What We Teach When We Teach DH
Digital Humanities in the Classroom
Herausgeber: Croxall, Brian; Jakacki, Diane K.
What We Teach When We Teach DH
Digital Humanities in the Classroom
Herausgeber: Croxall, Brian; Jakacki, Diane K.
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
"Exploring how digital humanities (DH) is taught and what that reveals about the field itself, this book highlights how DH can transform learning across a vast array of curricular structures, institutions, and education levels, from high schools and small liberal arts colleges to research-intensive institutions and postgraduate professional development programs"--
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- James F. MillerDH 2 vs Albatros D I/D II19,99 €
- Global Debates in the Digital Humanities135,99 €
- Bodies of Information37,99 €
- Networks and the Spread of Ideas in the Past124,99 €
- Tony ButlerDH Hornet and Sea Hornet26,99 €
- Debates in the Digital Humanities 202337,99 €
- Terry PratchettNight Watch17,99 €
-
-
-
"Exploring how digital humanities (DH) is taught and what that reveals about the field itself, this book highlights how DH can transform learning across a vast array of curricular structures, institutions, and education levels, from high schools and small liberal arts colleges to research-intensive institutions and postgraduate professional development programs"--
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Debates in the Digital Humanities
- Verlag: University of Minnesota Press
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 178mm x 253mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 590g
- ISBN-13: 9781517915315
- ISBN-10: 1517915317
- Artikelnr.: 68716177
- Debates in the Digital Humanities
- Verlag: University of Minnesota Press
- Seitenzahl: 360
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 178mm x 253mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 590g
- ISBN-13: 9781517915315
- ISBN-10: 1517915317
- Artikelnr.: 68716177
Brian Croxall is associate research professor of digital humanities at Brigham Young University. He is coeditor of Like Clockwork: Steampunk Pasts, Presents, and Futures (Minnesota, 2016). Diane K. Jakacki is digital scholarship coordinator and associate faculty in comparative and digital humanities at Bucknell University. She is coeditor of Early Modern Studies after the Digital Turn.
Contents
Introduction: What We Teach When We Teach DH
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Part I. Teachers
1. Born-Pedagogical DH: Learning While Teaching
Emily McGinn and Lauren Coats
2. What Do We Want from the Standard Core Texts of the Digital Humanities
Curriculum?
Gabriel Hankins
3. Teaching the Digital Humanities to a Broad Undergraduate Population
Alison Langmead and Annette Vee
4. Teaching Digital Humanities: Neoliberal Logic, Class, and Social
Relevance
James O’Sullivan
5. Teaching from the Middle: Positioning the Non–Tenure Track Teacher in
the Classroom
Jacob Heil
6. Why (in the World) Teach Digital Humanities at a Teaching-Intensive
Institution?
Rebecca Frost Davis and Katherine D. Harris
Part II. Students
7. Digital Humanities in General Education: Building Bridges among Student
Expertise at an Access University
Kathi Inman Berens
8. (Hard and Soft) Skills to Pay the Bills: A Both/And Approach to Teaching
DH to Undergraduates
Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
9. Digital Humanities across the Curriculum, or How to Wear the Digital
Halo
Scott Cohen
10. Rethinking the PhD Exam for the Study of Digital Humanities
Asiel Sepúlveda and Claudia E. Zapata
11. Pedagogy First: A Lab-Led Model for Preparing Graduate Students to
Teach DH
Catherine DeRose
12. What’s the Value of a Graduate Digital Humanities Degree?
Elizabeth Hopwood and Kyle Roberts
Part III. Classrooms
13. Codework: The Pedagogy of DH Programming
Harvey Quamen
14. Community-Driven Projects, Intersectional Feminist Praxis, and the
Undergraduate DH Classroom
Andie Silva
15. Bringing Languages into the DH Classroom
Quinn Dombrowski
16. DH Ghost Towns: What Happens When Makers Abandon Their Creations?
Emily Gilliland Grover
17. How to Teach DH without Separating New from Old
Sheila Liming
18. The Three-Speed Problem in Digital Humanities Pedagogy
Brandon Walsh
Part IV. Collaborations
19. Sharing Authority in Collaborative Digital Humanities Pedagogy: Library
Workers’ Perspectives
Chelcie Juliet Rowell and Alix Keener
20. K12DH: Precollege DH in Historically Underprivileged Communities
Laquana Cooke and Andrew Famiglietti
21. A Tale of Two Durhams: How Duke University and North Carolina Central
University Are Increasing Access and Building Community through DH Pedagogy
Hannah L. Jacobs, Kathryn Wymer, Victoria Szabo, and W. Russell Robinson
22. Expanding Communities of Practice through DH Andragogy
Lisa Marie Rhody and Kalle Westerling
23. What Is Postcolonial DH Pedagogy, and What Is It Doing in Nonhumanities
Institutions? Case Studies from India
Dibyadyuti Roy and Nirmala Menon
24. Finding Flexibility to Teach the “Next Big Thing”: Digital Humanities
Pedagogy in China
Lik Hang Tsui, Benjun Zhu, and Jing Chen
25. What Is Digital Humanities and What’s It Doing in the Classroom?
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Introduction: What We Teach When We Teach DH
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Part I. Teachers
1. Born-Pedagogical DH: Learning While Teaching
Emily McGinn and Lauren Coats
2. What Do We Want from the Standard Core Texts of the Digital Humanities
Curriculum?
