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DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T171119Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T023442Z
UID:10000135-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:[Foundations] Race\, Social Justice and DH: Applied Theories and Methods
DESCRIPTION:Over the past five years we have seen a proliferation of academic job advertisements\, publications\, and discussions demonstrating ways in which race and social justice can be engaged in digital humanities scholarship. Interest by students and local communities in technological advancements through Web 2.0\, social media\, and mobile phones are permitting new forms of research and practice. #transformDH\, #DHpoco\, #femDH\, and #BlackLivesMatter have helped to challenge the all-white discourse\, often dominated by scholars in the disciplines of English and history\, that is too often found in digital humanities. What happens to students in digital humanities methods classes who bring non-traditional bodies into this world? There have been discussions how to insure that syllabi and materials for digital humanities classes are inclusive – specifically\, how an introductory DH methods class keeps race\, social justice\, and inclusivity as cornerstones in their pedagogy. The traditional divides witnessed in the tech world will only be replicated in the world of both undergraduate and graduate DH courses without attention to race\, social justice\, etc. This week-long class will show how\, through an interdisciplinary intersectional and CRT framework\, both race and social justice can be central to any DH teaching\, pedagogy\, and practice. The course will pay special attention to queer theory\, critical ethnic studies\, postcolonial theory\, WOC/Black feminism\, Indigenous studies\, and disability studies as they currently help to reshape digital humanities teaching and methods across our university/college classrooms. \n\n\n\nThis course combines lecture\, seminar\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering to build on: Fundamentals of Coding / Programming for Human(s|ists); Web Development / Project Prototyping for Beginners with Ruby on Rails. Consider this offering in complement with and / or to be built on by: Physical Computing and Desktop Fabrication; Digital Humanities with a Global Outlook; Digital Indigeneity; Intersectional Feminist Digital Humanities: Theoretical\, Social\, and Material Engagements; Queer Digital Humanities; Surveillance and the Critical Digital Humanities; Anti-Colonial DH Pedagogy; and more.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/foundations-race-social-justice-and-dh-applied-theories-and-methods-6/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T171126Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T023528Z
UID:10000136-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:[Foundations] Intersectional Feminist Digital Humanities: Theoretical\, Social\, and Material Engagements
DESCRIPTION:Although there is a deep history of feminist engagement with technology\, projects like FemTechNet argue that such history is often hidden and feminist thinkers are frequently siloed. In order to address this\, the seminar will offer a set of background readings to help make visible the history of feminist engagement with technology\, as well as facilitate small-scale exploratory collaboration during the seminar. Our reading selections bring a variety of feminist technology critiques in Media Studies\, Human-Computer Interaction\, Science and Technology Studies\, and related fields into conversation with work in Digital Humanities. Each session is organized by a keyword – a term that is central to feminist theoretical and practical engagements with technology – and will begin with a discussion of that term in light of our readings. The remainder of each session will be spent learning about and tinkering with Processing\, a programming tool that will allow participants to engage in their own critical making processes. \n\n\n\nPushing against instrumentalist assumptions regarding the value and efficacy of certain digital tools\, we will be asking participants to think hard about the affordances and constraints of digital technologies. While we will be engaging with a wide range of tools/systems in our readings and discussions\, we anticipate that the more hands-on engagement with Processing will help participants think about operations of interface\, input\, output\, and mediation. In addition to the expanded theoretical framework\, participants can expect to come away with a new set of pedagogical models using Processing that they can adapt and use for teaching at their own institutions. \n\n\n\nThis course combines lecture\, seminar\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering to build on: Fundamentals of Coding / Programming for Human(s|ists); Web Development / Project Prototyping for Beginners with Ruby on Rails. Consider this offering in complement with and / or to be built on by: Physical Computing and Desktop Fabrication; Digital Humanities with a Global Outlook; Digital Indigeneity; and more.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/foundations-intersectional-feminist-digital-humanities-theoretical-social-and-material-engagements-5/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172051Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T023823Z
UID:10000137-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:[Foundations] DH for Chairs and Deans
DESCRIPTION:Intended for university administrators who seek an understanding of the Digital Humanities that is both broad and deep\, this offering establishes a cohort that [1] meets as a group for three dedicated sessions before the first day of DHSI (on the Sunday beforehand) and several dedicated session midweek to survey and discuss pragmatic DH basics and chief administrative issues related to supporting DH and those who practice it at their institution\, [2] allows those enrolled to audit (as non-participatory observers\, able to go from class to class) any and all of the DHSI courses\, and [3] individually engages in consultation and targeted discussion with the instructors\, who are the first three chairs of the international Alliance of Digital Humanities Organisations (ADHO)\, speakers and consultants contributing to the course\, and others in the group outside of course time during the institute. \n\n\n\nThis is a seminar style / audit-oriented course. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by: Scholarscapes\, Augmented Dissemination via Digital Methods; Models for DH at Liberal Arts Colleges (& 4 Yr Institutions); Out-of-the-Box Text Analysis for the Digital Humanities; Digital Pedagogy Integration in the Curriculum; Crowdsourcing as a Tool for Research and Public Engagement; Online Collaborative Scholarship: Principles and Practices (A CWRCShop); Professionalizing the Early Career Digital Humanist: Strategies and Skills; and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/foundations-dh-for-chairs-and-deans-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T024018Z
