Author: Brett D. Hirsch (ed.)
Introduction</Parentheses>: Digital Humanities and the Place of PedagogyBrett D. Hirsch
Part 1. PracticesThe PhD in Digital HumanitiesWillard McCarty
Hands-On Teaching Digital Humanities: A Didactic Analysis of a Summer School Course on Digital EditingMalte Rehbein and Christiane Fritze
Teaching Digital Skills in an Archives and Public History CurriculumPeter J. Wosh, Cathy Moran Hajo, and Esther Katz
Digital Humanities and the First-Year Writing CourseOlin Bjork
Teaching Digital Humanities through Digital Cultural MappingChris Johanson, Elaine Sullivan, Janice Reiff, Diane Favro, Todd Presner and Willeke Wendrich
Looking for Whitman: A Multi-Campus Experiment in Digital PedagogyMatthew K. Gold
Acculturation in the Digital Humanities CommunityGeoffrey Rockwell and Stéfan Sinclair
Part 2. PrinciplesTeaching Skills or Teaching Methodology?Simon Mahony and Elena Pierazzo
Programming with Humanists: Reflections on Raising an Army of Hacker-Scholars in the Digital HumanitiesStephen Ramsay
Teaching Computer-Assisted Text Analysis: Approaches to Learning New MethodologiesStéfan Sinclair and Geoffrey Rockwell
Pedagogical Principles of Digital HistoriographyJoshua Sternfeld
Nomadic Archives: Remix and the Drift to PraxisVirginia Kuhn and Vicki Callahan
Part 3. PoliticsThey Have Come, Why Don’t We Build It? On the Digital Future of HumanitiesJon Saklofske, Estelle Clements and Richard Cunningham
Opening Up Digital Humanities EducationLisa Spiro
Multiliteracies in the Undergraduate Digital Humanities Curriculum: Skills, Principles and Habits of MindTanya Clement
Teaching Digital Rhetoric: Wikipedia, Collaboration and the Politics of Free KnowledgeMelanie Kill
Bibliography
No comments:
Post a Comment