Gabriel Hankins
3. Teaching the Digital Humanities to a Broad Undergraduate Population
Alison Langmead and Annette Vee
4. Teaching Digital Humanities: Neoliberal Logic, Class, and Social
Relevance
James O’Sullivan
5. Teaching from the Middle: Positioning the Non–Tenure Track Teacher in
the Classroom
Jacob Heil
6. Why (in the World) Teach Digital Humanities at a Teaching-Intensive
Institution?
Rebecca Frost Davis and Katherine D. Harris
Part II. Students
7. Digital Humanities in General Education: Building Bridges among Student
Expertise at an Access University
Kathi Inman Berens
8. (Hard and Soft) Skills to Pay the Bills: A Both/And Approach to Teaching
DH to Undergraduates
Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
9. Digital Humanities across the Curriculum, or How to Wear the Digital
Halo
Scott Cohen
10. Rethinking the PhD Exam for the Study of Digital Humanities
Asiel Sepúlveda and Claudia E. Zapata
11. Pedagogy First: A Lab-Led Model for Preparing Graduate Students to
Teach DH
Catherine DeRose
12. What’s the Value of a Graduate Digital Humanities Degree?
Elizabeth Hopwood and Kyle Roberts
Part III. Classrooms
13. Codework: The Pedagogy of DH Programming
Harvey Quamen
14. Community-Driven Projects, Intersectional Feminist Praxis, and the
Undergraduate DH Classroom
Andie Silva
15. Bringing Languages into the DH Classroom
Quinn Dombrowski
16. DH Ghost Towns: What Happens When Makers Abandon Their Creations?
Emily Gilliland Grover
17. How to Teach DH without Separating New from Old
Sheila Liming
18. The Three-Speed Problem in Digital Humanities Pedagogy
Brandon Walsh
Part IV. Collaborations
19. Sharing Authority in Collaborative Digital Humanities Pedagogy: Library
Workers’ Perspectives
Chelcie Juliet Rowell and Alix Keener
20. K12DH: Precollege DH in Historically Underprivileged Communities
Laquana Cooke and Andrew Famiglietti
21. A Tale of Two Durhams: How Duke University and North Carolina Central
University Are Increasing Access and Building Community through DH Pedagogy
Hannah L. Jacobs, Kathryn Wymer, Victoria Szabo, and W. Russell Robinson
22. Expanding Communities of Practice through DH Andragogy
Lisa Marie Rhody and Kalle Westerling
23. What Is Postcolonial DH Pedagogy, and What Is It Doing in Nonhumanities
Institutions? Case Studies from India
Dibyadyuti Roy and Nirmala Menon
24. Finding Flexibility to Teach the “Next Big Thing”: Digital Humanities
Pedagogy in China
Lik Hang Tsui, Benjun Zhu, and Jing Chen
25. What Is Digital Humanities and What’s It Doing in the Classroom?
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Contents
Introduction: What We Teach When We Teach DH
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Part I. Teachers
1. Born-Pedagogical DH: Learning While Teaching
Emily McGinn and Lauren Coats
2. What Do We Want from the Standard Core Texts of the Digital Humanities
Curriculum?
Gabriel Hankins
3. Teaching the Digital Humanities to a Broad Undergraduate Population
Alison Langmead and Annette Vee
4. Teaching Digital Humanities: Neoliberal Logic, Class, and Social
Relevance
James O’Sullivan
5. Teaching from the Middle: Positioning the Non–Tenure Track Teacher in
the Classroom
Jacob Heil
6. Why (in the World) Teach Digital Humanities at a Teaching-Intensive
Institution?