UID:10000138-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Podcasting from Scratch
DESCRIPTION:This course for beginners will explore the how and why of podcasting. We’ll consider the benefits of the medium\, and learn how to plan\, record\, edit and publish audio content. Expect to do some listening and reading outside of class time\, and have your favourite audio and text editors ready.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/podcasting-from-scratch-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T024045Z
UID:10000139-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Introduction to Project Planning and Management for DH: Issues and Approaches
DESCRIPTION:This course will cover the basics of project management from project definition to project review upon completion. Topics such as budget setting and controls\, risk management\, critical path scheduling\, software tools\, and related Internet resources will also be discussed. Material will be covered through lectures\, discussions\, case studies\, and presentations. By the end of the course\, participants will be able to implement the course concepts and tools in their projects. \n\n\n\nThis course has lecture\, seminar\, and hands-on components. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by most other DHSI courses that focus on the pragmatics of planning elements of research\, including Agile Project Management.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/introduction-to-project-planning-and-management-for-dh-issues-and-approaches-3/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T024257Z
UID:10000140-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Databases for Humanists
DESCRIPTION:Digital Humanities projects use more and more data every year. It’s no wonder — the rise of “big data” and “data science” are transforming how we humanists do our research. Databases are becoming increasingly important foundations for data analysis and data visualizations of all kinds. This course is about building and using databases\, whether that means a small personal project like creating a reading list or managing large projects like wrangling unwieldy research materials\, performing data science metrics\, or analyzing social networks. We’ll see that databases are really about much more than just “looking things up.” Database query languages allow us to find patterns in our data\, to see how things change across time\, and to discover anomalies that may lead to new research questions. Over the course of the week\, we’ll install the free database\, MySQL\, on everyone’s computer and we will learn the basics of designing\, creating\, and querying relational databases. No prior programming experience is necessary. \n\n\n\nThis course combines lecture\, discussion\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering in complement with: Fundamentals of Programming/Coding for Human(s|ists); Visualizing Information: Where Data Meets Design; Introduction to Computation for Literary Criticism; and more.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/databases-for-humanists-4/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172131Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T024525Z
UID:10000141-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Designing Digital Publications
DESCRIPTION:This course will focus on strategies for designing\, building\, and publishing long-form scholarship in fully digital formats. As we consider commonly-used platforms like Pressbooks\, Omeka\, and Scalar\, we will discuss flexible writing workflows and best practices for developing a multimodal expressions of your research\, regardless of medium. Our discussions will be guided by an audience-centered approach to project design\, and the course will offer participants ample opportunities to reflect on their own research\, professional goals\, and audiences as they make choices about the content and layout of their own projects. This course is ideal for graduate students who are contemplating a born-digital dissertation\, scholars who are working heavily with multimedia\, and those who are curious to explore alternatives to print-based scholarship. \n\n\n\nThis course balances lectures with hands-on activities. This offering harmonizes with courses on project planning and management\, open access and open social scholarship\, digital storytelling\, and digital editions. We are particularly eager to support projects that grow from DHSI courses on race\, social justice\, intersectional feminist and queer digital humanities.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/designing-digital-publications-5/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T025020Z
UID:10000142-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Engaging Play
DESCRIPTION:This class provides students with hands on experience with games and their uses in the humanities classroom. The focus of our course is to learn how games are structured\, how they function and how they can become an integral part of a humanities curriculum. Participants will learn to use Twine and incorporate game narratives into their own classes. Taught by Jeffrey Lawler and Sean Smith\, co-directors of the Center for the History of Video Games\, Technology and Critical Play\, the course covers a variety of topics such as game theory and questions that games\, including tabletops and video games\, raise within humanities disciplines. \n\n\n\nThis course combines lecture\, seminar\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering a compliment to Games for Digital Humanists and build on Using Digital Games as Critical Methods of Intervention\, Advocacy\, and Activism in Humanities Scholarship. Here we take a disciplinary specific approach to video games and offer practical ways of implementing them in lower division survey courses and upper division research seminars. Participants will leave class with a model assignment\, prototype Twine game\, and practical advice for implementing the project in upper or lower division history curriculum.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/engaging-play-4/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172811Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T025259Z
UID:10000143-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Critical Making as Scholarship
