Sunday, November 22, 2009

11/23 Readings

'Haunted Mouses' is about the din of noise that inhabits the internet. Forgotten sites, the paranormal and the horrific. It was brief and seemed primarily a vehicle to showcase a few of the sites listed at the end, but was fun in it's characterization of the web and its electronic visual phenomena.

'Hyperlinking Reality'- The concept of a QR seemed to have a lot of potential. Although it was something I was previously unaware of, it seems to have a lot of implications for the field of public history. The ability for people to disseminate and consume stories linked to a specific place definitely seems like a viable way to bridge the gap between the web and the physical world. Although they can be done well, it sometimes seems as though web-based history projects can be too detached from the places or people they are trying to represent with this article providing a great counter-example.

'What is Digital History? A Look at Some Exemplar Projects' tackles the definition of Digital History in a broad, general level offering up a few positive examples. The projects listed were ambitious, varied and well-executed. There seems to be a large gap between institutions tackling content in this way, and those concentrating on just digitizing content and presenting it in a neutral fashion as part as a digital collection. I think this is often this is due in a large part to staffing issues. My immediate thoughts of course turned to work being done in Temple's Library. Right now the impetus is to simply get content up in our catalog, although we've just started pursuing grants to present material interactively in a more curated fashion. My hope is that soon we will be embarking on a project similar to the examples given in the article.

'The Digital Durham Project: Creating Community through History, Technology and Service Learning' is the anatomy of a digital project at Duke. What was unique about the project was the integration of both students at Duke and at local middle schools. Students at Duke use the site along with primary source material as the foundation for papers for a seminar class. Duke students then engage in a service learning project where they then mentor middle school students in conducting research. This type of direct engagement of the audience is a positive model for digital history, particularly when based on a college campus with available students.

Another model of students, archivists, librarians and historians is covered in the article 'Creating Community with the History Engine Connecting Teachers, Librarians, Students and Scholars.' Students create entries in a Wikipedia type forum with assistance by teachers and information professionals to help provide well vetted entries. The interface breaks down entries by region and decade. Where scholars shun Wikipedia entirely, this stands as a good example of how the model can be adopted but tweaked to compensate for its shortcomings.

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