Author: admin

Teaching, research, and more

All good things, etc.

Well, it’s the end of the semester, and boy, I am I ready to catch up on sleeping, audiobooks, and playing Pokemon! But at the same time, there’s also a kind of accomplishment you can feel at the end of the semester, looking back at everything you did. Or at least, that’s how I like…
Read more

A Screenshot of "Versailles: The Palace is Yours," from Google Arts & Culture

My tour through virtual reality

This week, I was confronted with a veritable smorgasbord of groovy tools in HIST 8500. On the one hand, something more familiar, an area in which I could in fact see myself drawing on it for teaching purposes and even creating work of my own; the other, a place where frankly I’m completely at sea…
Read more

A screenshot of a banner from Tableau Public

Lies, statistics, and Tableau, or my very short data visualization journey

My dive into the world of Tableau taught me two things: 1) this is a powerful tool for people who use statistics in their work, and 2) I have no idea what I’m doing with it. My troubles began when I opened the sample workbook we were working with in class at the same time…
Read more

Learning the ropes of Palladio

To be 100% frank, when using Palladio, I ran up against a bit of a wall: while all the nodes and edges and such in the readings on network theory made perfectly good sense to me, I had absolutely no idea how that translated into something that a computer could actually read. As a result,…
Read more

Re-learning the ropes of Voyant

So, the tool for this week’s HIST 8500 seminar wasn’t totally new to me–I took an online class through EdX some years ago that spent some time on Voyant Tools. I’ll say that I could approach it with a lot more theoretical understanding this time around, though! I was going to go through a poem…
Read more

A whole new world…

I was really excited this week to dive into digital mapping tools. This is an area where I’ve dipped my toe before–I’ve used StoryMapsJS to make tools for teaching like this one–but I don’t have a lot of experience either using ESRI StoryMaps or, for that matter, conducting actual research using mapping. Pretty much everything…
Read more

A screenshot of the census highlighting the number of individuals with a 4th grade education

Databases: a new kind of creativity for me

This week in HIST 8500, we learned about databases and tried our hand at designing them using Airbase. I’ll be honest, this is an intellectual challenge I’m going to need some time and practice to wrap my head around. I have a lot of experience in using databases, and had a job for a couple…
Read more

Tiger Headline 12-12-1958

There never seems to be enough time…

Alas, I knew not everything was going to be as successful an adventure as my introductions to Tropy and Zotero were! I was quite excited to use Omeka–I’ve seen it demonstrated at conferences before and looked at model projects created in it, and I’ve really wanted the ability to curate digital exhibits for years now,…
Read more

Tropy and me: the start of a beautiful friendship?

I may have been dubious about Zotero, but when exploring our digital tool for HIST 8500 this week, Tropy, all I had to do was watch the introductory video and I knew this was something I wanted to use. Why the big difference, one might ask? Tropy is in many ways similar in functionality to…
Read more

A screenshot of a library in Zotero

Old dog, new tricks, etc.

I found myself somewhat hesitant when approaching Zotero as one of our webtools for HIST 8500, not because it was unfamiliar to me, but rather because it was too familiar, something I’ve tried to use once or twice before. Zotero, along with other citation managers like RefWorks and Mendeley, first came on my radar in…
Read more

css.php