CMS.633 | Spring 2015 | Undergraduate

Digital Humanities

Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Seminars: 1 session / week, 3 hours / session

Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for the course. Some programming and design experience is helpful but not required.

Format and Requirements

This class consists of reading discussion, demonstrations of and experimentation with tools and techniques, and hands-on project work. Guest speakers who work in museums, libraries, and humanistic research all discuss their work in relationship to digital technologies. Students are expected to participate in class discussions on readings, group projects and project review sessions. Additionally, students will be asked to annotate readings using the tool Annotation Studio. Students will work in cross-disciplinary teams on a range of smaller projects throughout the semester and on one larger project in the second half of the term. The final project will be selected before spring break and will have to be completed by the end of the term.

Grades will be based on the following criteria:

ACTIVITIES PERCENTAGES
Final Project, including a Design Paper and a Prototype 40%
Short Projects 20%
Presentations and Project Updates 15%
Class Participation 15%
Annotation Studio 10%

There will be no final exam in the class.

Plagiarism

Avoid plagiarizing. Plagiarism is the use of another’s intellectual work without acknowledgment. Full acknowledgment for all information obtained from sources outside the classroom must be clearly stated in all written work submitted. All ideas, arguments, and direct phrasings taken from someone else’s work must be identified and properly footnoted. Use quotation marks to identify all sources of wording that are not yours. Identify sources of ideas with appropriate footnoting.

HyperStudio at MIT

This class is offered by members of MIT’s HyperStudio-Center for Digital Humanities, one of the research groups within Comparative Media Studies / Writing. HyperStudio explores the potential of new media technologies for the enhancement of education and research in the humanities. HyperStudio’s work focuses on questions about the integration of technology into humanities curricula within the broader context of scholarly inquiry and educational practice. HyperStudio conceptualizes, develops, and deploys innovative media applications in close collaboration with scholars, educators, students, and developers.

Course Info

As Taught In
Spring 2015
Learning Resource Types
Projects with Examples
Instructor Insights