Lecture TimeThursday, 14:30-16:15
VenueDS Lab (UL); Room 706B, Chen Kou Bun Building (CKB 706B)
LanguageEnglish
Lecturer Stuart MCMANUS (39437858 / smcmanus@cuhk.edu.hk)
Teaching Assistant ZHANG Xinyao Kingyo (kingyosinio@link.cuhk.edu.hk)
Computer games, apps and AI are everywhere in the lives of CUHK students. These technologies are useful in our everyday interactions, but they can also help us be better historians and humanists. In this introductory course, you will learn about the exciting field of Digital Humanities, which applies all manner of technologies to humanities questions. The course will introduce the resources available at CUHK for digital humanities (DS Lab, VR Studio, 3-Printing space, etc.). It will also involve the study of some exciting applications of tools, like VR, text analysis, 3-D modelling and printing, historical mapping, etc. At the end of the course, students will have a solid foundation for further studies in digital humanities.
(4/9) Introduction: Humanities and Technology?
Project: The Two Cultures
Tool: StoryMaps
(11/9) History for Today, History for Tomorrow? The Origins of the Digital Humanities
MEET IN DS LAB, UL
Project: Index Thomisticus [arguably the first DH project] & Selfiecity
Tool: Google N-gram viewer
(18/9) Resources at CUHK: DS Lab, etc.
MEET IN DS LAB, UL
Project: China Biographical Database Project
Tool: DS Lab
(25/9) Key questions in the Digital Humanities
MEET IN DS LAB, UL
Project: Battle of HK
Tool: Three Challenges (and Solutions) & The Trouble with Text Mining
(2/10) Reading with Technology I: English texts (Voyant).
MEET IN 706B, CKB
Project: Representing Race and Ethnicity
Tool: https://voyant-tools.org/docs/tutorial-tools_.html ; https://text-compare.com/
(9/10) Reading with Technology II: Literary Sinitic (Classical Chinese) (Voyant).
MEET IN 706B, CKB
Project:
Tools: https://beta.voyant-tools.org/docs/tutorial-stopwords.html and www.ctext.org
(16/10) Foundations of AI I
MEET IN 706B, CKB
Project: IBM AI Explained
Tool: Copilot
(23/10) Foundations of AI II
MEET IN 706B, CKB
Project: There is a digital art history
Tool: Teachable Machine
(30/10) What is a Map? What is a Network?
MEET IN 706B, CKB
Project: Mapping the Republic of Letters; A World made by travel
Tool: QGIS Lessons 2.1-2.2
(06/11) Congregation – no class
(13/11) 3-D Printing
MEET IN DS LAB, UL
Project: Harvard 3D printing
Tool: LibGuide
(20/11) VR and Humanities
MEET IN DS LAB, UL
Project: VR Ancient Egypt
Tool: LibGuide to VR
(27/11) Rebuilding the Pyramids?
MEET IN DS LAB, UL
Project: Virtual Field Trips to Ancient Rome
Tool: 3-D Modelling
(Bonus material) Gamification
Tool: Unity ; Unity tutorial
30% Participation in Tutorial
Active and enthusiastic participation in the tutorial (7.5% per tutorial). This will receive a letter grade.
20% Attendance and participation in lecture and departmental seminars
Each student is required to attend the weekly lecture and the tutorials, as well as participate in class exercises, etc. (10%). If students are more than 15 minutes late to class, this will be counted as an absence.
Additionally, students must attend at least 3 seminars from among term 2’s various meetings of the RIH Digital Humanities Talk Series OR History Department World History Seminar via Zoom (send screen shot to TA as proof). You should also ask at least one question during one of the Q&A sessions (also send screen shot of chat box to TA as proof). The schedules will be announced in due course. (10%).
20% DH Project Video Review
Produce a 2- to 3-minute video (max permitted: 3:30) which provides a review of an interesting DH project (either one we have studied in class, or one that you have found yourself). This video should include sound, images (like a PPT) and may include video extracts. Images and other material may be AI-generated. You may need to do more research about the project and its reception and use. NB These will be uploaded to a class YouTube page. In making the videos, you should follow relevant copyright guidelines.
Due by email (MP4 format) to the TA who will put them on the YouTube site: DEADLINE 15/12 @5PM
20% “Teach a Friend Digital History” Video
Produce a 8- to 10-minute (max permitted 11:00) video which captures your screen, camera and voice as you guide a friend how to make a mini-digital history project (e.g. create a map, analyze a text, visualization, 3D printed object, 3D scan, etc.) using one of the tools introduced during the course. You can use Panopto, Zoom or some other tool to create these videos. For a guide to recording in Zoom, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9qhoAIzW3E In making the videos, you should follow relevant copyright guidelines.
Due by email (MP4 format) to the TA who will put them on the YouTube site: DEADLINE 15/12 @5PM
10% AI-diary
The use of AI, including chatbots, is permitted (and encouraged!) in this class. However, it must be documented and reflected upon. An important part of the assessment is therefore an AI diary (absolute minimum 13 entries, one for each week). This can be a Word document or other format, in which you record the prompt, the response (screenshots are OK) and a minimum 50-word personal reflection on the value of the response and how you might want to further prompt the AI chatbot or edit the output. It is important to show sustained interactions with chatbots (multiple related prompts). You must document every single use of AI related to the course. You should begin keeping the AI diary from the very beginning of the course. Microsoft Copilot is a good choice, but you can use any chatbot you want. The only place you are not allowed to use AI is in writing the comments on the AI diary!
Due by email to the TA: DEADLINE 15/12 @5PM
Only the AI diary requires a submission to Veriguide. Please email the Veriguide receipt to the TA along with the assignments: DEADLINE 15/12 @5PM.
AI Policy
By requiring an AI diary, this course follows Approach 3 in the CUHK Use of Artificial Intelligence Tools in Teaching, Learning and Assessments A Guide for Students:
Use only with explicit acknowledgement
In courses where students are allowed or expected to collaborate with or use AI tools, students may use these tools for in-class learning activities, exercises or assignments as long as they explicitly cite or acknowledge the use of these tools. Details will be spelt out clearly in the course outline and/or the instructions of the assignments. Students shall follow the instruction strictly and are expected to understand the limits and appropriate uses of these tools.
Email Policy
The TA and I are here to help you. We aim to respond to emails within 48 hours of receiving them (excluding weekends and public holidays). If you do not receive a response within 48 hours, please send a follow-up email.
Attention is drawn to University policy and regulations on honesty in academic work, and to the disciplinary guidelines and procedures applicable to breaches of such policy and regulations. Details may be found at http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/policy/academichonesty/.
With each assignment, students will be required to submit a signed declaration that they are aware of these policies, regulations, guidelines and procedures.
Assignments without the properly signed declaration will not be graded by teachers.
Only the final version of the assignment should be submitted via VeriGuide.
The submission of a piece of work, or a part of a piece of work, for more than one purpose (e.g. to satisfy the requirements in two different courses) without declaration to this effect shall be regarded as having committed undeclared multiple submissions. It is common and acceptable to reuse a turn of phrase or a sentence or two from one’s own work; but wholesale reuse is problematic. In any case, agreement from the course teacher(s) concerned should be obtained prior to the submission of the piece of work.