Rebecca Frost Davis and Katherine D. Harris
Part II. Students
7. Digital Humanities in General Education: Building Bridges among Student
Expertise at an Access University
Kathi Inman Berens
8. (Hard and Soft) Skills to Pay the Bills: A Both/And Approach to Teaching
DH to Undergraduates
Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
9. Digital Humanities across the Curriculum, or How to Wear the Digital
Halo
Scott Cohen
10. Rethinking the PhD Exam for the Study of Digital Humanities
Asiel Sepúlveda and Claudia E. Zapata
11. Pedagogy First: A Lab-Led Model for Preparing Graduate Students to
Teach DH
Catherine DeRose
12. What’s the Value of a Graduate Digital Humanities Degree?
Elizabeth Hopwood and Kyle Roberts
Part III. Classrooms
13. Codework: The Pedagogy of DH Programming
Harvey Quamen
14. Community-Driven Projects, Intersectional Feminist Praxis, and the
Undergraduate DH Classroom
Andie Silva
15. Bringing Languages into the DH Classroom
Quinn Dombrowski
16. DH Ghost Towns: What Happens When Makers Abandon Their Creations?
Emily Gilliland Grover
17. How to Teach DH without Separating New from Old
Sheila Liming
18. The Three-Speed Problem in Digital Humanities Pedagogy
Brandon Walsh
Part IV. Collaborations
19. Sharing Authority in Collaborative Digital Humanities Pedagogy: Library
Workers’ Perspectives
Chelcie Juliet Rowell and Alix Keener
20. K12DH: Precollege DH in Historically Underprivileged Communities
Laquana Cooke and Andrew Famiglietti
21. A Tale of Two Durhams: How Duke University and North Carolina Central
University Are Increasing Access and Building Community through DH Pedagogy
Hannah L. Jacobs, Kathryn Wymer, Victoria Szabo, and W. Russell Robinson
22. Expanding Communities of Practice through DH Andragogy
Lisa Marie Rhody and Kalle Westerling
23. What Is Postcolonial DH Pedagogy, and What Is It Doing in Nonhumanities
Institutions? Case Studies from India
Dibyadyuti Roy and Nirmala Menon
24. Finding Flexibility to Teach the “Next Big Thing”: Digital Humanities
Pedagogy in China
Lik Hang Tsui, Benjun Zhu, and Jing Chen
25. What Is Digital Humanities and What’s It Doing in the Classroom?
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Introduction: What We Teach When We Teach DH
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Part I. Teachers
1. Born-Pedagogical DH: Learning While Teaching
Emily McGinn and Lauren Coats
2. What Do We Want from the Standard Core Texts of the Digital Humanities
Curriculum?
Gabriel Hankins
3. Teaching the Digital Humanities to a Broad Undergraduate Population
Alison Langmead and Annette Vee
4. Teaching Digital Humanities: Neoliberal Logic, Class, and Social
Relevance
James O’Sullivan
5. Teaching from the Middle: Positioning the Non–Tenure Track Teacher in
the Classroom
Jacob Heil
6. Why (in the World) Teach Digital Humanities at a Teaching-Intensive
Institution?
Rebecca Frost Davis and Katherine D. Harris
Part II. Students
7. Digital Humanities in General Education: Building Bridges among Student
Expertise at an Access University
Kathi Inman Berens
8. (Hard and Soft) Skills to Pay the Bills: A Both/And Approach to Teaching
DH to Undergraduates
Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
9. Digital Humanities across the Curriculum, or How to Wear the Digital
Halo
Scott Cohen
10. Rethinking the PhD Exam for the Study of Digital Humanities
Asiel Sepúlveda and Claudia E. Zapata
11. Pedagogy First: A Lab-Led Model for Preparing Graduate Students to
Teach DH
Catherine DeRose
12. What’s the Value of a Graduate Digital Humanities Degree?
Elizabeth Hopwood and Kyle Roberts
Part III. Classrooms
13. Codework: The Pedagogy of DH Programming
Harvey Quamen
14. Community-Driven Projects, Intersectional Feminist Praxis, and the
Undergraduate DH Classroom
Andie Silva
15. Bringing Languages into the DH Classroom
Quinn Dombrowski
16. DH Ghost Towns: What Happens When Makers Abandon Their Creations?
Emily Gilliland Grover
17. How to Teach DH without Separating New from Old
Sheila Liming
18. The Three-Speed Problem in Digital Humanities Pedagogy
Brandon Walsh
Part IV. Collaborations
19. Sharing Authority in Collaborative Digital Humanities Pedagogy: Library
Workers’ Perspectives
Chelcie Juliet Rowell and Alix Keener
20. K12DH: Precollege DH in Historically Underprivileged Communities
Laquana Cooke and Andrew Famiglietti
21. A Tale of Two Durhams: How Duke University and North Carolina Central
University Are Increasing Access and Building Community through DH Pedagogy
Hannah L. Jacobs, Kathryn Wymer, Victoria Szabo, and W. Russell Robinson
22. Expanding Communities of Practice through DH Andragogy
Lisa Marie Rhody and Kalle Westerling
23. What Is Postcolonial DH Pedagogy, and What Is It Doing in Nonhumanities
Institutions? Case Studies from India
Dibyadyuti Roy and Nirmala Menon
24. Finding Flexibility to Teach the “Next Big Thing”: Digital Humanities
Pedagogy in China
Lik Hang Tsui, Benjun Zhu, and Jing Chen
25. What Is Digital Humanities and What’s It Doing in the Classroom?
Brian Croxall and Diane K. Jakacki
Acknowledgments
Contributors