NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - TEI

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As students increasingly draw upon digital content as a primary source of information, how might they be taught to be both discriminating consumers as well as producers of online information? Doing history rather than teaching history is not a new approach, but the “doing” part of researching, writing, and publishing now includes drawing upon and creating digitized resources. In this NITLE Shared Academics seminar, NITLE subject-area specialist Michelle Moravec, Aaron Cowan, assistant professor of history at Slippery Rock University, and Kathryn Tomasek, associate professor of history at Wheaton College, provided concrete examples from their own work, and examined the opportunities and challenges of integrating digital humanities into the undergraduate curriculum. These are Dr. Kathryn Tomasek's slides.

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Project-Based Learning, Undergraduate Research, and Digital Methods in the Wheaton College Digital History ProjectKathryn TomasekWheaton College, MassachusettsNITLE Webinar, 14 May 2014

“do history”American Historical AssociationHistorians.org

Inquiry-based LearningHow Students Learn (2005)National Research Councilhttp://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?isbn=0309074339

High-Impact PracticesProject LEAP: Liberal Education and America’s PromiseAmerican Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U)https://www.aacu.org/leap/

Extensible Markup Language(XML)

Guidelines of the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI)http://www.tei-c.org/index.xml

The Wheaton College Digital History Projecthttp://wheatoncollege.edu/digital-history-project/

Eliza Baylies Chapin WheatonLaban Morey Wheaton

Founders of Wheaton Female Seminary

Maria E. Wood JournalU.S. Women’s History Fall 2004

Eliza Baylies WheatonTravel Journal & Pocket DiariesSpring 2005Summers 2005-2008

Teaching Historical Methods with Text Encoding

History 302

Junior ColloquiumMethods course for History majors

Intended to be taken the semester prior to taking capstone course—Senior Seminar

Students in Senior Seminar are expected to write a research paper of at least twenty pages, not including front and back matter

The paper must be based on original research in primary sources.

Assignment meant to model the process of research and writing

Day BookDaily accounting of transactions that reflect the many business activities of Laban Morey Wheaton between 1828 and 1859

PaymentsRents

Land, equipment

Taxes

Postage

Labor

PurchasesFood

Fabrics and sewing supplies

Lumber and building supplies

Long Term Collaborations

Building a database that can be used in future assignments

Files available for use in other courses on campus.Computer Science

Diaries and accounts can be coded for analysis in US History courses.

Eventually, files will be available for use on other campuses.

We built a website for the Wheaton College Digital History Project in 2010.

TAPAS Project has created a tool that will publish XML files; it has just launched

These projects feed my own research about women, work, and economy in the nineteenth-century United States.

TAPAS: TEI Archiving, Publication, and Access

Servicehttp://tapasproject.org/

Transcription and markup, as part of scaffolded assignments in which students engage deeply with archival materials and write about the stories they uncover, offer one model for the effective use of digital tools in teaching the practice of history to undergraduates.

kathryntomasek.orgencodinghfrs.org

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