13.0250 seminars/workshops

Humanist Discussion Group (humanist@kcl.ac.uk)
Wed, 27 Oct 1999 20:49:02 +0100 (BST)

Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 13, No. 250.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
<http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
<http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>

[1] From: Sawyer Seminar Program <sawyer- (36)
seminar@uchicago.edu>
Subject: Fall Quarter Sawyer Seminar Conference

[2] From: Chuck Bearden <cbearden@rice.edu> (106)
Subject: Digitization for Cultural Heritage Professionals,
Houston

--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 27 Oct 1999 20:39:45 +0100
From: Sawyer Seminar Program <sawyer-seminar@uchicago.edu>
Subject: Fall Quarter Sawyer Seminar Conference

The 1999-2000 Sawyer Seminar at the University of Chicago
"Computer Science as a Human Science: The Cultural Impact of Computerization"
Sponsored by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

SYNESTHETIC EDUCATION AND THE CULTURAL ORGANIZATION OF THE SENSES
An international conference at the University of Chicago
October 29-November 1, 1999
_________________________________________________________________

Dear friends and colleagues,

We are pleased to announce the Autumn 1999 conference of the 1999-2000
Sawyer Seminar at the University of Chicago, "Computer Science as a Human
Science: The Cultural Impact of Computerization."

This quarter's conference, "Synesthetic Education and the Cultural
Organization of the Senses," will be held at the Franke Institute for the
Humanities on Saturday, October 30, and Sunday, October 31. The keynote
address by Simon Penny of Carnegie Mellon University, "Modalities of
Interaction: Embodiment and Digital Cultural Practice," will be held in
Social Sciences, Room 122, on Friday, October 29th at 5:00 pm with a
reception to follow. Finally, a concluding roundtable and panel discussion
will take place at the Franke Institute on Monday, November 1, at 4:00 pm.

A detailed conference schedule and interactive discussion list, as well as
information about the seminar's aims and other events related to the
1999-2000 Sawyer Seminar, can be found at the seminar web site:

http://humanities.uchicago.edu/sawyer/CSasHS

We invite your participation and look forward to a productive and rewarding
conference.

Best wishes,

Margot Browning, Associate Director
The Franke Institute for the Humanities
=============================================================================
The 1999-2000 Sawyer Seminar at the University of Chicago
"Computer Science as a Human Science: The Cultural Impact of Computerization"
http://humanities.uchicago.edu/sawyer/CSasHS
sawyer-seminar@uchicago.edu

The Franke Institute for the Humanities
The University of Chicago
1100 East 57th Street, JRL S-102
Chicago, IL 60637

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 27 Oct 1999 20:40:08 +0100
From: Chuck Bearden <cbearden@rice.edu>
Subject: Digitization for Cultural Heritage Professionals, Houston

[This announcement is being cross-posted.]

Digitization for Cultural Heritage Professionals
HATII, University of Glasgow
Fondren Library, Rice University
Houston, Texas, March 5 - 10, 2000
http://www.rice.edu/Fondren/DCHP00/

Following the great success of the 1998 and 1999 Glasgow Digitisation
Summer Schools, the Humanities Advanced Technology and Information
Institute (HATII) and the Fondren Library at Rice University are
pleased to announce the first offering of this course in North America.

Full details of the course and preliminary registration materials can
be found at:

http://www.rice.edu/Fondren/DCHP00/

Introduction
------------
The availability of high-quality digital content is central for
improving public access to the heritage and enabling teaching and
research. This one-week intensive program will be of value to
students, academics, and professionals working in the cultural and
humanities sector (archives, museums, libraries).

It introduces skills, principles, and best practice in the
digitization of primary textual and images resources with strong
emphasis on interactive seminars and practical exercises. With
expert guidance, you will examine the advantages of developing
digital collections of heritage materials and investigate issues
involved in creating, curating, and managing access to such
collections. The focus will be on working with primary source
materials not otherwise available in digital form.

In these, participants will apply the practical skills they acquire
to the digitization of an analogue collection which they have
selected (print, image e.g. photographic or slide, music manuscripts,
or map). The focus will be on working with primary source material
not otherwise available in digital form.

Participants are encouraged to bring material related to their own
interests or to those of their home institution. Where this is not
practical, material from the University of Glasgow's collections will
be made available.

Aims and Objectives
-------------------
After completing the course, participants will:

o be familiar with major digitization projects and how they are
being run;
o acquire the skills to select materials for digitization and
provide sound justifications for these decisions;
o be able to define the standards to be used depending upon the
type of documentary or image material with which they are working
and the objectives of a particular digitization initiative;
o gain the skills to manage the digitization process from end-to-end;
o appreciate the role and types of metadata used to assure the long
term reusability of digital materials;
o acquire the skills to create suitable metadata;
o be able to determine the costs of digitization projects;
o be able to plan appropriate storage and access facilities; and,
o understand the application of the techniques to various heritage
sectors, including archives, libraries, special collections, and
museums.

Time scale
----------
The one-week intensive course will consist of 10 lectures; 5 seminars;
5 lab-based practicals (offering both guided tuition, as well as an
opportunity for individual practice); and a visit to the Woodson
Research Center (Fondren's special collections and archives unit) as
well as a visit to another Houston-area special collection.

Daily schedule: 9:00-9:55 Lecture, 10:00-11:00 Seminar, 11:30-12:45
Lecture, 2:00-4:15 Practical I, 4:30-6:30 Practical II)

Costs, Registration, and Deadlines
----------------------------------
Course Fees (including study materials, mid-morning coffee, lunch,
and afternoon tea breaks, not including accommodation):
- Advanced booking price: $700 (fees paid by January 15, 2000)
- Normal price: $800 (fees paid after January 15, 2000)

More information can be found at:

http://www.rice.edu/Fondren/DCHP00/

The Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute,
University of Glasgow, George Service House, 11 University Gardens,
GLASGOW G12 8QQ, UK.
Telephone: (+44 141) 330 5512 | Fax: (+44 141) 330 3788
director@hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk

The Fondren Library, Rice University
P.O. Box 1892
Houston, Texas 77251-1892
Telephone: (+1 713) 527 4022 | Fax: (+1 713) 285 5258
cbearden@rice.edu

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Charles Henry, Ph.D.
Vice Provost and University Librarian
Fondren Library MS 44
Rice University
P.O. Box 1892
Houston, Texas 77251-1892
voice: 713.527-4022 fax: 713. 285-5258
<http://riceinfo.rice.edu/>

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dr Seamus Ross
Director, Humanities Computing & Information Management
Humanities Advanced Technology and Information Institute
Faculty Office, Faculty of Arts
6 University Avenue
University of Glasgow
Glasgow, G12 8QQ
Scotland

Telephone: 0141 330 3635 (direct)
Secretary: 0141 330 5512 (Mrs Ann Law)
Fax: 0141 330 3788
email: seamusr@arts.gla.ac.uk

Institute Website: http://www.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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