DESCRIPTION:In this team-taught workshop\, we invite scholars to join us in exploring the potential of critical making to transform their scholarship: to make it playful\, experiential\, public\, interactive\, and weird. Daniel Chamberlain defines work grounded in this way as critical making\, a practice which “extends beyond critique into artistry: in making\, design and function are not separate. The message (or story) of a work is intertwined throughout its making.” This places the emphasis not on learning tools for their own sake\, but on thinking through the relationship of our tools (and our code) with our disciplines and scholarship. It is not enough to master a tool or software program. A critical maker reflects on the tool itself\, and rejects\, supplements\, extends\, and critiques it as part of the process of making. As Matt Ratto contends\, the products of critical making are “a means to an end…[to] achieve value through the act of shared construction\, joint conversation\, and reflection” (Ratto). Accordingly\, participants in this workshop will learn a variety of ways to make both physical and computational things (and physical-computational things) as well as ways to critically examine the assumptions built into technologies\, how to make more inclusive technologies\, and how to use making as mode of research. Centering the humanities within critical making provides depth and richness in the interpretation and analysis of technologies that is not available from other approaches. During the week-long workshop\, we will immerse our fellow humanists in critical making\, building their confidence and self-efficacy with material and software-driven making and preparing them to engage in both their own research and pedagogy using models building on comics\, interactive fiction\, craft\, and computation. We will work with both physical and material elements for prototyping and design as well as digital tools including Twine\, an open-source platform for making hypertext and Tracery\, a procedural library for grammar-driven generation.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/critical-making-as-scholarship-6/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T025332Z
UID:10000144-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Open-Assembly Teaching\, Making\, and Publishing: COVE Editions and Studio
DESCRIPTION:This course will introduce the open-assembly teaching and making tools at the nonprofit COVE (Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education)\, which anyone\, anywhere can use without having to learn to code. COVE is a scholar-driven\, open-access platform that publishes both peer-reviewed material and active-learning or “flipped classroom” student projects built with our web-based online tools. COVE operates as a two-fold platform: Studio\, where instructors can create anthologies of primary works that can then be made available for multimedia student annotation\, and Editions\, which hosts published and private editions\, galleries\, maps\, and timelines\, and facilitates peer review. DHSI students will learn the COVE toolset and principle of “open assembly\,” or free\, transformative remixing of texts\, items\, and archives. They will build an anthology (in COVE Studio) and begin an Edition\, Map\, Gallery\, or Timeline (in COVE Editions) that they can easily complete afterwards. They will then share these projects with the DHSI community. \n\n\n\nConsider this offering in complement with Designing Digital Publications\, Critical Making as Scholarship\, and Conceptualizing and Creating a Digital Edition.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/open-assembly-teaching-making-and-publishing-cove-editions-and-studio/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172841Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T025441Z
UID:10000145-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Digital Pedagogy and the Book: Tools\, Methods\, and Projects
DESCRIPTION:This course will help faculty\, staff\, and instructional technologists conceptualize\, design\, and explore platforms for courses teaching book history and editorial practices. The course will provide readings on the history of the book and the book after the digital turn\, and together we will discuss ways to immerse students in archival\, editorial\, and analytical practices regardless of their access to material books in special collections. Throughout the week\, we will explore digital tools and platforms and consider how to best adapt them for the study of book history. We will collaborate on designing and scaffolding assignments\, consider methods for assessment\, and collectively build a repository of resources\, links\, and prompts. At the end of the week\, participants will leave with a fully designed course unit and a better understanding of how to incorporate digital tools within their book history lessons and courses. \nThis course combines lecture\, seminar\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering in complement with\, and/or to be built on by: Digital Pedagogy Integration in the Curriculum; Understanding The Predigital Book: Technologies of Inscription; Using Digital Games as Critical Methods of Intervention\, Advocacy\, and Activism in Humanities Scholarship; Feminist Digital Humanities: Theoretical\, Social\, and Material Engagements; Critical Pedagogy and Digital Praxis in the Humanities.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/digital-pedagogy-and-the-book-tools-methods-and-projects/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172848Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T025516Z
UID:10000146-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Introduction to IIIF: Sharing\, Consuming\, and Annotating the World’s Images
DESCRIPTION:Access to image-based and A/V resources is fundamental to research\, scholarship and the transmission of cultural knowledge. Digital images are containers for much of the information content in the Web-based delivery of books\, newspapers\, manuscripts\, maps\, scrolls and archival materials. Yet much of the Internet’s resources are locked up in silos\, with access restricted to bespoke\, locally built applications. A growing community of the world’s leading research libraries and content repositories have embarked on an effort to collaboratively produce an interoperable technology and community framework for image and AV delivery. IIIF (International Image Interoperability Framework) has the following goals; To give scholars an unprecedented level of uniform and rich access to image-based resources hosted around the world\, to define a set of common application programming interfaces that support interoperability between image repositories\, and to develop\, cultivate and document shared technologies\, such as image servers and web clients\, that provide a world-class user experience in viewing\, comparing\, manipulating and annotating images.” (https://iiif.io) and with the release of version 3.0 to extend these benefits to Audio and Video resources. This course will introduce students to the basic concepts and technologies that make IIIF possible\, allowing for guided\, hands-on experience in installing servers and clients that support IIIF\, and utilizing the advanced functionality that IIIF provides for interpretive research\, such as annotation.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/introduction-to-iiif-sharing-consuming-and-annotating-the-worlds-images/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172926Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T025624Z
