Teaching – SIUE THATCamp 2016 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org Engaging Communities Through Digital Humanities Thu, 16 Jun 2016 20:04:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 SIUE Landscape and Naming History http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/06/12/siue-landscape-and-naming-history/ http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/06/12/siue-landscape-and-naming-history/#comments Sun, 12 Jun 2016 05:44:57 +0000 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/?p=358

In 2014, I wrote an article for the SIUE student newspaper, the Alestle, which discussed the name origins of buildings on the SIUE campus. Unfortunately, that article never had a good way to visualize the way I wrote it. It turned into lengthy paragraphs that I was never happy with.

Having seen Dr. Hildebrandt’s presentation on mapping, I created a custom Google Map of all the major buildings on campus, with years for when they were built and a short biography for each building’s namesake.

Having created it in a day with writing two years old, I am happy with the result, though there are limitations to this product. It borders on historical antiquarianism with no explicit argument. Only people familiar with SIUE will likely care. Still, it could be used to form a larger narrative on the design of college campuses, as well as examining who buildings are named after. For example, more recently SIUE buildings are more likely to either have no “person” name or to be named after a alumni donor. There were also a number of building and location renamings in the 1990s, which is worth further examination.

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Digital East St. Louis Project Notes http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/06/11/digital-east-st-louis-project-notes/ Sat, 11 Jun 2016 23:41:33 +0000 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/?p=344

Digital East St. Louis Project

-Dr. Jess DeSpain

 

East St. Louis

-Population decreased 82,3666 in 1950 to 27,066 in 2010.

 

-Source of Project Funding: National Science Foundation ITEST

Purpose of Digital East St. Louis Project is to attract East St. Louis natives, who largely constitute under-represented groups, into STEM

 

Project Overview:

-Develop + test an urban place-based learning model

-Cohort of grade 6-9 participants progress through 4-week summer camps and Saturday sessions during the school year over a three-year period

-5-6 Instructors help develop + deliver content in the hopes they will take what they learn into their classrooms

Urban Place-based Education

Participants ask questions, solve real-world problems, and use field work to gather information in a local urban setting

 

Impacting Local Communities

  1. Pairing “IRL” experiences with digital methods
  2. Begin projects with a goal of listening + learning from participant experiences
  3. Gauging participant technology use + needs
  4. Forms of reciprocity when facing a lack of basic human needs

 

Middle School: age where STEM based interests often fade away, also age where web-building commonly involves playing around with text in ways that might hurt the eyes of an adult, but for the student, it is the coolest thing ever. They play with WordPress sites before working on main project.

 

If could start it over, prefer to work with smaller cohorts (15 at a time beginning in the summer)

 

Project should last 4 Years- ideally each student will be transferred into upward bound (upward bound=college readiness program for high schoolers), 3rd year = more options, e.g. graphic novels/game design, Intrinsic based: extrinsic learning does not equal long term learning.

 

Biggest tension: how much control over website is given to students vs. providing a usable database

 

Best way to encourage extrinsic motivation: choice + presence of friends

 

Problems with Project: because basic human needs are not always met in East St. Louis, it has been hard to get people involved

 

Better luck getting people to show up by texting students instead of parents

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Omeka Notes http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/06/11/omeka-notes/ Sat, 11 Jun 2016 20:00:55 +0000 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/?p=338

Omeka

-Dr. Jessica DeSpain [note:  the more ridiculous parts of this post are of my own invention to help others, as well as myself, relate some of the more tech-heavy parts of Omeka into an easy to understand context]

 

“Omeka” (pronounced oh-MEH-ka): Swahili word meaning to “display or lay out wares”

-Created at George Mason University

 

Is Omeka the right choice?

-Have set of things to display on wed

-Best when you have complete info about each object

-Not great for a simple website (consider WordPress instead)

-Not great is want control over how things look

-Not great is you want sophisticated dynamic queries of database

-Not great if you want to create complex paths through collection (Consider Scalar instead)

 

Which version?

yoursite.omeka.net

-free on Omeka.net servers

-fewer functionalities than full installaion/Omeka.net susbscription

-Example of Omeka hosted page: eaststlouisculture.org/omeka/

This page costs $20 a month for Omeka to host.

 

Omeka Vocab:

Item:   things added to site (like images, scanned pages)

Item Type: type of thing added to site (videos, photo, etc.)

Collection: grouping of items on site (e.g. digital book)

Exhibit: items displayed together on site

Metadata: specific groupings amongst items on the site (think Subject)

e.g. Wide, Wide World, Geography, or History of Tacos

Tags: generic pieces of information (more general searchable terms)

e.g. cats, tears, or Chuck Norris

Theme: look of site

Plugin: programs that can be added to a site

Simple Pages: type of plug-in to easily create web pages, basic, not detailed

 

Geoserver: server for multiple layers of maps, needed to run Neatline (Neatline not necessarily recommended for mapping, but no other option for Omeka without embedding new code into Omeka)

 

Building Omeka Pages

  • Create a Plan: Organizing content- determine how site will be structured, requires you know beforehand what sections + subpages of exhibit will be. E.g. a flowchart can help you understand hierarchy of items, collections, +exhibit pages in Omeka Tricky Aspect of Item Description- are you describing item or photo?
  • Prepare Items for the Web: important concepts for optimizing image for web use- file size, image size, + image resolution always do a “save as” when working with images + keep a folder for originals and one for edits
  • Add Core Fields: Dublin Core + Controlled Vocab, subject=topic of resource, description= account of resource, relation=establishes one item’s relation to another item, format= file format/physical medium/dimensions of resource, language= language of resource
  • Build an Exhibit: install exhibit builder plug-in, enter exhibit metadata: title, slug, description, credits, + themes.

