On Writing, Making and Mining: Digital History Class Projects
Posted by tjowens on Thursday, June 2, 2011 · Comments (0)
This is the forth post in a multi-post series reflecting on the digital history course I taught last semester at American University. For more on this you can read initial post about the course, the course syllabus, my posts on the value of a group public blog on how technical to get in a digital history course and on how the students content will continue to be a part of future version of the course.
I am a big fan of the idea that building and making is a hermeneutic. Part of what makes the idea of the digital humanities particularly nifty is the idea that we can embrace building tools, creating software, designing websites and a range of maker activities as an explicit process of understanding. Because of this, and in light of my feelings about the necessity for students to develop technical competency, I knew I wanted students in my class to work on a digital project.
With that said I gave my students a choice.
via On Writing, Making and Mining: Digital History Class Projects : Trevor Owens.