UID:10000147-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Queer(ing) DH
DESCRIPTION:Queerness and the digital humanities share a common ethos: a desire to make meaning in new ways. Indeed\, the intersection of DH and queerness is a site of rich potential that can inspire (and challenge) us to think differently about DH\, its methods\, its purpose\, and its politics. This is true whether we are building a DH project or writing DH critique.This course draws from readings\, discussions\, interactive exercises\, visits by guest speakers\, and short\, collaborative hands-on making projects to explore a variety of questions about queerness and DH. What does DH bring to queer studies? What does queer studies bring to DH? How might a queer DH project serve social justice? How can we develop DH projects that are queer in their design? What might it mean to queer DH itself? How can we understand DH as already queer? This course values self-reflection\, intersectional perspectives\, and cultural critique. It addresses the challenges and frictions facing those who do queer DH work. What are the obstacles for queer DH within larger structures of academia and funding? Is there a tension between the push for skill-building within DH and queer studies’ critiques of neoliberalism? When do the norms of DH themselves run counter to the values of queerness? \nOur readings will address topics that fall under the wide umbrella of the “digital humanities\,” including (but not limited to) data visualization\, classification systems\, programming languages\, video games\, mapping and geography\, online archives\, and tangible computing. We will also engage with queer communities at and around the University of Victoria by visiting the Trans Archive. As instructors\, we bring to this course an understanding that LGBT/queer people\, identities\, and histories are multiple and complex. We strive to foster thinking about queerness and DH that engages meaningfully with intersecting issues of race\, class\, disability\, nationality\, religion\, and indigenous rights. \nThis course includes lecture\, seminar\, demo\, and hands-on components. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by: Intersectional Feminist Digital Humanities: Theoretical\, Social\, and Material Engagements; Race\, Social Justice\, and DH: Applied Theories and Methods; Critical Pedagogy and Digital Praxis in the Humanities; Spatial DH: Unsettling Cultural Territories Online; Anti-Colonial DH Pedagogy; and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/queering-dh/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T025719Z
UID:10000148-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Surveillance and the Critical Digital Humanities
DESCRIPTION:This course uses an anti-colonial framework to analyze the ethics surrounding physical and digital surveillance methods\, including the use of algorithms\, biometrics\, social media\, and physical data. We will examine the ways in which communities experience surveillance differently\, based on factors such as race\, ethnicity\, gender\, sexuality\, and socioeconomic status. To do so\, we will read the work of leading scholars like Simone Browne and Safiya Noble\, conduct self-assessments to determine our own participation in surveillance culture\, and discuss strategies to limit surveillance in the university classroom.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/surveillance-and-the-critical-digital-humanities-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T172955Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T030005Z
UID:10000149-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Natural Language Pro​cessing with Pytho​n
DESCRIPTION:This course will introduce you to many techniques available to process\, analyze\, and visualize textual data with Python. You will learn the fundamental theories and methods used in Natural Language Processing (NLP) by writing code. We will begin with a swift introduction to Python syntax and Jupyter Notebooks\, learning what we need to know to be effective in the course. We will emphasize Python’s built-in capabilities for handling text as we transition into using many of the most popular Python packages for NLP\, including the Natural Language ToolKit (NLTK). The NLTK is a large library of tools and resources that will allow us to conduct part-of-speech tagging\, sentiment analysis\, entity recognition\, and text classification. Because of its extensive documentation\, NLTK remains an ideal choice for researchers interested in showing proof of work through citation and reproducibility. We will use other packages for Machine Learning (ML) tasks\, such as Gensim for topic modeling and Stanza for multi-language capabilities and access to contemporary ML language models. We will learn to visualize our findings beautifully with packages such as Networkx\, Seaborn\, and Bokeh. Experience with Python is not strictly required for participation in the class\, but a general understanding of programming methods and terms will be an asset. This class will help you think about humanities problems through computation. By the end of our time together\, you will understand the kinds of questions we can answer with NLP methods and be ready to implement them in code. \nThis is a hands-on course with some lecture components. Consider this offering to be built on by and/or in complement with Fundamentals of Programming/Coding for Human(s|ists)\, Wrangling Big Data for DH\, Out-of-the-Box Text Analysis for the Digital Humanities\, Text Processing – Techniques & Traditions\, Visualizing Information: Where Data Meets Design\, Web APIs with Python\, Parsing and Writing XML with Python\, and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/natural-language-processing-with-python-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ccdhhn.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-DHSI-header-logo-e1683903079212.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173014Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T030030Z
UID:10000150-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Social Knowledge Creation / Construction
