NYCDH Week’s series of wide-ranging workshops are open to everyone. They are FREE and offered across the city. Workshops are made possible by members of the NYCDH community who are willing to offer their time to teach and help organize each session.
Currently 2017 NYCDH Week will include workshops on the following topics by the following instructors:
- Access: Bridging the Continuum between Digital Archival Management and the Public Interface – Emily Kate Genatowski
- Advanced Omeka – Kimon Keramidas
- Advanced Text Analysis – Jonathan Reeve
- Building Mobile Narratives and Games using ARIS – Jesse Merandy
- Dealing with Messy Data using Open Refine and other tools – Heather Seminelli
- Design-Based Thinking for Humanists – Deanna Sessions
- Digital Mapping for JavaScript Novices – Moacir P. de Sá Pereira
- Experimenting with DH: A Beginners Workshop – Tierney Gleason
- How do I Get My Catalogue Raisonné Online? – Louisa Wood Ruby
- Intro to Networks – Chris Alen Sula
- Intro to Omeka – Kimon Keramidas
- Intro to the Command Line – Zach Coble
- Introduction to FromThePage – Laura Morreale
- Introduction to Humanities Commons – Nicky Agate
- Introduction to Information Security – Patrick Smyth
- Introduction to Mapping with QGIS – Michelle McSweeney and Dare Brawley
- Introduction to Scalar – Shawn Hill
- Introduction to Security and Privacy for Researchers – Alex Gil
- Islandora Working Group – Robin Naughton, Chris Stanton, Emily Miranker
- Machine Learning: A Primer – Achim Koh
- Machine Learning for the Study of Literary and Historical Corpora – Aaron Plasek
- Making a Minimal Digital Edition of a Historical or Literary Text – Alex Gil
- Making Maps into Webmaps with Leaflet.js – Michelle McSweeney and Dare Brawley
- Making the Most of Text: Markdown & Pandoc Text-only Workflow – John Muccigrosso
- Multimedia Film Analysis – Marina Hassapopoulou
- The Pedagogy of DH: A Conversation – Kimon Keramidas and Marion Thain
- Physical Computing 101 with Arduino – Mary Catherine Kinniburgh
- Planning and Prototyping a Digital Humanities Project – Joshua Korenblat
- Preserving Performance – Noreen Whysel and Tanya Elder
- Sampling for the Digital Humanities – Angus Grieve-Smith
- Sensing Urban Noise – Tae Hong Park
- Social Media Scraping for Qualitative Research – Sarah DeMott
- Social Network Analysis for Humanities – Alexander Nakhimovsky
- Strategies for Interactive and Immersive Dance – D. Schmüdde and Kim Burgas
- Sustaining and Growing your DH Projects – Nancy Maron
- Using Optical Character Recognition (OCR) to Build a DH Corpus – Nicholas Wolf
- Visualizing Qualitative Data – Ah-Young Song
Institutional and organizational affiliations of workshop instructors include:
- American Theatre Archive Project
- Bard Graduate Center
- BlueSky to BluePrint
- Colgate University
- Columbia University
- Drew University
- Fordham University
- The Frick Collection
- The Graduate Center, City University of New York
- Kitchen Table Coders
- Modern Language Association
- New York University
- Pratt Institute
- State University of New York, New Paltz
.