from one task to another, they learn to self-assess their progress and adjust accordingly. There are several instructional design activities that promote metacognition: think-pair-share, one minute paper (“share a key concept learned” or “what comes next?”), and case studies.
  • There are specific strategies we can implement to help learners escape the recursive spiral of the liminal state they experience while managing complex digital projects: One of the most challenging aspects of teaching digital tools is forgetting what it is like to be a novice learner. Sometimes being a near-novice oneself helps you better prepare for the basic problems and frustrations learners are facing. But recognizing liminality is a reminder to you as a teacher that the learning process is not smooth, and it requires anticipating common difficulties and regularly checking in with learners to make sure you are not leaving them behind. When meeting with learners one-on-one, make sure to use your in-depth reference interview skills to engage in methods discussions. When a learner is in the liminal state, they are not always able to “see the forest for the trees.” Your directed questions will illuminate the problems they are having and the solutions they had not seen. Pay close attention to the digital humanities work and discussions happening on your own campus, as well as across the academic community. Working through the liminal space may require helping learners make connections to others facing similar problems. Also follow online discussions in order to point your learners to a wide variety of group learning opportunities, such as the active digital humanities community on Slack.9 When designing instructional opportunities, such as workshops and hackathons, pay particular attention to outreach strategies that may bring like-minded learners together, as well as diverse voices. For example, invite the scholar whose project was completed last year to add a more experienced voice to the conversation. By encouraging the formation of learning communities on your campus, you are creating safe spaces to help learners navigate the liminal state with others who may be on the other side of struggling with specific digital project issues. In designing instructional activities, guide learners through visualization exercises that help to identify “stuck” places. Making graphic representations of one’s thoughts (e.g., concept maps) can highlight areas that require clarification.
Jennifer Parrott

Survey Finds Only Limited Public Awareness of MOOCs - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    What the general public knows and thinks about MOOCS
Leslie Harris

U Illinois Prof Places Herself into Flipped Courses -- Campus Technology - 0 views

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    A faculty member uses software called Personify to record her "flipped classroom" lectures. Personify allows her to place her head and shoulders (recorded as she delivers the lecture) on top of the screencasting content, and she can choose when to display her image and when not to display her image as she delivers the lecture.
Leslie Harris

55% More STEM Students Fail Lectures Than Active Learning Classes -- Campus Technology - 0 views

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    This article about an article didn't define active learning, but it points to a study that asserts that 55% more students in STEM courses fail the course when lecture is used, as compared to active learning.
Jennifer Parrott

Professors Envision Using Google Glass in the Classroom - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    Google glass in the classroom
Leslie Harris

Exploring New Frontiers with Google Glass -- Campus Technology - 0 views

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    Very short promotional article about a course in which students are developing apps for Google Glass
Leslie Harris

Research: The Proof is In! Multi-Tasking in Class Reduces Test Scores -- Campus Technology - 1 views

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    The study itself involved student self-reporting of Internet use during lecture, and the researchers used ACT scores as an indicator of academic ability, but the results are not surprising: students who surfed the Internet during lecture did worse on course exams. Duh!
Leslie Harris

What Enhanced E-Books Can Do for Scholarly Authors - The Digital Campus 2014 - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 1 views

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    Article by a faculty member who used Apple iBooks Author to produce an "enhanced" eBook version of a scholarly monograph
Leslie Harris

16 OER Sites Every Educator Should Know -- Campus Technology - 1 views

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    Most of the links are to online textbook sites, but there are also links to other OER repositories.
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