{"id":579,"date":"2015-04-23T18:11:04","date_gmt":"2015-04-23T18:11:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/endlesshybrids.com\/?p=579"},"modified":"2015-04-23T18:11:04","modified_gmt":"2015-04-23T18:11:04","slug":"dh-pedagogy-and-the-undergraduate-curriculum","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/endlesshybrids.com\/digital-humanities\/dh-pedagogy-and-the-undergraduate-curriculum\/","title":{"rendered":"DH Pedagogy and the undergraduate curriculum"},"content":{"rendered":"

This morning I gave\u00a0a short talk to the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges<\/a>\u00a0about our digital humanities initiatives at Washington and Lee (W&L). A couple of my colleagues also presented at this session. My focus was on a concept we’re calling DH Studio.<\/p>\n

Formally, we have described DH Studio:<\/p>\n

The library and information technology services are developing a series of one-credit lab courses for the humanities and the humanistic social sciences. These weekly courses will give students the opportunity to discuss the context of a topic, examine the important research questions guiding the DH methodology, review exemplary scholarly projects, and gain significant hands-on experience exploring relevant tools. Each DH Studio course will be a co-requisite to one or more full-credit courses in the humanities or social sciences. The studio courses also will utilize student mentors to assist with the classes.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

We just completed our first pilot of DH Studio: Scholarly Text Encoding<\/a>. That course turned out very well, particulary thanks to my colleague Mackenzie Brooks<\/a>\u00a0who did a great job teaching the class.<\/p>\n

The problem we’re trying to address with DH Studio: how to further integrate DH practices into the curriculum<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

W&L has succeeded in introducing students to simple DH tools through the use of timelines, basic mapping applications, blogging with\u00a0WordPress, and creating short video-based digital stories in iMovie. That’s a great set of basic DH skills<\/strong> and is facilitated by having an academic technology specialist visit the class to provide instruction in those tools.<\/p>\n

The students learn the tools rather quickly. But I don’t get a sense that the students really understand why they’re using a particular tool. Why that specific tool and why that tool for addressing a specific problem? Introducing tools to students is a great start but there is a lack of critical thinking among students<\/strong> about the use of digital methods in their assignments.\u00a0 We realized that the bigger question was how do you get students exposed to more digital practices and do so in a way that requires them to reflect on what they’re doing?<\/p>\n

Our DH Working Group<\/a> and DH Action Team<\/a> started discussing learning outcomes and adopted the learning outcomes from the Short Guide to the Digital_Humanities<\/a>\u00a0(pdf):<\/p>\n