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Jenny Grant Rankin deposited How to Make Data Work: A Guide for Educational Leaders in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 2 months agoEducators are increasingly responsible for using data to improve teaching and learning in their schools. This helpful guide provides leaders with simple steps for facilitating accurate analysis and interpretation of data, while avoiding common errors and pitfalls. How to Make Data Work provides clear strategies for getting data into workable shape…[Read more]
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Jenny Grant Rankin deposited Sharing Your Education Expertise with the World: Make Research Resonate and Widen Your Impact in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 2 months agoGo on NPR, give a TED Talk, write for publications read by thousands… This book helps education experts of all levels share their knowledge, work, and research with and beyond their own field and colleagues. By pursuing the recommendations in this book, educators and researchers can increase the exposure of their ideas and impact more…[Read more]
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Jenny Grant Rankin deposited First Aid for Teacher Burnout: How You Can Find Peace and Success in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 2 months agoOffering clear strategies rooted in research and expert recommendations, First Aid for Teacher Burnout empowers teachers to prevent and recover from burnout while finding success at work. Each chapter explores a different common cause of teacher burnout and provides takeaway strategies and realistic tips. Chapter coverage includes fighting low…[Read more]
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Jenny Grant Rankin deposited Engaging & Challenging Gifted Students: Tips for Supporting Extraordinary Minds in Your Classroom (ASCD Arias) in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 2 months agoThough nearly 5 million students can be characterized as gifted and talented in the United States, many exceptional learners “fly under the radar.” Because they are not appropriately challenged in the general classroom, they never meet their full potential in school or in life. Author Jenny Grant Rankin equips general classroom teachers with the…[Read more]
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Julian C. Chambliss deposited A Black Social World: Recovering African American Community Life through Generative Digital Practice in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 3 months agoThe paper explores the impact of generative digital scholarship to document and illuminate the black experience in Winter Park, Florida. Building on a community engagement and experiential learning model that positions the classroom as a critical making platform, this presentation documents how archival research and digital exhibits focused on…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited A Time for Radical Hope: Freedom, Responsibility, Publishing, and Building New Publics in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 3 months agoThis essay explores the various state(s) and future(s) of academic publishing, and also makes an argument for the radical hope of a vibrantly futurist University-Library, and the formation of new cultural-intellectual-artistic publics, that would come into being in new para-institutional spaces.
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Eileen Joy deposited A Garden of Wandering: A Response to Simon During in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 3 months agoThis short essay is part of a Forum centered upon responses to Simon During’s essay, “Precariousness, Literature and the Humanities Today,” Australian Humanities Review 58 (May 2015), and argues (following Nicholas Bourriaud’s figure of the radicant) for the becoming-itinerant of humanistic practice, as well as for reinventing the Academy as a wan…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited Why We Blog: An Essay in Four Movements in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 3 months agoThis essay comprises four parts, each by one of the co-bloggers at In the Middle (http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com). Karl Steel argues that the benefits of academic blogging outweigh its potential humiliations, and that academic conferences should post their papers publicly and allow for comments so that conferences, in a sense, never end.…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited Let Us Now Stand Up for Bastards: On the Importance of Illegtimate Publics in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 4 months agoThis essay is partly a response + riposte to Johanna Drucker’s Jan. 2014 essay in the Los Angeles Review of Books, “Pixel Dust: Illusions of Innovation in Scholarly Publishing,” and partly a plea for the University, and the Humanities, along with their publishing “arms,” to be refashioned, not as sites of cultural Authority from which Knowledge…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited Here Be Monsters: A Punctum Publishing Primer in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 4 months agoRelative to many of the ongoing discussions and debates around the changing (and often precarious) landscapes of scholarly publishing, and especially around Open Access publishing, we at punctum books have put together a sort of “primer” (which also serves as our own, expanded vision statement) on what we see as the perils of the commodification…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited Like a Radio Left On / on the Outskirts of Identical Cities: Living (with) Fradenburg in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 4 months agoThis essay serves as the Preface to “Still Thriving: On the Importance of Aranye Fradenburg,” a collection of critical reflections on the career and paradigm-shifting scholarship of medievalist and psychoanalyst L.O. Aranye Fradenburg.