DESCRIPTION:This course explores historical and contemporary theories of knowledge construction and conveyance in an interdisciplinary context\, balancing earlier thought and theory\, via readings related to pertinent traditions\, with direct engagement of current applications and active experimentation in the area\, including via contribution to a live wikibook on the subject. Topics include: ways of knowing; inter/disciplinary and methodological foundations; digital scholarship; social knowledge production; knowledge construction and constriction; social media communities and collaboration; knowledge space design; gamification; tools and techniques.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/social-knowledge-creation-construction-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T030214Z
UID:10000151-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Linked Open Data and the Semantic Web
DESCRIPTION:This course explores how opening access to data changes the digital humanities project. We will cover the reasons for publishing open data\, how we can create open data\, and how we can work with open data. We will see how linked open data allows us to share data and incorporate data from other projects. We will learn about data models\, data formats\, and software tools for working with linked open data. We’ve designed the course to give you the tools you need to incorporate linked data into your projects\, whether you’re a software engineer\, a project manager\, or a subject matter expert. \nThis course combines lecture and hands-on activities. Consider this offering in relation to the following. Predecessors: Making Choices About Your Data; Race\, Social Justice\, and DH: Applied Theories and Methods (good for evaluating the vocabularies that we find); Feminist Digital Humanities: Theoretical\, Social\, and Material Engagements (good for evaluating vocabularies that we find); Queer Digital Humanities: Intersections\, Interrogations\, Iterations (good for evaluating vocabularies that we find); Databases for Digital Humanists; Fundamentals of Programming/Coding for Human(s|ists). Successors: Introduction to Network Analysis in the Digital Humanities; Ethical Data Visualization: Taming Treacherous Data; Web APIs with Python; Information Security for Digital Researchers; Introduction to IIIF: Sharing\, Consuming\, and Annotating the World’s Images. Peers: Open Access and Open Social Scholarship; Endings: How to end (and archive) your digital project; XPath for Processing XML and Managing Projects; Agile Project Management. And more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/linked-open-data-and-the-semantic-web-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173058Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T030238Z
UID:10000152-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Out of the Box Text Analysis
DESCRIPTION:This class will focus on using digital tools to enhance and deepen traditional ways of reading and analyzing texts. We will explore ways of answering questions about authorship\, textual\, chronological\, and authorial style\, genre\, and meaning. The first sessions will introduce some freely-available tools and some widely available general software\, and will address the issues of planning a project\, and finding/creating and preparing the texts for analysis. We will begin with some prepared groups of texts for guided investigation as a group\, so that we can concentrate on general problems\, issues\, and opportunities. Because my own background is in literature\, the emphasis will be on literary texts. In later sessions\, participants will be able to use these tools (and perhaps others\, depending on their interests) to explore texts of their own choosing\, or to examine some already-prepared sets of texts in greater detail and depth. The backgrounds and experiences of the participants will undoubtedly differ; therefore\, we will aim for an intensely collegial and collaborative atmosphere\, so as to capitalize on these differences. \nMost of the tools and methods work across different languages\, though there may be some problems with transliterated and accented languages\, and there is a good deal of variation in how effective different techniques are for different languages. Most also require a substantial amount of text–either one long text or at least several texts of 1000 words or more. On the other hand\, this class will focus on relatively detailed and intensive analysis\, and is not appropriate for those who are interested in working with huge data sets or very large numbers of very long texts. For the purposes and methods of this class\, a set of 100 novels should be considered a very large amount of data. \nWe will be meeting in a computer lab where all the software used will be available\, though most of it can easily be installed and run on students’ own computers\, if they want to. Much of the work will be done in Stylo and in tools that operate in Microsoft Excel. Potential participants whose own computers are Macs and/or who have specific (groups of) texts or kinds of problems in mind that they would like to work on in the class can contact the instructor to discuss any potential difficulties or challenges. \nThis is a hands-on course. Consider this offering to build on\, or be built on by: Stylometry with R: Computer-Assisted Analysis of Literary Texts; Extracting Cultural Networks from Thematic Research Collections; or Wrangling Big Data for DH. Consider this offering in complement with Fundamentals of Programming/Coding for Human(s|ists); Text Analysis with Python and the Natural Language ToolKit; Geographical Information Systems in the Digital Humanities; Understanding the Pre-Digital Book; XPath for Processing XML and Managing Projects; and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/out-of-the-box-text-analysis/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T030408Z
UID:10000153-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Critical Pedagogy and Digital Praxis in the Humanities
DESCRIPTION:This course will focus on building community in collaborative digital learning environments and will interrogate notions of outcomes\, best practices\, and instructional design. Our work together will be productive\, grounded in praxis\, and driven by learner experiences. \nDigital Humanities\, with its deep reliance on technological tools\, is replete with courses about those tools. This course offers an alternative: It is an exploration of pedagogy\, challenging teachers to re-think how they approach their classes and interact with their students. We will discuss critical pedagogy and the importance of letting students define\, control\, and take responsibility for\, their learning environment. This course will also serve as a playground\, letting participants experiment with critical digital pedagogy in a class-created open-access online course that we co-design\, build\, deploy\, promote\, and assess\, all within the one-week seminar. Participants will leave with a better understanding of their approaches to teaching and how critical digital pedagogy applies to DH courses. \nThis course combines lecture\, seminar\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by: Digital Pedagogy Integration in the Curriculum; Models for DH at Liberal Arts Colleges (& 4 Yr Institutions); Intersectional Feminist Digital Humanities: Theoretical\, Social\, and Material Engagements; Professionalizing the Early Career Digital Humanist: Strategies and Skills; Anti-Colonial DH Pedagogy; and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/critical-pedagogy-and-digital-praxis-in-the-humanities-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T030436Z
