Individual Fellow Initiatives

Displaying 1 - 7 of 7
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Digital Research Apprenticeship: Projects For Intersectional Justice

Cohort: 2021
Fellow: Tanya Clement

Research and scholarship in Digital Humanities applies technology to humanities questions and subjects technology to humanistic interrogation. DH pedagogy is difficult to develop because DH is inherently collaborative and interdisciplinary, crossing the humanities, archaeology, arts and architecture, computer science, film and media studies, information studies, geography, and the social sciences.

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Podcasting as Experiential Learning in Classics

Cohort: 2020
Fellow: Deborah Beck

Students in pre-modern disciplines face greater challenges in finding productive and engaging avenues for Experiential Learning than students in fields whose connections to current events are more self-evident. Podcasting offers students of ancient Greece and Rome a way to connect with people outside their classrooms, both other students and interested members of the general public. It also requires them to hone their oral presentation skills and to think about how to present the same idea to different audiences, both of which are fundamental to critical thinking.

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Medieval Digital Research Lab: A Pilot Upper-Division Course

Cohort: 2018
Fellow: Daniel Birkholz

The idea for this pilot course grows directly out of departmental and university goals to increase opportunities for Experiential Learning and for new technology exposure in the Humanities; and to involve more undergraduate students in original faculty research.

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A Sustainable Way to Teach Data Mining and Mapping: Proof of Concept For a Flipped Computational Skill Instruction Module

Cohort: 2017
Fellow: Lars Hinrichs

This project is directed at students with no prior knowledge of computer programming languages. When introducing complex and new skills such as computer programming in a classroom, teachers are often confronted with a lot of worried students and great numbers of very different questions, especially in humanities departments. The lecture setting is not well suited to address the needs of individual students.

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CREEES Fusion Room: an Interdisciplinary Digital Workshop

Cohort: 2016
Fellow: Mary Neuburger

This project entailed the creation of a curricular context and physical space for collaborative interdisciplinary teaching and research for faculty and students interested in Russian, East European and Eurasian studies. This was achieved in two ways. First, I transformed the required gateway course to our major, “Introduction to Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies,” which had been a disjointed “parade of faculty” course with disconnected guest speakers.

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The Keys to Understanding History: Unlocking Digital Timelines

Cohort: 2016
Fellow: Erika Bsumek

This project started out with a simple idea: From my original proposal, we noted that “Current historical timelines are not interactive, nor do they enable students to understand connections between different events. They are good at showing chronology, but are not good at illustrating how specific events are influenced by a whole host of different historical factors.”

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Bevosourcing: Tools to Involve Students in Citizen Science and Online Data Publication

Cohort: 2015
Fellow: Adam Rabinowitz

Digital archives and the internet have made it possible for non-experts to make major contributions to research through crowdsourcing and citizen science. UT has fascinating and important collections of primary sources for the humanities, many of which have been digitized. But before my PTF project, there were no digital tools at UT to facilitate crowdsourcing as a pedagogical strategy, engaging students with historical documents while enriching the collections themselves. The project therefore proposed to develop two UT-based crowdsourcing platforms.