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Teaching Digital History with HistoryPin Dr. Aaron Cowan Slippery Rock University Email [email protected] Twitter @aaronbcowan Project Guidelines: https://www.evernote.com/pub/abc owan/historypinassignment

NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - HistoryPin

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As students increasingly draw upon digital content as a primary source of information, how might they be taught to be both discriminating consumers as well as producers of online information? Doing history rather than teaching history is not a new approach, but the “doing” part of researching, writing, and publishing now includes drawing upon and creating digitized resources. In this NITLE Shared Academics seminar, NITLE subject-area specialist Michelle Moravec, Aaron Cowan, assistant professor of history at Slippery Rock University, and Kathryn Tomasek, associate professor of history at Wheaton College, provided concrete examples from their own work, and examined the opportunities and challenges of integrating digital humanities into the undergraduate curriculum. These are Dr. Aaron Cowan's slides about using HistoryPin for teaching and learning.

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Page 1: NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - HistoryPin

Teaching Digital History with HistoryPin

Dr. Aaron CowanSlippery Rock University

[email protected]

Twitter@aaronbcowan

Project Guidelines:https://www.evernote.com/pub/abcowan/historypinassignment

Page 2: NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - HistoryPin

What is Historypin?Historypin.com “is a way for millions of people to come together to share small glimpses of the past and to build up the story of human history.”

Page 3: NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - HistoryPin

What are Historypin’s aims?

• To get as many people as possible taking part in the history of their family, streets, country and world.

• To bring neighborhoods together around local history and help people feel closer to the place they live in.

• To get people from different generations talking more, sharing more and coming together more often.

• To conserve and open up archives for everyone to enjoy, learn from and improve.

• To create a study resource for schools and universities.

• To be the largest global archive of human history.

Page 4: NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - HistoryPin

Why HistoryPin?

• Accessible interface

• Platforms (web, mobile apps)

• Collaborative/crowdsourcing

http://www2.archivists.org/sites/all/files/HistoryPin.pdf

“With its geospatial focus, HistoryPin allows users to view content across archival collections, revolutionizing the discovery process...HistoryPin brings the DJ into the archives by enabling archivists and their user communities to mashup photographs, videos, audio clips, descriptive text, and map data.”

– Abigail Nye, Society of American Archivists Reviews Portal, May 1, 2014

Page 5: NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - HistoryPin

Historypin ProjectSlippery Rock University & Lawrence County Historical Society

SRU students enrolled in Intro to Public History course

Basic tasks

• Select images from LCHS digitized archives

• Research subjects and pin images with 150-200 word “exhibit

labels”

• Create thematic tours linking content

Benefits for SRU Students

• Experience in digital history, historical research, and curating

• Practice in local history research

• Model & practice of community service/engagement

Benefits for Lawrence Co. Historical Society

• Free resource for engaging the public and especially “digital natives”

• Aid in advocating for preservation & building sense of community

• Better fulfill mission “to preserve and display the heritage of all our

citizens”

Page 6: NITLE Shared Academics: Doing Digital History with Undergraduates - HistoryPin
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Student Reflections

“Perhaps the most important lesson learned from this project is the value of local history resources at the local library or in the historical society’s archives; not everything is available on the Internet.”

“I think this project made me more sensitive to how people of a community may not be in touch with its history, and why they should be.”

“In most classes your work is not seen by anyone but the professor, but in this project the whole world can see our work and benefit from our research.”

“This project pushed us out of our comfort zone – in a good way. We had to take what we learned through our research and connect it to the audience. We had to make choices about what to include and what to omit, and think about what our audience needed to know, and what would hold their interest.”

“Historians need to do things like HistoryPin more often; they need to spark interest in the common person for history, and keep history relevant to modern society.”