Two Digital Scholarship Show & Tell webinars coming soon | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: John Burger (jburger![]() |
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Date: Thu, 9 Aug 2018 08:02:07 -0700 (PDT) |
ASERL Friends: Our highly-acclaimed webinar series is gearing up again, with two "show & tell" webinars highlighting the work of ASERL libraries' digital scholarship efforts in the next few weeks: WEBINAR: Digital Scholarship Show & Tell #2: Vanderbilt Univ Libraries "Sampler" DATE / Time: August 21, 2018 | 2pm ET / 1pm Central Time REGISTER: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3953653990299227139 WEBINAR: Digital Scholarship Show & Tell #3: University of Florida "Sampler" DATE / TIME: September 5, 2018 | 2pm ET / 1pm Central Time REGISTER: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/4726908629645911809 VANDERBILT Session Description Digital Scholarship at Vanderbilt is broadly defined and library support is project-oriented. This webinar will offer three examples of digital scholarship projects at Vanderbilt and the libraries role in supporting those projects, as well as scholarly communications services in support of digital scholarship. Digital Scholarship for Comparative Media Analysis and Practice: Madeleine Casad, Senior Lecturer, Cinema and Media Arts, Associate Director, Vanderbilt Center for Digital Humanities. Vanderbilt University recently established a new joint-PhD program in Comparative Media Analysis and Practice (CMAP). Madeleine will speak about Library collaboration in CMAP’s intensive summer programs, where students gain most of their digital scholarship skills. Hannah Arendt: Complete Works. Critical Edition. Digital and print. Ramona Romero, Librarian for Anthropology, Philosophy, and Classical and Mediterranean Studies. Ramona will discuss the digital component of this hybrid edition, which will include diplomatic transcriptions of Hannah Arendt’s published and unpublished works in TEI-XML. Tiny Data Working Group: Veronica Ikeshoji-Orlati, CLIR Postdoc Fellow. Tiny Data is data for the qualitative analyses which characterize humanistic inquiry, the documentation of personal interactions with the observable world. The group meets once a week during the semester to investigate software and other digital tools as well as discuss theoretical implications of approaching data from a Tiny Data perspective. Scholarly Communication as support for Digital Scholarship: Elisabeth Shook, Copyright and Scholarly Communications Librarian. Elisabeth explores concerns associated with the long term storage, preservation, and access to digital projects. She will discuss strategies to reach out to practitioners to encourage and educate them to think beyond the finished project to how it will be shared and preserved. REGISTRANT LIST to date for Vanderbilt session: 1. Clemson University: Brenda Burk 2. College of William & Mary: Sara Belmont 3. College of William & Mary: Georgie Donovan 4. Duke University: Emily Daly 5. East Carolina: William Thomas 6. Emory University: Jennifer Doty 7. Emory University: Anne McLean 8. Florida International University: Zhaohui Fu 9. Florida International University: Jamie Rogers 10. Florida State University: Devin Soper 11. George Mason University: Michael Hunter 12. Georgia State University: Laura Burtle 13. Georgia State University: Jeff Steely 14. James Madison University: Kevin Hegg 15. Johns Hopkins University: Robin Sinn 16. Mississippi State University: Claudia Holland 17. Tulane University: Jane Pinzino 18. Tulane University: Jeff Rubin 19. Tulane University: Kevin Williams 20. UNC Charlotte: Somaly Kim Wu 21. UNC Charlotte: Michael Winecoff 22. UNC Greensboro: Tim Bucknall 23. University of Kentucky: Adrian Ho 24. University of Kentucky: Jennifer Hootman 25. University of Louisville: Rachel Howard 26. University of Louisville: Bruce Keisling 27. University of Memphis: Bess Robinson 28. University of Miami: Paige Morgan 29. University of Mississippi: cecilia botero 30. University of Mississippi: Gail Herrera 31. University of Mississippi: Christina Torbert 32. University of South Carolina: KATE BOYD 33. University of South Carolina: Amie Freeman 34. University of South Florida: Melanie Griffin 35. University of Tennessee, Knoxville: Meredith Hale 36. University of Virginia: Suzanne Bombard 37. University of Virginia: Chip German 38. UT Rio Grande Valley: Justin White 39. Vanderbilt University: Clifford Anderson 40. Virginia Commonwealth University: Jimmy Ghaphery 41. Virginia Commonwealth University: Erin White 42. Wake Forest University: Molly Keener UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA Session Description Speakers will include Crystal Felima, PhD, the CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Caribbean Studies Data Curation at UF. Her interests include pedagogy, narrative research, public anthropology, and Africana Studies. Crystal serves as a team member of the Digital Library of the Caribbean (dLOC) to facilitate campus-wide data curation activities and forge new collaborations to extend capacity. She also consults with researchers and scholars on emerging trends and best practices in digital humanities, data curation, and e-scholarship in Caribbean Studies. Website: crystalfelima.com Hélène Huet, PhD, is the European Studies Librarian at UF. She holds a Ph.D in French and Francophone Studies from the Pennsylvania State University. At UF, Hélène oversees many international collections and collaborates on a variety of projects from creating exhibits to organizing conferences. She also helps facilitate undergraduate and graduate students’ research through library instruction sessions and workshops. As a digital humanist and the Vice-Chair of the Florida Digital Humanities Consortium (FLDH), a collective of institutions in Florida that seeks to promote an understanding of the humanities in light of digital technologies and research, she is particularly interested in studying how digital tools can help facilitate students and faculty’s research. Plato Smith, PhD, is the Data Management Librarian at UF with experience in academic research libraries, digital libraries, and data management. He assists in the development of socio-technical (people, policies, technologies, communities) relationships with diverse stakeholders, leads the Data Management and Curation Working Group, is a member of UF’s Academic Research Consulting & Services (ARCS), and conducts data management instruction and training workshops to develop a culture of data management. Laurie N. Taylor, PhD, is UF’s Digital Scholarship Librarian, the dLOC Digital Scholarship Director, and Editor-in-Chief of the LibraryPress@UF. Website: http://www.laurientaylor.org REGISTER for UF session: REGISTER: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/4726908629645911809 [No registrants for this webinar yet -- today is the first announcement of this webinar.] ABOUT ASERL WEBINARS These sessions are available at no cost to ASERL members and guests, and will be recorded for later playback. Please feel free to share this information with other librarians & staff who may be interested. Our webinars are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. System Requirements: https://link.gotowebinar.com/help-system-requirements-attendees We hope these prove to be of interest. Please let me know any questions or if you encounter difficulties with our e-meeting system. Thanks! --jeb John Burger, Executive Director Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL) c/o Robert W. Woodruff Library 540 Asbury Circle, Suite 316 Atlanta, GA 30322 404-727-0137
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