UID:10000154-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:[Foundations] Introduction to Digital Approaches to Music Research
DESCRIPTION:This course introduces current practices in encoding\, analysing and presenting music information. It will begin by introducing the philosophy\, theory\, and practicalities behind encoding symbolic music notation and will then explore pathways for analyzing and publishing that encoded data. Participants should have a basic knowledge of how to read music\, but no prior experience with coding or XML is assumed. \nThis is a hands-on course. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by: Advanced TEI Concepts / TEI Customization; Digital Documentation and Imaging for Humanists; Conceptualising and Creating a Digital Documentary Edition; A Collaborative Approach to XSLT; Geographical Information Systems in the Digital Humanities; and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/foundations-introduction-to-digital-approaches-to-music-research-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T022747Z
UID:10000156-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:[Foundations] Fundamentals of Programming for Human(s|ists)
DESCRIPTION:This course is intended for humanities-based researchers with no programming background whatsoever who would like to understand how programs work behind the scenes by writing some simple but useful programs of their own. Over the week the emphasis will be on understanding how computer programmers think so that participants will be able to at least participate in high-level conceptual discussions in the future with more confidence. These general concepts will be reinforced and illustrated with hands-on development of simple programs that can be used to help with text-based research and analysis right away. The language used for most of the course will be Python because of its gentle syntax and powerful extensions. Using the command-line interface and regular expressions will also be emphasized. We will also spend some time taking glimpses at what is happening in the other DHSI courses to understand how reading and writing programming code goes well beyond what we touch on in this class. \nThis offering is co-sponsored by ACENET. \nThis is a hands-on course. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by: Out-of-the-Box Text Analysis for the Digital Humanities; Geographical Information Systems in the Digital Humanities; Physical Computing and Desktop Fabrication; Data Mining for Digital Humanists; Understanding Topic Modelling; Stylometry with R: Computer-Assisted Analysis of Literary Texts; RDF and Linked Open Data; 3D Modelling for DH and Social Sciences; DH Databases; Creating LAMP Infrastructure for Digital Humanities Projects; XPath for Processing XML and Managing Projects; Information Security for Digital Researchers; and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/foundations-fundamentals-of-programming-for-humansists/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173214Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T022859Z
UID:10000160-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:[Foundations] Making Choices About Your Data
DESCRIPTION:“I have some stuff that I want to do a DH project with. How do I get started?” Answering this question (and getting started doing DH) involves several related questions about data: What data/materials do you work with? What format are your data/materials in? What does the format of your data allow you to do? How can you transform your data to do different things with it? What are the stakes of the choices that you make? This course guides participants through answering these questions in relation to their own research areas\, datasets\, and materials. You will start by introducing your classmates to your data — and will spend the week exploring what you can do with that data\, and the ways that you might develop it further. \nWhat do you gain\, or lose\, by thinking about your subject matter as data? How do you balance between making your data as useful as possible\, while still acknowledging its limitations? This course provides an introduction to different types and formats of data (structured\, unstructured\, etc.)\, to the work associated with data (building and using vocabularies\, working with data models\, normalization\, cleaning); and best practices for documenting and sharing that work. We’ll look at a few different platforms & tools that you could work with your data in\, and think about the full range of things you might do with your data\, from analyzing it to making it available for other people to use.” \nThis is a hands-on course. Consider this offering in complement with most other DHSI courses.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/foundations-making-choices-about-your-data-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231113T201252Z
UID:10000162-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:NLP Coding Libraries and Network Analysis for Text Corpora
DESCRIPTION:The 3-day workshop offers a quick and effective intro to natural language processing (NLP) and textual corpus network visualization and analysis. We will be doing coding in Python and learning how to use (and compare) certain relevant libraries such as Scikit-learn\, NLTK\, FastText\, Gensim plus word2vec & doc2vec\, SpaCy\, TextStat\, LexicalRichness\, and NetworkX. We will apply those packages in computationally analyzing texts and textual corpora\, representing the corpora as networks\, and thus finding out unexpected if not amazing things about the texts they contain. The knowledge and skills acquired—alongside our in-class applications—will be useful in education and research in NLP\, automated text and corpus analysis\, network science and graph theory applications\, computational literary analysis and criticism\, computational linguistics\, and vector space (and topic) modeling for the humanities. On the fourth day\, everybody will have the opportunity to participate in the #GraphPoem event that will involve some of the Python scripts developed during the workshop. We will run those and other scripts live (on JupyterHub) on ready-made and individually/collaboratively assembled and expanded corpora\, thus feeding into a hypermedia performance involving a Twitter bot and a cross-artform live stream.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/nlp-coding-libraries-and-network-analysis-for-text-corpora/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173336Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231113T201427Z
