Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 20, No. 172.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
www.kcl.ac.uk/schools/humanities/cch/research/publications/humanist.html
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[1] From: Willard Mccarty <willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.uk> (48)
Subject: Museums and the Web 2007
[2] From: Willard Mccarty <willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.uk> (114)
Subject: Call: Doing Ethnography: Examining ICT use in context
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2006 05:18:59 +0100
From: Willard Mccarty <willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.uk>
Subject: Museums and the Web 2007
Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2006 18:45:14 -0400
To: Museums and the Web 2007 <mw2007_at_archimuse.com>
From: "J. Trant" <jtrant_at_archimuse.com>
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION.
Museums and the Web 2007
April 11 - 14, 2007
San Francisco, California, USA
http://www.archimuse.com/mw2007/
You are invited to participate in the Eleventh Annual Museums and the
Web Conference.
* THEMES FOR 2007 *
Social Issues and Impact
- Building Communities
- Public Content Creation
- On-going Engagement
Organizational Strategies
- Building + Managing Web Teams
- Multi-Institutional Ventures
- Facilitating Institutional Change
- Sustainability
Applications
- Wireless Inside/Outside
- Visitor Support On-site + On-line
- Schools + Educational Programs
- E-commerce for Museums
Technical and Design Issues
- Standards, Architectures + Protocols
- Interface + Design Paradigms
- New Tools + Methods
- Managing Content + Metadata
Museum 2.0 Services
- Podcasting, Blogging, RSS, Social Tagging,
- Folksonomy, Wikis, Cell Phone Tours ...
- Museum Mashups
Evaluation + User Studies
- Research Methods + Results
- Impact Studies
- User Analysis + Audience Development
[This list is not exhaustive; any relevant proposal will be considered.]
[...]
-- Jennifer Trant and David Bearman Co-Chairs: Museums and the Web 2007 produced by April 11 - 14, 2007, San Francisco, CA Archives & Museum Informatics http://www.archimuse.com/mw2007/ 158 Lee Avenue email: mw2007_at_archimuse.com Toronto, Ontario, Canada phone +1 416 691 2516 / fax +1 416 352-6025 -- --[2]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2006 05:22:08 +0100 From: Willard Mccarty <willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.uk> Subject: Call: Doing Ethnography: Examining ICT use in context *Call for Participation in ASIS&T 2006 Workshop =AD * *Doing Ethnography: Examining ICT use in context* Saturday, 4 November 2006 1:30-5:30 pm *Deadlines: *500-word problem statement due September 8, 2006 (REVISED DEADLINE) to the organizer (see details below) *Speaker**s*: Elisabeth Davenport, Brenda Dervin, Elizabeth Figa (see bios below) *Expertise level*: all levels welcome This =BD day workshop aims to help participants to devise and enrich ethnographic techniques for investigating the complex interplay between people, technology and information given time and resource constraints. It offers an opportunity to researchers to share their experiences in the fiel= d and/or learn from the prior experiences of others. The workshop is part of the 2006 Annual Meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T) taking place from November 3-8, 2006, in Austin, Texas. This =BD day ethnography workshop will offer participants the opportunity t= o work with three eminent discussants: Elisabeth Davenport, Brenda Dervin, an= d Elizabeth Figa (details below). The discussants will draw on their own research experiences in the field to serve as commentators on the themes raised in the problem statements of participants. Description of the Workshop Interactions in today's digital information environments blur the lines between the physical and the social, between a tool that one uses and a person with whom one communicates. These information systems are in fact socio-technical systems with a complex and interdependent system of dynamic and interrelated elements involving people, tools and information structures. Understanding the interplay between people, information and technology requires a fuller understanding of ways to examine this dynamic relationship in the context of practice in "real world" settings. The philosophic traditions of ethnography can inform such research through the guidelines they provide for sensitizing observations in the field. With its emphasis on prolonged engagement and systematic observation of people i= n natural settings, this form of research generally involves rich description= s of the situations observed and their sociocultural context. Ethnographic techniques provide a powerful way for researchers to study lived, everyday experiences. It is however imperative that any techniques applied to the study of these context-rich environments are consistent with ethnography's core principles. *The workshop will address the following methodological problems or goals: = * 1: Increase understanding of how the ideals of an ethnographic approach can be translated into specific project goals. 2: Increase understanding of how a researcher can develop the appropriate skill set to investigate and understand the critical processes taking place in the situation under study whilst remaining true to the methodological holism that is the defining quality of ethnography. 3: In view of the limited time and resources faced by many researchers, compare best practices for how researchers employ ethnographic approaches with efficiency and expediency. *Discussants biographies: =3D Elisabeth Davenport* heads the Center for Social Informatics at Napier University and has a permanent visiting scholar appointment at the Rob Klin= g School of Informatics at Indiana University . She is a senior scholar of social aspects of computing and has received a number of grants from the European Commission under the Information Society Technologies Programme.* =3D Brenda Dervin* is full professor at the School of Communication and Joa= n N. Huber Fellow in Social and Behavioral Sciences, Ohio State University. She is well known for the development and implementation of the Sense-Makin= g Methodology, a philosophically derived approach for studying communication as communication. * =3D Elizabeth Figa* is an assistant professor at the School of Library and Information Sciences, University of North Texas and a fellow of the Texas Center for Digital Knowledge. Her research includes ethnographies of information retrieval and human systems and ethnographies of storytelling. All participants are invited to submit a brief problem statement (500 words= ) describing the particular research challenge they wish to discuss within th= e workshop. Registered participants will have an opportunity prior to the workshop to review all the problem statements. Prior to the workshop, organizers and invited discussants will review these statements to identify key themes and create small working groups for the = =BD day session. The workshop will involve small group and full workshop sessions during which discussants will comment on the challenges being raised by workshop participants. The workshop will close with a discussion of some core principles and techniques. ABSTRACTS: Send your 500-word problem statement to theresa.anderson_at_uts.edu.au by September 8, 2006 QUESTIONS: All questions, email Theresa Anderson ( theresa.anderson_at_uts.edu.au) Fees ASIS Members $40, non-members $50, before Sept. 22 ASIS Members $50, non-members $65, after Sept. 22 This half day course does not qualify for a $75 discount NOTE: This 1/2 day workshop is being offered in conjunction with the 1/2 da= y SIG-SI symposia: *Interrogating the Social Realities of Information and Communications Systems *on Saturday, Nov. 4, 2006, 8:30am-12:30pm (separate fee) For further information on both events, please go to http://rkcsi.indiana.edu/article.php/special-interest-groups/37 For further information about the ASIS&T Annual Meeting, please go to: http://www.asis.org/Conferences/AM06/index.html -- ---------------- Dr. Theresa Dirndorfer Anderson Lecturer Information and Knowledge Management Program Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Technology, Sydney (UTS). P.O. Box 123, Broadway, NSW 2007 Australia telephone: +61 2 9514 2720 email: theresa.anderson_at_uts.edu.au -- Willard Mccarty willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.ukReceived on Thu Aug 31 2006 - 01:12:12 EDT
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