Matthew G. Kirschenbaum - 0 views
Introduction to Digital Humanities - 1 views
New Job; or, If Digital Humanities is a Game, I Prefer Tactics « Brian Croxall - 0 views
Publishing | metaLAB (at) Harvard - 0 views
Next Generation of Online-Learning Systems Faces Barriers to Adoption - Wired Campus - ... - 0 views
-
Chief among them are professors’ desires to customize what they teach and their reluctance to use prepackaged course material. The most sophisticated of today’s online-learning systems rely on machine-guided instruction to adapt lessons to the needs of individual students. But most of those systems do not yet allow instructors to deeply tailor the material to meet their course needs.
MLA issues guidelines on evaluation of digital scholarship | Inside Higher Ed - 1 views
Digital Humanities efforts range from database design to new creations | Harvard Magazi... - 1 views
-
Building a virtual world (as he and his team have done in partnership with Dassault Systèmes, Paris) enhances research, too, he adds: it underscores what isn’t known. “The process raises all sorts of research questions: Was the mummy embalmed in the temple or in some kind of purification tent somewhere else? Should this canopy be in the middle of the courtyard? How many statues were set up in the niches?”
-
Like pyramid-building itself, the work of the humanities is to create the vessels that store our culture. In this sense, the digitization of archives and collections holds the promise of a grand conclusion: nothing less than the unification of the human cultural record online, representing, in theory, an unprecedented democratization of access to human knowledge. Equally profound is the way that technology could change the way knowledge is created in the humanities. These fields, encompassing the study of languages, literature, history, jurisprudence, philosophy, archaeology, religion, ethics, the arts, and arguably the social sciences, are entering an experimental period of inventiveness and imagination that involves the creation of new kinds of vessels—be they databases, books, exhibits, or works of art—to gather, store, interpret, and transmit culture.
-
But digitization of archives also has the capacity to change the traditional division of labor in humanities scholarship in fundamental ways—for example, by empowering ordinary people to participate in the creation, curation, and interpretation of collections.
- ...9 more annotations...
metaLAB (at) Harvard - 0 views
MPublishing - MPublishing - 0 views
Welcome | Bamboo DiRT (BETA) - 0 views
About the CDRH | Katherine L. Walter - 0 views
Digital Humanities Questions & Answers - 1 views
« First
‹ Previous
61 - 80 of 98
Next ›
Showing 20▼ items per page