UID:10000163-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Creating Digital Collections with Minimal Infrastructure: Hands On with CollectionBuilder for Teaching and Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:This course introduces fundamental web and DH skills using CollectionBuilder\, an open source project for building digital collection and exhibit websites driven by metadata and hosted on a lightweight infrastructure. The high cost and IT requirements of digital collection platforms are often a barrier to creating new collections for sharing or teaching humanities research. CollectionBuilder is optimized for non-developers and simple hosting solutions\, allowing researchers to take greater ownership over their digital projects and lowering barriers to customization. Scholars in this course will learn CollectionBuilder by engaging in a scaffolded approach with hands-on experience in digital library foundations such as scanning and metadata creation to web development. Building on these skills\, students will learn the basics of working with plain text files\, CSV data\, Markdown\, Jekyll\, Git\, GitHub\, and GitHub Pages in order to create and customize their very own digital collection. By the end of this course\, students will have gained the knowledge and independence necessary to implement CollectionBuilder in contexts that include creating and disseminating research collections and custom digital exhibits\, or teaching digital libraries in the classroom. This is a hands-on course that will cover basics of digitization\, metadata\, and web programming fundamentals. No programming experience is necessary\, although you should have a strong interest to learn! Participants are asked to bring their own computers. All software used in the course is free\, open source\, and cross platform and will be installed during class time. Optionally\, participants are invited to bring along a small collection of physical items to digitize\, digital files (images\, pdfs\, audio) to feature in a digital collection\, or metadata exported from an existing collection hosted on CONTENTdm.This offering is co-sponsored by U Idaho Libraries. \nThis course will complement “[Foundations] Digitisation Fundamentals and their Application\,” “Creating LAMP Infrastructure for Digital Humanities Projects\,” “[Foundations] Developing a Digital Project (With Omeka)\,” and can be built on by “The Frontend: Modern JavaScript & CSS Development.”
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/creating-digital-collections-with-minimal-infrastructure-hands-on-with-collectionbuilder-for-teaching-and-exhibits-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173341Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T031600Z
UID:10000164-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Digital Storytelling
DESCRIPTION:This course explores the combination/collision/collusion of storytelling techne with digital media to prompt storytelling projects as Digital Humanities scholarship\, teaching\, and creative practices.The course will begin with an overview of traditional storytelling frameworks\, asking how these various approaches to storytelling might be paired with and/or enhanced by a variety of digital media\, including web design\, video\, audio\, data-based\, and ludic (game) storytelling. We will also discuss project planning/management for digital storytelling projects. Richard will then lead workshops on basic media integration for the web and choice-based storytelling with Twine. Twine is a digital storytelling format that builds on hypertext and includes ludic elements. We’ll discuss non-trivial work required of the user in ergodic media\, as well as nonlinearity and multilinearity and some basic principles of game design. \nThe latter third of the course is reserved for the development and support of students’ specific project ideas and goals. \nThis course will make use of both Slack and Basecamp. At week’s end\, participants are invited to show and discuss with other course participants their digital storytelling project\, which may be in the form of a conceptual framework\, a working prototype\, or more. \nThis offering is co-sponsored by The Electronic Literature Organization.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/digital-storytelling-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T031616Z
UID:10000165-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Agile Project Management
DESCRIPTION:Agile project management is about negotiating the completion of a project from beginning to end while remaining flexible. Being patient and delaying decisions until you have to make them\, gathering as much information as you can in the meantime\, and then taking action with the information you have\, always keeping alternatives in mind in case your first plan of action doesn’t pan out. Just as a fighter shifts from foot to foot to be ready to counter a punch\, the agile project manager constantly considers shifts to accommodate any changes in the project’s environment. But it’s about more than just negotiating within the rules. It’s about changing the rules of the game to better ensure a successful project.This course combines lecture\, discussion\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering in complement with: Making Choices About Your Data; Developing a Digital Project (With Omeka); Project Management in the Humanities; Conceptualising and Creating a Digital Edition; and more.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/agile-project-management/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173352Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T031726Z
UID:10000166-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Modeling Texts and Maps with Semantic Annotation
DESCRIPTION:This course will provide the foundation for the extended course “Text Mapping as Modelling”\, that will be offered in 2023. First\, we will give a theoretical introduction about one of the most important practices in Digital Humanities\, the digital mapping of texts\, and expand on the use of semantic annotation as a particular method for the collection of unstructured information from literary and visual sources. Participants will experiment with various methods for modeling and visualization of data\, such as the use of folksonomic vocabularies\, external schemas\, Linked Open Data\, and network visualization. In the exercise part of the course\, participants will be able to look into the various tools\, and create mini-projects using Recogito. Then\, we will work together in a structured discussion of the results from the practical work\, exploring how textual and cartographic information can be represented through different media\, and what one can learn about the interpretative process of critical mapping\, geographical re-contextualisation\, and the modeling of ambiguity in textual research.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/modeling-texts-and-maps-with-semantic-annotation-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T031736Z
