Posts Tagged ‘Julie Renner’
-
Ancient Greece Daily Life
3April 6, 2015 by jrenner1
The British Museum’s digital history website “Ancient Greece Daily Life” is a site dedicated to representing the lives of ordinary …
keep readingCategory Digital History Site Review | Tags: ancient Greece, education, interactive, Julie Renner, material culture, The British Museum
-
The Ancient Americas
0March 24, 2015 by jrenner1
For my digital history site review, I plan to discuss The Ancient America’s online exhibit website from the Field Museum.
Category Digital History Site Review | Tags: Julie Renner
-
Digital Tools Review
4March 24, 2015 by jrenner1
For our digital tool review, I selected Zotero, MyHistro, ProProfs and DocTeach. I found all these tools to have a …
keep readingCategory Research Tool Review | Tags: data searching, digital tools, docteach, education, Julie Renner, myhistro, proprof, research, visual, Zotero
-
Topics for Online Exhibition Review
0March 10, 2015 by jrenner1
For the presentation today, I will be talking about USC Thomas Cooper Library’s “Exploring Africa” exhibit from our reading and …
keep readingCategory Online Exhibit Show and Tell | Tags: Julie Renner
-
A rose by any other name would still smell as sweet?
0February 20, 2015 by jrenner1
In examining and evaluating the tagging criteria for History@Work for potential repetitiveness and overall effectiveness, I discovered that each of …
keep readingCategory Tagging Assignment | Tags: Julie Renner
-
Maybe I’m Part of the Problem
0February 17, 2015 by jrenner1
After this week’s readings regarding text encoding, I found myself thinking a lot about the role of the historian in …
keep readingCategory Reading Response | Tags: collaboration, digital technology, digital tools, Julie Renner, text encoding, Week 6
-
Well, There are Some Big Problems
6January 20, 2015 by jrenner1
Ah, the pitfalls of digital history. I think it’s very easy, at least for me personally, to think about digital …
keep readingCategory Reading Response | Tags: best practices, digital tools, digitization, Julie Renner, public history, shared authority