hcgwgmu.wordpress.com
More Photoshop – Trials and Tribulations | Beth's Clio II Blog
https://hcgwgmu.wordpress.com/2014/04/06/more-photoshop-trials-and-tribulations
Beth's Clio II Blog. April 6, 2014. More Photoshop – Trials and Tribulations. Ah, coloring. It was so fun as a kid. Pick a crayon (it didn’t even have to “match” whatever you wanted to color) and go to town. The littlest kids don’t even have to stay inside the lines. My world has been turned upside down. Coloring has (hopefully only temporarily) lost its magic. Not only do I have to stay inside the lines, I have to create the lines! This week I commented on Kasey’s blog. And Kirk’s blog. You can follow a...
hcgwgmu.wordpress.com
May | 2014 | Beth's Clio II Blog
https://hcgwgmu.wordpress.com/2014/05
Beth's Clio II Blog. Monthly Archives: May 2014. May 5, 2014. Here it is – my final project. At least the preliminary attempt) for presentation tonight. I would appreciate any and all comments. It’s been a whirlwind of a semester – learning HTML and CSS, Photoshop and ideas about design. And I admit to being just a little bit tired. But it is gratifying to see my very own website appear, and not look horrible! Design and the Beginnings of a Site. Images of Military Women – Part II.
saracollini.wordpress.com
This site has moved! | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/2015/07/14/this-site-has-moved
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. This site has moved! This site has moved! July 14, 2015. This is the new site. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email.
saracollini.wordpress.com
About | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/about
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. I am a History PhD student at George Mason University, studying American history of medicine and digital history. Currently, I am exploring eighteenth-century midwifery and slavery at George Washington’s Mount Vernon. I’m also interested in mental illness, medical institutions, and infectious disease and public health. In May 2013, I graduated with a BA in History from the University of Texas at Austin. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
saracollini.wordpress.com
July | 2015 | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/2015/07
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. This site has moved! July 14, 2015. This is the new site. Adventures in Art History. Piecing Together Digital History. From Periphery to Catalyst - New Orleans. History and New Media. My Digital Angst: Surviving Clio Wired. My Semester Embracing/Surviving Digital History. HistoriAnne and Digital History. Paul's History Blog. Kirk Johnson's Digital History Blog. Exploring History and New Media. The WordPress.com Blog. This blog w...
saracollini.wordpress.com
Evaluating Digital Scholarship | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/2015/06/30/evaluating-digital-scholarship
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. June 30, 2015. This week’s readings covered numerous issues in digital scholarship. Similar to the on-going discussions on the definition of digital history, digital scholarship can take many forms. Trevor Owens outlined suggestions for digital exhibits. In Living in a Digital World: Rethinking Peer Review, Collaboration, and Open Access. Writing History in the Digital Age. Journal of the Digital Humanities. This topic of digita...
saracollini.wordpress.com
What is Digital History? | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/2015/05/19/what-is-digital-history
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. What is Digital History? What is Digital History? May 19, 2015. What is Digital History? Is it a field of study, a genre, a methodology, a promise? Can it be defined? What is it not? How can I, a young graduate student studying Digital History, succinctly define this minor field to future employers? How well does the title. Digital history is a field of study, as numerous undergraduate and graduate programs offer majors, minors,...
saracollini.wordpress.com
Teaching Digital Humanities | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/2015/06/23/teaching-digital-humanities
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. June 23, 2015. June 23, 2015. This week’s readings on teaching digital history discussed many important themes. Two themes stood out particularly and go hand-in-hand: navigating the different technology backgrounds of today’s supposed digital natives and designing college and graduate-level courses that utilize digital media effectively to teach the content, the process of doing history, and the technology itself. Enter your ema...
saracollini.wordpress.com
Databases and Audience | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/2015/06/09/databases-and-audience
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. June 9, 2015. This week’s readings discussed the advantages and disadvantages of databases and searching in presenting and conducting historical research. One aspect of these web-based databases that intrigued me was the usability of the database’s interface and the intended audience. In his review. The French Book Trade Enlightenment in Europe. The Trans-Atlantic Slavery Database Project. Rebuilding the House for Families.
saracollini.wordpress.com
Digital Public History | Exploring History and New Media
https://saracollini.wordpress.com/2015/06/16/digital-public-history
Exploring History and New Media. Digital History at George Mason University. June 16, 2015. This week’s readings on public history raised a number of issues, namely defining audience and the public, building and maintaining that community of users, and the ability of digital exhibits to promote access, to encourage historical research, and to preserve museums’ collections. The issue that stood out the most was one that Sheila Brennan. The Histories of the National Mall. Teaching Digital Humanities →.