UID:10000167-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Code the X-Files using the XML Family of Languages
DESCRIPTION:This class teaches you how to navigate and process XML using tools designed for the purpose–XSLT\, XQuery\, and Schematron. We cover these together as members of the same XML family\, sharing a common syntax in XPath. New and experienced coders of XML will benefit alike from this course\, whether just beginning a project or seeking to update and refresh skills. Our goals are 1) to share strategies for systematically building archives and databases\, and 2) to increase participants’ confidence and fluency in extracting information coded in XML in those archives and databases. XPath is the center of the course\, but we will show you how it applies in multiple XML processing contexts so that you learn how these work similarly and how these are used\, respectively\, to validate documents and to transform them for publication and other reuse. We’ll apply XPath to check for accuracy of text encoding–to write schema rules to manage your coding (or your project team’s coding). \nYou’ll practice and gain fluency in writing XPath expressions and patterns\, including sequence expressions\, regular expressions\, datatypes\, predicates\, operators\, and functions (from the core library and user-defined). We’ll write XPath to calculate how frequently you’ve marked a certain phenomenon\, or locate which names of people are mentioned together in the same chapter\, paragraph\, sentence\, stanza\, or annotation. You’ll learn how XPath can help you to build exciting visualizations from XML code (such as to make a chart like a timeline or a network graph). Whether you are an XML beginner or a more experienced coder\, you’ll find that strengthened skills in XPath and the XML family will help you with systematic encoding\, document processing\, and project management. \nThis is a hands-on course. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by: Text Encoding Fundamentals and their Application\, Out-of-the-Box Text Analysis for the Digital Humanities\, Text Processing – Techniques & Traditions\, XML Applications for Historical and Literary Research; Parsing and Writing XML with Python; and more! No advanced knowledge of XML processing is necessary but those with interests in document processing who have taken Digital Documentation and Imaging for Humanists; Advanced TEI Concepts / TEI Customization; A Collaborative Approach to XSLT; or Geographical Information Systems in the Digital Humanities will certainly benefit.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/code-the-x-files-using-the-xml-family-of-languages-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ccdhhn.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-DHSI-header-logo-e1683903079212.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173522Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T031851Z
UID:10000168-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:Using Digital Games as Critical Methods of Intervention\, Advocacy\, and Activism in Humanities Scholarship
DESCRIPTION:Digital games are often studied as texts\, as objects of research. However\, given that games can function as simulations\, models\, arguments\, and creative collaboratories\, game-based inquiry can be used as a method of humanities research\, communication\, and pedagogy\, and can also function as a political intervention into humanities theories and practices. Merging these two approaches\, this course explores how simple game environments and tools can be used to encourage builders\, players\, and publics to pursue broader social\, cultural\, and interpersonal understandings. Understanding digital games through factors such as computational bias\, disruptive and interactive play\, ethics\, complicity\, and user awareness\, participants in this course will approach games as methods of critical intervention\, advocacy\, and activism. In particular\, participants will learn ways that game experiences can be used as tools that disrupt and defamiliarize research\, reporting\, teaching\, spaces\, objects\, purposes\, embodiment\, and habits of perception and practice. Course outcomes will involve exploring existing examples\, discussing realistic design\, development\, and outcome logistics\, critically reflecting on the implications of game-based engagement\, and working towards the creation of individual prototypes (which need not be exclusively digital). \nThis course combines lecture\, seminar\, and hands-on activities. Consider this offering to build on: Race\, Social Justice\, and DH; Intersectional Feminist Digital Humanities; Pedagogy of the Digitally Oppressed; Queer Digital Humanities; Accessibility & Digital Environments; Critical Pedagogy and Digital Praxis; Engaging Play/Playing to Engage; Digital Storytelling; Digital Fictions\, Electronic Literature\, Literary Gaming; and more.
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/using-digital-games-as-critical-methods-of-intervention-advocacy-and-activism-in-humanities-scholarship-2/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Halifax:20240603T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Halifax:20240607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260404T202625
CREATED:20231113T173524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231116T031917Z
UID:10000169-1717372800-1717804799@ccdhhn.ca
SUMMARY:eTextBook Publishing and Open Educational Resources
DESCRIPTION:This hands-on course is for those who want to author or compile an eTextbook or Open Educational Resource (OER) that is multimodal\, interactive\, and usable on mobile phones and tablets as well as laptops and desktops. Course topics include obtaining and remixing content from OER; integrating and synchronizing multimedia assets; applying principles of accessibility\, universal design\, and learning science; licensing and copyrighting; choosing the right formats and distribution channels; and using eTextbooks and OER for pedagogical purposes such as student empowerment\, engagement\, and co-creation.This course combines presentation\, discussion\, and hands-on workshops. Consider this offering in complement with\, and / or to be built on by: Conceptualising and Creating a Digital Edition; Digital Publishing in the Humanities; Open Access and Open Social Scholarship; and more!
URL:https://ccdhhn.ca/workshop/etextbook-publishing-and-open-educational-resources/
LOCATION:Québec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:20+ hour workshop
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