Dear all,
Thanks to everyone who was able to join us for Dr. Gardner’s engaging talk about “Women, Websites, and Wikipedia: Accessible Digital Pedagogy and the Undergraduate
Classroom.” The talk is now available on the StFX Youtube Channel here: https://youtu.be/B_xLrArwbek
Thanks especially to Lydia Vermeyden at ACENET for facilitating the livestream and recording; thanks also to Blaise MacMullin for its timely upload. Thanks to
Dr. Gardner and the DHSI-East organizing team for making a last-minute transition online look easy!
“Women, Websites, and Wikipedia: Accessible Digital Pedagogy and the Undergraduate Classroom”
How do you integrate meaningful DH pedagogy into a short, 13-week undergraduate semester? How can we, as educators, empower students to create and mediate digital content
responsibly? What specific skills do students need, and what will they learn? In this talk, Chelsea Gardner addresses these questions through the presentation of three case studies that each introduce digital platforms into the undergraduate classroom: Wikipedia
Education, Women in Antiquity, and Peopling the Past. These platforms form the basis of classroom assignments that aim to provide students with skills that impart digital literacy and contribute to impactful research through the creation and improvement of
globally accessible, open-access resources.
Bio:
Dr. Chelsea Gardner is Assistant Professor of Ancient History at Acadia University. As an archaeologist, her field research focuses primarily on religious space and cultural
identity in southern Greece, where she co-directs the CARTography Project and the Southern Mani Archaeological Project. Her digital humanities
research centres largely on DH pedagogy and integrating high-impact practices into the undergraduate classroom. She is a WikiScholar, director of the From
Stone to Screen project, creator of the Women in Antiquity website and, most recently, the founder of Peopling
the Past, an award-winning initiative that hosts free, open-access resources for teaching and learning about real people in the ancient world. Her DH publications have appeared in Digital
Humanities Quarterly, Journal
for Interactive Teaching and Pedagogy, and the Debates
in the Digital Humanities series.
This event was hosted by the St.
Francis Xavier Digital Humanities Centre and DHSI-East.
Stay safe and healthy,
Laura
Dr. Laura Estill
Canada Research Chair in Digital Humanities
Associate Professor of English, St. Francis Xavier University
Director, StFX Digital Humanities Centre
Editor, Early Modern Digital Review