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Eileen Joy deposited The Arts of Living / Epicurean Rain in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 4 months agoThis short essay, co-authored with L.O. Aranye Fradenburg, in the edited 2-volume collection BURN AFTER READING, eds. Eileen A. Joy, Myra Seaman, and Jeffrey Jerome Cohen (Oliphaunt Books, 2014), ruminates the importance of the humanities as an important space for the artfulness of living, for enriched environments, and real-time experimental…[Read more]
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Eileen Joy deposited Burn After Reading: Volume 1. Miniature Manifestos for a Post/medieval Studies + Volume 2: The Future We Want: A Collaboration in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 4 months agoThe essays, manifestos, rants, screeds, pleas, soliloquies, telegrams, broadsides, eulogies, songs, harangues, confessions, laments, and acts of poetic terrorism in these two volumes — which collectively form an academic “rave” — were culled, with some later additions, from roundtable sessions at the International Congress on Medieval Studies…[Read more]
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Ismail Royer deposited Pakistan’s Blasphemy Law and Non-Muslims in the group
Digital Middle East & Islamic Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 5 months agoSection 295-C of Pakistan’s penal code prohibits insulting the Prophet and carries a mandatory death penalty. This law was passed based on a claim of ijma‘ (consensus among Islamic scholars) that such an offense is subject to a hadd (divinely fixed) punishment. Nearly half of those charged under this statute crimes of hadd are Christians, who mak…[Read more]
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Michael L. Hays deposited Race: Political Correctness vs. Scholarship in the Humanities in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 6 months agoDescribes and analyzes two episodes of article rejections based on political correctness and several published instances of politically correct inverse racism. Shows that political correctness in judging scholarship on race uses a double standard which enables reverse racism and an unsavory rhetoric. Discusses political correctness as the…[Read more]
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Michael L. Hays deposited The English Profession-Tendentious Reflections of a Retired Independent Scholar. in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 6 months agoProvides a personal perspective on, and analysis of, developments in the English profession. Emphasizes the proliferation of PhDs, the industrialization of scholarship and its effects on research and promotion, and the diminished influence and status of English studies. Makes suggestions for addressing present difficulties and reviving the study…[Read more]
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Michael L. Hays deposited The Dehumanizing of the Humanities and a Remedy in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 6 months agoExplores issues of professionalization and politicalization of humanistic studies. Sketches an up-dated return to the basics of humanistic research and teaching.
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Matthew Suriano deposited The Historicality of the King: An Exercise in Reading Royal Inscriptions from the Ancient Levant in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 7 years, 7 months agoThe problem with using royal inscriptions as historical sources is their inherent bias. The interests of the king drive the narratives of royal inscriptions. Yet this essential feature reveals their underlying concept of history. In royal inscriptions, historical thought is defined by the life and experience of the king. This article will present…[Read more]
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Matthew Suriano deposited Wine Shipments to Samaria from Royal Vineyards in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 7 years, 7 months agoThe Samaria Ostraca contain a subset of receipts that record wine shipments from what were evidently royal vineyards. But this particular group of ostraca has been largely overlooked in the study of the Northern Kingdom, probably resulting from the fact that not all of the ostraca were published in the editio princeps. This article presents a new…[Read more]
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Jim McGrath deposited Our Marathon: The Role of Graduate Student and Library Labor in Making the Boston Bombing Digital Archive in the group
Public Humanities on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoThis chapter uses Our Marathon: The Boston Bombing Digital Archive to consider the ways that collaborative, public-facing digital humanities initiatives can conflict with institutional conventions and methods of evaluating academic labor. Collaborative work creates challenges as well as opportunities for its organizers and laborers. The particular…[Read more]
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