The University of Guelph is again hosting DH@Guelph Summer Workshops a series of 4-day workshops from May 14-17, 2018 on topics related to digital humanities research and teaching. Offerings include courses on project planning, digital storytelling, the command line, geospatial humanities, the Text Encoding Initiative (introductory and creating editions), telling stories with data, augmented reality, semantic text analysis, making and intersectionality, and Omeka, along with Getting Going with Scholarship Online: An introduction to CWRC for projects and individual scholars.
Here's the description:
The Canadian Writing Research Collaboratory (CWRC) provides an online space in which scholars can engage with the possibilities for online scholarship either individually or in groups. CWRC provides an environment that supports best practices in the production of online collections, editions, born-digital essays, anthologies, collections, monographs, articles, or encyclopedia entries, or bibliographies, and supports the inclusion of visual, audio, and video sources. This course will provide an introduction to many the principles and practices underpinning digital scholarship, including the ways in which scholars can work collaboratively by adopting online standards and tools.
The course is suitable for those wishing a general introduction to digital humanities as well as for those wishing to initiate a longer-term project, providing a general introduction to key principles associated with DH scholarship, ranging from platform-independent data formats and metadata standards to text markup, preservation challenges, and semantic web principles. It will touch on practical, institutional and cultural challenges associated with collaboration, as well as strategies for deciding what types and levels of collaboration are right for particular individuals or projects.
Please don't hesitate to contact us at cwrc@ualberta.ca if you have any question about whether the workshop would be suitable for you!