Digital Literacy – THATCamp AHA Denver 2017 http://ahadenver2017.thatcamp.org Mon, 09 Jan 2017 03:22:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Visualization play http://ahadenver2017.thatcamp.org/2017/01/04/visualization-play/ Wed, 04 Jan 2017 15:00:56 +0000 http://ahadenver2017.thatcamp.org/?p=260 Continue reading ]]>

A last-minute proposal for a visualization workshop/play session. I’m no expert, but I can start us off.

We could think about what use visualization is for the historian/humanities scholar, what kinds of things can usefully be visualized, and what the requirements for a good visualization are.

We could also play with low-entry-bar visualization tools like the RAW tools (app.raw.densitydesign.org/) and the Bertifier (bertifier.com).

]]>
Digital Fluency in an “Information Age” http://ahadenver2017.thatcamp.org/2017/01/03/digital-fluency/ http://ahadenver2017.thatcamp.org/2017/01/03/digital-fluency/#comments Tue, 03 Jan 2017 18:07:54 +0000 http://ahadenver2017.thatcamp.org/?p=229 Continue reading ]]>

The past year has brought us many examples of the need for students (well, for the public), to be able to evaluate sources, to identify how and why knowledge is produced in all of its many media and forms, and to suggest the ways in which verifiable, authoritative sources can be produced using the tools of scholars.

The focus of Digital History and Digital Humanities on consumption, analysis, and production of knowledge in many digital forms allows practitioners and novices to address and help demonstrate to students and the public how digital production works and why we should be skeptical of it.

That’s not a simple process however.  As Mike Caulfield of Washington State University, Vancouver, has been writing lately (such as in “Yes, Digital Literacy. But Which One?“), curriculum for information literacy is not new, but that such programs are not sufficiently grounded in either specific content areas or the structures of the Web to keep up with the blizzard of problematic content.  And as my colleague at UMW, Kris Shaffer, has noted in a recent article (“Truthy Lies and Surreal Truths: A Plea for Critical Digital Literacies“) the issue isn’t just misinformed content, but intentional misleading content.  As he notes,  “The future of digital culture ― yours, mine, and ours ― depends on how well we learn to use the media that have infiltrated, amplified, distracted, enriched, and complicated our lives.”

So, I propose a session in which we talk about strategies to address issues of Digital Fluency (or Fluencies) at our schools and in our departments, to share existing resources on Digital and Information Fluency, and to describe what an idealized curriculum would address.

]]>
http://ahadenver2017.thatcamp.org/2017/01/03/digital-fluency/feed/ 1