JOINT CERTIFICATE IN DIGITAL HUMANITIES

Stage-two proposal: Curriculum

From Computer Science/Math and English Studies

Presented by: Gyllian Phillips (English) and Murat Tuncali (Math/Computer Science)

Stage-one approval by the Academic Planning Committee of Senate received on Sept. 18, 2009.

Approved by Craig Cooper, Dean of Arts and Science, Department of Math/Computer Science, Department of English Studies, Academic Regulations and Curriculum Committee of Arts and Science

Consulted in preparation: Chair/coordinators of History, Religions and Cultures, Classics, Gender Equality and Social Justice, Political Science and Philosophy

Process

At this moment in Nipissing University’s history, we have no approval process in place for new certificates, only new programmes. However, a precedent of sorts was established at a meeting of the USC (May 2009?) in which it was decided (principally by the chair of USC, the Registrar and the VPAR) that any new course code designation necessarily implied a new programme. The English and Math/Computer Science departments were asked to bring the Certificate in Digital Humanities back to APC as a new programme in the following academic year. As a consequence, Stage-one approval was sought and received Sept 18, and we are going ahead with the Stage-two which outlines the specific curriculum required for the Certificate. However, it should be made clear that at the moment this Certificate is proposed only as a certificate, not a new programme.

Proposed motions

MOTION: That USC approve the new Joint Certificate in Digital Humanities as outlined in the Stage-two proposal.

MOTION: That USC approve the pre-requisite for the Joint Certificate in Digital Humanities as follows: students must have completed 30 credits of undergraduate courses in any discipline.

MOTION: That USC approve the addition of DIGI 4xxx Project in Digital Humanities (3 credits) as outlined in the attached course proposal.

Outline of Curriculum

Admission requirements

Students are eligible for the first stage of the Joint Certificate in Digital Humanities once they have completed 30 credits of undergraduate courses in any discipline. In order to succeed in the intro courses, they should be counseled to take ENGL1501 or ENGL1106 among their 30 credits of first-year courses.

Required courses

To complete the CDH, students are required to take 18 credits in total, 12 credits of which must be drawn from the courses listed below:

DIGI 2305 Introduction to Digital Humanities (6 credits) (approved by Senate June 2009)

Course description: Digital technologies are dramatically challenging and changing areas of study and engagement that are largely the province of the humanities, namely the ways in which we learn, build knowledge, share information, and communicate. This survey course will introduce students to interdisciplinary questions about the impact of digital capacity on theory and culture, tools and applications, and the digital world. This course provides a foundation for continued study in the interdisciplinary field of digital humanities.

Pre-requisite: 30 credits of undergraduate courses in any discipline

Additional comments: it is strongly recommended that students who plan to take DIGI 2305 include ENGL1501 or ENGL1106 among their 30 credits of first-year courses. This is a writing and reading intensive course.

DIGI 2006 Introduction to Computing Technologies for the Digital Humanities (3 credits) (approved by Senate, June 2009)

DIGI 4xxx Project in Digital Humanities (3 credits)

See attached course proposal

Electives:

In addition to the required courses, students will be need 6 credits of electives. These will be special topics courses designated on a year-by-year basis in a range of electives disciplines from programmes in Arts and Science. The courses will be selected and designated as follows:

Process

By October 1, programmes who wish to have a course x-listed as a DIGI elective, must submit the course syllabus, including at least a description and assignment breakdown, to the Certificate administrators (English/Math-Computer Science). Courses that meet the criteria listed below will be designated as electives in time enough to be added to the course master (usually by November 1).

Criteria

The principal criteria used by Math/Computer Science and English to evaluate the suitability of courses from other disciplines are these:

1) The course must address the theoretical and academic issues raised by the intersection between digital media and humanities disciplines. For our purposes “humanities” identifies an approach rather more than a subject field. In other words, the approach should be one of critical engagement with the way in which information is structured, disseminated and received.

2) The course should have a significant (more than 25% or course content or mark value) practical component requiring students to engage substantively with or to manipulate digital media in course material or assignments. Whether students are asked to critically analyze electronic media or they are asked to produce electronic media, the emphasis should be on the interaction between student and medium.

3) The contributing programme should consider accepting DIGI 2305 Introduction to Digital Humanities in place of the conventional disciplinary pre-requisite for the designated course.


A) Descriptive Data

Course code: / DIGI 4xxx
Course title: / Project in Digital Humanities
Short title:
(maximum 29 characters) / Project in Digital Humanities
If this course belongs to a major that has course groupings, please indicate which group the course belongs with:
Course Prerequisites: / DIGI 2006 Introduction to Computing Technologies for the Digital Humanities and DIGI 2305 Introduction to Digital Humanities. Students wishing to take this course during the following Spring/Summer or Fall/Winter Session must apply in writing to the discipline no later than February 15.
Course Co-requisites:
Antirequisite:
Total Hours:
(Lecture / Lab / Seminar) / 36
Breakdown of Hours
(e.g. Two hours of lecture and one hour of laboratory work per week for one term.) / Each student meets as necessary with his/her instructor.
Course Credits: / 3
Course Description:
(as it will appear in the academic calendar) / Project in Digital Humanities is a directed studies course. A student chooses an independent project in Digital Humanities according to his or her interests. S/he designs and completes the project under the supervision of an instructor from a Digital Humanities discipline. Projects include both theoretical and practical components and the course serves as a practicum to complete the Digital Humanities certificate.
Program Implications:
Cross-listing or cross-coding
(please indicate if this course is approved for either cross-listing or cross-coding, and to which discipline) / This course should be cross-listed as a credit towards the student’s discipline major.
B) Comparative Data

There are no comparable courses at other universities since Digital Humanities is a unique certificate.

C) Statement of Need

A three-credit practicum course is required for students to complete the Joint Certificate in Digital Humanities. Since the Certificate is both a theoretical and practical qualification, students need an opportunity to apply the work they may have done in the required and electives courses. The delivery model of the directed reading course allows for students to work independently with a knowledgeable faculty member perhaps with overlap among the student projects and the supervising instructors.

D) Statement of Resources

This course is modeled along the lines of directed reading or honours research essay courses. Hence, it will be staffed, as overload, by regular faculty members who have experience in Digital Humanities. If enrollment in the Digital Humanities certificate is sufficient, then the delivery model for this practicum will have to be reconsidered. As long as the numbers remain low, in the initial phase of the certificate, this seems like the most resource efficient model.