Difference between revisions of "Resource: Digital Humanities Pedagogy"
From Lyndsey Twining
(→Summary) |
(→Review) |
||
Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
==Review== | ==Review== | ||
− | + | *Useful tips and perspectives for curriculum design | |
+ | *Some theory around what DH pedagogy is - especially Chapter 8 - in regard to skills versus methodology. I could somehow apply this to my theoretical background. | ||
[[Category:Resource]] | [[Category:Resource]] |
Latest revision as of 11:28, 20 April 2019
Digital Humanities Pedagogy - Practices, Principles and Politics | |
Title | Digital Humanities Pedagogy - Practices, Principles and Politics |
---|---|
Author/Editor | Hirsch, Brett D. (Ed.) |
Year | 2012 |
Publisher | OpenBook Publishers |
Summary
The book has three sections: Practices, Principles, and Politics.
Useful Content
Table of Contents
Introduction - Parentheses: Digital Humanities and the Place of Pedagogy
- The PhD in Digital Humanities
- Hands-On Teaching Digital Humanities
- Teaching Digital Skills in an Archives and Public History Curriculum
- Digital Humanities and the First-Year Writing Course
- Teaching Digital Humanities through Digital Cultural Mapping
- Looking for Whitman: A Multi-Campus Experiment in Digital Pedagogy
- Acculturation and the Digital Humanities Community
- Teaching Skills of Teaching Methodology?
- Programming with Humanists
- Teaching Computer-Assisted Text Analysis
- Pedagogical Principles of Digital Historiography
- Nomadic Archives: Remix and the Drift to Praxis
- On the Digital Future of Humanities
- Opening Up Digital Humanities Education
- Multiliteracies in the Undergraduate Digital Humanities Curriculum
- Wikipedia, Collaboration, and the Politics of Free Knowledge
Review
- Useful tips and perspectives for curriculum design
- Some theory around what DH pedagogy is - especially Chapter 8 - in regard to skills versus methodology. I could somehow apply this to my theoretical background.