Comments on: From Projects to Program http://newengland2011.thatcamp.org/10/17/from-projects-to-program/ The Humanities and Technology Camp Sat, 29 Oct 2011 00:14:54 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 By: Elli Mylonas http://newengland2011.thatcamp.org/10/17/from-projects-to-program/#comment-171 Fri, 21 Oct 2011 20:30:19 +0000 http://newengland2011.thatcamp.org/?p=217#comment-171 Brown has had a digital humanities group since 1994, when it was called humanities computing. We’ve never been a real, stand alone, funded center. We started out as part of the computing organization and are now part of the library. The library had also been active in DH and DL activities starting at about 2000. We are still not a stand alone funded center. However, we are very blended group in the library, and we have recently acquired two new colleagues – an e-science librarian and dh librarian (who’s attending THATCamp). The vision that we are being asked to function under is one where dh permeates the library.

On the whole, I like this, but it’s worth discussing what it really means, and how to get there. Molly Ruggles proposed a session on recognizing and capturing the knowledge of pre-digital scholars. Is this another factor?

]]>
By: Amanda Rust http://newengland2011.thatcamp.org/10/17/from-projects-to-program/#comment-162 Fri, 21 Oct 2011 17:05:04 +0000 http://newengland2011.thatcamp.org/?p=217#comment-162 I think there’s some interesting overlap with this session, and that poster articulated better than I the concerns I have about locking oneself into only an ad hoc or only a programmatic approach.

]]>
By: elizabethcornell http://newengland2011.thatcamp.org/10/17/from-projects-to-program/#comment-123 Wed, 19 Oct 2011 22:22:44 +0000 http://newengland2011.thatcamp.org/?p=217#comment-123 I love this idea. My school, Fordham University, has no formal program for grad or undergrad students.

There is, however, a formal DH initiative at my school, but it is tiny. The department chairs and most of the teachers don’t have a clue as to what they need to establish a DH dimension in the major requirements or course curriculum.

If a DH “center” existed on campus, they wouldn’t really know how to use it. This does not mean they are afraid of DH or not interested. They just don’t know what to ask for from DH, how to use it in their own research, or how to assess the work of their students and colleagues.

In addition to addressing the questions you raise above, I’d like to figure out ways to approaching some of these challenges of simply moving people toward seeing why they might need and how they might use a DH center or department in their school or organization.

]]>