2018.11.13 Digital Library Pedagogy Twitter Chat

From DLF Wiki

Details

The DLF Digital Library Pedagogy group is partnering with the DLF Digital Scholarship Working Group to host a chat about teaching digital scholarship. Leigh Bonds, Elizabeth Gibes, Alex Gil, and Kush Patel will facilitate. This chat will take place at 8:00 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday, November 13, 2018. Join in using the #DLFteach and #DLFds hashtags.

Questions

  • Join us tomorrow at 8:00 p.m. Eastern for our next #DLFteach chat co-hosted with the DLF Digital Scholarship Working Group and focused on teaching digital scholarship. Details on our wiki! (drawing by @laurabrodrick of Think Big Picture) https://wiki.diglib.org/2018.11.13_Digital_Library_Pedagogy_Twitter_Chat
    • Image: drawing by Laura Brodrick of Think Big Picture
    • Alt text: A person thinking of teaching some aspect of the digital humanities figures out their environment (teaching spaces, collaborators) and thinks through questions such as teaching approaches, module design, and assessment.
  • In one hour (at 8:00 p.m. Eastern), join us for our next #DLFteach chat, co-hosted with the Digital Scholarship Working Group and focused on teaching digital scholarship. Details on our wiki! (drawing by @laurabrodrick of Think Big Picture) https://wiki.diglib.org/2018.11.13_Digital_Library_Pedagogy_Twitter_Chat
    • Image: drawing by Laura Brodrick of Think Big Picture
    • Alt text: A person thinking of teaching some aspect of the digital humanities figures out their environment (teaching spaces, collaborators) and thinks through questions such as teaching approaches, module design, and assessment.
  • Welcome! This #DLFteach and #DLFds chat is hosted by @eagibes, @elotroalex, @kshpatel, and @leigh_bonds
  • Follow along with the #DLFteach and #DLFds hashtags, and don’t forget to include them in your responses along with the question number, e.g. Q1.
  • At the last #DLFteach chat, we talked about how and where we teach data viz. This time we’ll be discussing challenges and techniques around teaching digital scholarship with the #DLFds community.
  • Questions will be tweeted from @CLIRDLF. Ready? Here we go! #DLFteach #DLFds
  • First, introduce yourself! #DLFteach #DLFds
  • Q1 What’s your best strategy for giving an overview or introduction to digital humanities or digital scholarship to classes or student groups? #DLFteach #DLFds
  • Q2 What’s your best tip or trick to teach a specific digital scholarship method (e.g. TEI, text analysis, exhibit building, data analysis)? #DLFteach #DLFds
  • Q3 How do you tailor instruction to specific disciplines (or not)? #DLFteach #DLFds
  • Q4 In your experience, have open workshops (on practices, tools, methods, or specific topics) been effective? Why or why not? #DLFteach #DLFds
  • Q5 What kind of community and support infrastructures for digital scholarship or digital humanities (from HR to centers to programs to people) exist on your campuses or in your institutions? #DLFteach #DLFds
  • Thank you for participating in this #DLFteach and #DLFds chat!
  • Learn more about #DLFTeach, what we do, and how you can get involved. We welcome #DLFds folks! https://wiki.diglib.org/Pedagogy
  • #DLFteach folks, you can also get involved with #DLFds and their work. https://wiki.diglib.org/Digital_Scholarship_Working_Group
  • Join the #DLFteach email list! #DLFds https://groups.google.com/d/forum/dlf-pedagogy
  • ...and the #DLDds email list! #DLFteach https://groups.google.com/d/forum/dlf-dswg
  • That’s a wrap on tonight’s #DLFteach chat! The next #DLFteach chat will be in January—stay tuned for the exact date. And #DLFds will be hosting their own Twitter chat on 12/10 at 3:00 pm Eastern. Please join!

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