Deanna Stover's Courses

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Deanna Stover is an Assistant Professor at Christopher Newport University. This website is a compilation of her syllabi since starting at CNU in Fall 2020.

View the Project on GitHub deanna-stover/coursesCNU

Twitter Prompt


Tweets Due: Weekly on Fridays by 11:59 pm
Percentage: 15%


General Overview

Twitter is pretty popular in the Digital Humanities (DH) community and has been for awhile. It’s also a good way of practicing being concise and informative while talking to a public audience. You’ll be setting up an academic or professional Twitter, meaning you might need to create a new profile if you already have a personal account. If you’re unfamiliar with Twitter, check this out.

You should be posting on Twitter at least twice per week about the readings and/or projects we’ll be working on and then submitting Tweets to me via Scholar each Friday by 11:59 pm. To submit your Tweets via Scholar, you’ll need to take screen shots. I’ve listed some resources and instructions under “Resources.” I’ve also included instructions for sumbitting your tweets under “How to Submit.”

We’ll be using the hashtag #cnuidst270. Please use this hashtag so I can look at Tweets before class.


Assignment Breakdown

Day One

And then . . .

Week 11 on . . .


Evaluation Criteria

Each week amounts to a fraction more than 1% of your final grade in the course. It doesn’t seem like much, but it adds up! You’ll also be required to use some of your own tweets in the Final Reflection, so take your tweets seriously!


Examples

An UNsubstantial tweet: I really liked the reading, but I still have questions.

What reading? Why? What questions?

A better (but still UNsubstantial) tweet: Kirschenbaum attempts to answer “What is the Digital Humanities?” but I’m still not sure if he actually answered the question for me.

More specific but I still have questions about your questions. Add some more detail (understanding that you only have so many characters!)

A substantial tweet:

Kirschenbaum attempts to answer “What is the Digital Humanities?” but I’m wondering what makes the digital humanities different than the humanities now that most things are done digitally? He was also writing ten years ago, so what has changed in the field?

An UNsubstantial comment or reply I agree with your questions! Ten years is a long time!

A substantial comment or reply Ten years does seem like a substantial amount of time, but I think defining DH will always be hard. Technology is constantly evolving, so I’m not sure we can even really define DH in any lasting way.

A substantial comment or reply to THAT reply I disagree. I think technology is advancing, of course, but the principles are the same. As long as people are doing humanities scholarship digitally, isn’t that DH? I think the blurring really comes when we ask what is humanities work to begin with?


How to Submit

Go to the “Twitter Posts” link in Scholar, click on the appropriate week, and then hit “Create Post.” Once there, add a title and then upload your screenshot(s). Pretty simple! But let me know if you run into any problems . . .

Please post both tweets as a single journal entry.


Resources

(Mostly Free) Screen Capture Software

You might consider using your phone to use Twitter and then take a simple screenshot. If you’d rather use a computer, here are some resources:


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