Digital Humanities Committee Member:
 
Join us for the Digital Humanities Faculty Fellows Projects Showcase hosted by the Teaching, Learning and Technology Roundtable Faculty Development & Best Practices Committee. The event will take place on Tuesday, December 5, from 9 – 10:30 p.m. in the Walsh Library, Beck Rooms and will consist of presentations from seven Faculty Fellows who will discuss their particular area of interest and how it applies to digital humanities.
 
Please pass this information onto your colleagues and encourage them to attend as well.
 
To Register for the session  Click Here
Presentations by the Digital Humanities Faculty Fellows:
  • Dongdong Chen Ph.D., Department of Languages Literatures and Cultures, College of Arts and Sciences
    • Upgrading the Web-based Chinese-Learning Program Project
  • William Connell, Ph.D.Department of History, College of Arts and Sciences, and La Motta Chair
    • Measuring the Population of Foreign Workers in Renaissance Florence
  • Kelly Goedert, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, College of Arts and Sciences and Viswa Viswanathan, Ph.D., Department of Computing and Decision Sciences, Stillman School of Business
    • Use of Concept Maps to Enhance Meaningful Learning
  • Penina Orenstein Ph.D., Computing and Decision Sciences, Stillman School of Business
    • Exploring the Structural Topology of a Representative Sample of Retail Supply Chains and Their Evolution using a Data Visualization Approach
  • Elizabeth A. Pallitto, M.F.A., Ph.D., University Core Curriculum, College of Arts and Sciences
    • Transformational Journey through Art: Utilizing Digital Media to Explore Dante’s Cosmos
  • Courtney Starrett M.F.A., Art and Design, College of Communication and the Arts
    • Layered Chiffon
 
For more information on the presentations – Click Here
 
Breakfast will be Served.
 
Follow the Digital Humanities Blog and the Technology Blog for the latest information on all things Digital Humanities and Teaching, Learning and Technology.
 
This event is sponsored by the Teaching, Learning & Technology Roundtable (TLTR). The Digital Humanities initiative is made possible through funding by the Provost’s Office.