Manufacturing Pasts: Making the history accessible

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www.le.ac.uk Manufacturing Pasts: Making the history accessible London Digital Humanities Group, 30 April 2013 Terese Bird Learning Technologist and SCORE Research Fellow

description

This paper was presented to the London Digital Humanities Group on 30 April, 2013, at University of London.

Transcript of Manufacturing Pasts: Making the history accessible

Page 1: Manufacturing Pasts: Making the history accessible

www.le.ac.uk

Manufacturing Pasts:Making the history accessible

London Digital Humanities Group, 30 April 2013Terese BirdLearning Technologist and SCORE Research Fellow

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What will we talk about?

• Making the history accessible

• Audiences

• Evolving needs for digital humanities

Photo by esrad on Flickr

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Making the history accessible

• No historiography of British industrial decline

• Dead zone: 70s – 90s

• Locked away

• Open materials

• Capture it now

• Not didactic but context

• AccessiblePhoto by Wesley Fryer on Flickr

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Fires – the need to capture now

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Accessible – how?• Saw connections, made the

mashups

• Created a website on top of the database

• Used social media

• Visited classes, groups, record office, libraries, conferences

• Made everything downloadable, mobile

• iTunes U

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On the website you can listen to the professor…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVN4OOpKGMQ

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Social Media: everyone joins in(Flickr, Prezi, Youtube, Scoop.it, Twitter)

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Mobile

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Audiences

• College librarians

• College students – extended project

• Currently-enrolled university students

• Local community

• Local historians

• Digital humanities scholars

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Evolving Needs for the Digital Humanities Toolkit for researchers:

• Using visual sources in historical research

• Using oral testimony in historical research

• Provenance, judgement

Tools for students & teachers:

• Glossary, reference

• How to make your own

• How to reference

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Key SkillsAnalyzing and drawing conclusions from primary sources, including image-based sources, is a key skill for historians and specialists in many fields, and utilising digitised primary sources has been effective in building such skills (Tally & Goldenberg, 2005)

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The storyso far…

Any questions?

www.le.ac.uk/manufacturingpasts

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Embedding in learning

• Gobbet papers

• Seminars around some of the materials; group work

• ‘Transformations’ module assessment will be built around

• PGCE Geography assessment will be built around

• PhD and Masters students will be introduced to these as research sources

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References

• Beyond Distance Research Alliance, University of Leicestere. (2010). OTTER: Open, Transferable and Technology-enabled Educational Resources — University of Leicester. University of Leicester website. Retrieved March 12, 2012, from http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/beyond-distance-research-alliance/projects/otter

• Beyond Distance Research Alliance, University of Leicester. (2011). OSTRICH: OER Sustainability through Teaching & Research Innovation: Cascading across HEIs — University of Leicester. University of Leicester website. Retrieved March 12, 2012, from http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/beyond-distance-research-alliance/projects/ostrich

• Tally, B., & Goldenberg, L. B. (2005). Fostering Historical Thinking With Digitized Primary Sources. Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 5191, 1-21. Retrieved from http://students.stritch.edu/dlcaven/Article2/DigitizedPrimarySources.pdf