PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge

PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge

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A project of the Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University. It is part of the Duke Digital Humanities Initiative.

The PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge provides an arena for humanities PhD students to learn about new digital scholarship & see its promise for their own research and professional lives. The PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge at the Franklin Humanities Institute provides an arena in which PhD students in humanities and interpretive social sciences can learn about new digital scholarship, engage with its cha

Table of Contents: Issue Seventeen / 05/20/2020

PhD Lab co-director Victoria Szabo co-edited Issue 17 in the Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy. At this critical moment, "This issue demonstrates the power of XR in pedagogical applications, community partnerships, and future gatherings."

Articles in this issue engage with humanistic concerns over an ethical and sustainable future in XR: "How will we ensure our values are embedded in the XR systems that emerge, or that the resulting models of pedagogy are immersive, interactive, accessible, and collaborative? Even as we go online with our teaching, we realize how much we’re missing from lived experience in physical proximity. How can we leverage the affordances of the real in pursuit of the digital? How does the digital expand access, opportunity, vision, and community? How might XR facilitate lifelong learning applications and the global communities these interventions make possible?"

Link below to the full issue!

Table of Contents: Issue Seventeen / Issue Seventeen Table of Contents: Issue Seventeen No responses May 20, 2020 Introduction The Potential of Extended Reality: Teaching and Learning in Virtual Spaces Amanda Licastro, Angel David Nieves, and Victoria Szabo Social Justice Immersive Pedagogy: Developing a Decolonial and Collaborative Fr...

08/16/2019

The PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge seeks graduate student fellows for the 2019-2020 academic year! Fellows receive a non-compensatory supplement of $1500 for the year.

Part of the Digital Humanities Initiative at the Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University, the PhD Lab supports the development of innovative digital research and teaching practices in the humanities and interpretive social sciences. PhD Lab Fellows are required to enter the program with a digital project idea (in any stage of development), attend lunch meetings (on Thursdays, roughly every two weeks), join a working group, and participate in PhD Lab programs and events.

Link to full CFP ➡️ http://duke.is/b5TSrJ
Link to apply ➡️ http://duke.is/9K6a9G

Call for Applications: PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge Graduate Student Scholars | John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute 07/09/2018

DUE THIS WEEK!

📢📢 CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University PhD LAB in DIGITAL KNOWLEDGE GRADUATE STUDENT SCHOLARS. Now Open! Apply today! Applications due July 15. 📢📢

Call for Applications: PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge Graduate Student Scholars | John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: PhD LAB in DIGITAL KNOWLEDGE GRADUATE STUDENT SCHOLARS at the FRANKLIN HUMANITIES INSTITUTE 2017-2018 PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge Scholar Application Deadline: July 15, 2018

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: PhD LAB in DIGITAL KNOWLEDGE GRADUATE STUDENT SCHOLARS | John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute 06/18/2018

📢📢 CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: Duke University Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University PhD LAB in DIGITAL KNOWLEDGE GRADUATE STUDENT SCHOLARS. Now Open! Apply today! Applications due July 15. 📢📢

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: PhD LAB in DIGITAL KNOWLEDGE GRADUATE STUDENT SCHOLARS | John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: PhD LAB in DIGITAL KNOWLEDGE GRADUATE STUDENT SCHOLARS at the FRANKLIN HUMANITIES INSTITUTE 2017-2018 PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge Scholar Application Deadline: July 15, 2018

2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium - Franklin Humanities Institute 05/02/2018

Saturday, May 5. Join us at the Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University for the NCCU-Duke Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium. Featuring keynote talks by Ronald Bailey, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and P. Gabrielle Foreman at U of Delaware, as well as updates from this year's DH Fellows: Shelvia Dancy, Tony A. Frazier, Carolyn (Collie) J. Fulford, Lenora Z. Helm Hammonds, Charmaine McKissick-Melton, Julie Nelson, and W. Russell Robinson.

2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium - Franklin Humanities Institute Please join us at the 2017-18 year-end symposium of the Franklin Humanities Institute-North Carolina Central University (FHI-NCCU) Digital Humanities Fellowship...

12/11/2017

Duke University’s Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in conjunction with Duke Information Science + Studies and the PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge invite proposals for “Digital Matters in Medieval and Renaissance Studies” a Digital Humanities symposium to be held at Duke University April 6 – 7 2018.

We welcome proposals in Digital Humanities scholarship that consider new directions in digital research and methodologies, particularly in the field of Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Especially welcome are proposals that think creatively about digital publication, data analysis, and interdisciplinary scholarly and pedagogical collaborations.

The symposium will include both research presentations and technology workshops. In pairing presentations and workshops, the goal is to allow for experiential and collaborative interaction with digital tools. Abstracts may be submitted for individual research presentations, whole panels, or workshops (see more details below).

Research presentations should take the form of individual 15-20 minute papers, or a group of speakers may choose to submit proposals for panels composed of three 15-20 minute papers. Workshops are meant to serve as a showcase for current scholarship as well as an opportunity for participants to develop familiarity with technical skills. We thus invite proposals for workshop sessions in which presenters will give a presentation (20-30 minutes), describing their current research and use of a particular digital tool (such as DEVONthink, Neatline, StoryMapJS, etc.). Presenters will then facilitate a discussion (approximately 30-45 minutes), guiding participants through introductory instruction in the use of that research tool.

Proposals for all projects should be 200-500 words. All proposals should be made via email and submitted to: [email protected]. The deadline for submitting abstracts is Feb. 15, 2018.

https://sites.duke.edu/digitalmatter2018/

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Durham, NC
27708