            Ex: widewideworlddigitaledition.siue.edu

           

Warning: adding items monotonous business, important to keep intellectual goals in mind.

 

Importance of Controlled Vocab: to help unify searches and keep relationships amongst items easy to locate, agree ahead to use specific terms so that items that should be related to one another pop up within same search. Ex: if one image shows George Washington on a unicorn and another image shows George Washington punching a T-Rex on a nose, but the unicorn picture is tagged only as General Washington and the T-Rex picture is tagged only as President Washington, the two will not appear within the same search.

 

Possible use for Omeka: Student run blog/magazine?

 

Places to host: Bluehost (good IT) + Amazon Web Services (free terabyte of storage)

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The Wide, Wide World Digital Edition, an SIUE DH Project http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/06/11/the-wide-wide-world-digital-edition-an-siue-dh-project/ Sat, 11 Jun 2016 15:11:43 +0000 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/?p=333

Lead by Dr. Jessica DeSpain, The Wide Wide World Project, featuring students Ben Ostermeier, Elizabeth Korinke, and Gabby Borders

The Wide, Wide World Digital Edition is a long-running project devoted to cataloging the 174 editions of a nineteenth century bestselling novel: The Wide, Wide World. Students will discuss their involvement with the project, what they have learned and gained, and what goals they have.

This session must be scheduled on Sunday.

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Session Proposal: Come learn more about SIUE’s IRIS Center! http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/06/08/session-proposal-come-learn-more-about-siues-iris-center/ Wed, 08 Jun 2016 13:16:50 +0000 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/?p=294

The Interdisciplinary Research and Informatics Scholarship (IRIS) Center (siueiris.com/) is a facility designed to support individual and collaborative scholarship at faculty and student levels that applies digital content as a primary methodology. IRIS facilitates cross-disciplinary and collaborative projects that involve applications, enhancements, or re-conceptualizations of technology in the humanities and social sciences.

The IRIS Center is home to a number of exciting faculty-student research projects, and IRIS-affiliated faculty have even launched a brand new interdisciplinary minor in digital humanities and social sciences.

The co-directors of the IRIS Center (Jessica DeSpain and Kristine Hildebrandt) would like to offer a tour of the Center, including some illustrations of current and past projects, conversations with IRIS faculty and student researchers, and a discussion of the minor.

We are planning two tours: one on Saturday June 11 @ 1.45pm and one on Sunday June 12 @ 10.10am. We will meet in the MUC Hickory-Hackberry Room and walk together to Peck Hall, where the IRIS Center is housed.

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Make Session-Teaching with Omeka http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/05/20/make-session-teaching-with-omeka/ Fri, 20 May 2016 16:07:01 +0000 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/?p=245

Bring your laptops! I’ll walk you through the basic steps to setting up an Omeka site for digital archiving, anthologizing, and exhibiting, and we’ll discuss possible pedagogical uses and best practices.

 

Handouts:

exhibitassignment

Using Omeka

 

Slides available on SlideShare:

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Talk/Play Session-Digital East St. Louis http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/2016/05/20/talkplay-session-digital-east-st-louis/ Fri, 20 May 2016 16:03:43 +0000 http://siue2016.thatcamp.org/?p=243

Session Organizers: Sudhamadhuri Arvapally, Jessica DeSpain, Matt Johnson, Sharon Locke, & Mallory Maves

This presentation will share work underway with Digital East St. Louis, a project funded by a National Science Foundation Innovative Technology Experiences for Students and Teachers grant. Housed at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, the project is a collaboration between the Science Technology and Math Center, the Interdisciplinary Research and Scholarship Center (SIUE’s digital humanities Center), and the East St. Louis Community. In addition to sharing information about the project, we’ll also give session attendees the chance to interact with and comment upon student work.

Faculty in English and History who specialize in the digital humanities work alongside middle school teachers in the East St. Louis school district to develop a comprehensive three-year summer and after-school program for a group of middle school students. The research component of Digital East St. Louis is assessing how a digital humanities, place-based approach inspires student interest in the computer sciences. Over the three-year program, which launched in the summer of 2015, students will build a comprehensive database and a content-rich digital map showcasing their research into the history and culture of the city and its inhabitants.
One of the project’s primary goals is to encourage students to think across disciplines about ecology, geography, the lived environment, history, literature, and culture. Students will use skills central to information technology and information literacy to draw linkages between these topics, which will expand their critical thinking abilities and encourage them to see technology as a tool for exploring and visualizing broader questions. The project plans to train students in photography as they learn about East St. Louis architecture, learn about video production as they conduct oral history interviews with East St. Louis residents, and develop skills in research and metadata as they develop their own research interests for the project. This presentation will highlight the projects’ progress and discuss how to develop successful collaborations between the fields of STEM and the digital humanities in informal K-12 learning environments.

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