Teaching Highlight: Imari Tetu, Teaching with AI
Imari Tetu discusses teaching with AI in her course, 111: Intro to Accessibility for the Humanities.
Imari Tetu discusses teaching with AI in her course, 111: Intro to Accessibility for the Humanities.
Undergraduate Student Margaux Smith gives insight into her undergraduate journey and how she found Digital Hummanties.
DH Core Faculty, WRAC Dept, describes what Digital Hummanties means to her within her scholarship.
The Internment Archaeology Digital Archive (IADA) project is a digital platform and website dedicated to sharing the stories of Japanese Americans who were incarcerated and interned during World War II in Idaho.
The legal profession must confront its role in slavery. Acknowledging and discussing the modern citation of slave cases is a first step.
Students learned about the ethics of data collection, survey design basics, and how to analyze survey results. The hands-on workshops used two free tools, Google Forms and Voyant, to collect and visualize survey data.
Digital Humanities as a discipline often expands collaborative activity into humanities disciplines that traditionally have been focused on solo work, and I think this is valuable.
This is an interactive website and online archive about food in the Great Depression, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities. What were Americans eating in the Depression?
The following piece was originally created for the DH@MSU Newsletter and was featured in the January 23, 2023 issue. Subscribe to the Newsletter here. Spring 2022 Alumni Highlight: Miranda Madro What is…
The Cube, a space for diverse ranges of people, places, and communities to participate in communications of all kinds, from traditional book production to user experience research to web and app development.