Amy Giroux Archives | 麻豆原创 News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Thu, 07 Aug 2025 18:22:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Amy Giroux Archives | 麻豆原创 News 32 32 麻豆原创鈥檚 Center that Helps Preserve, Share History Awarded National Grant /news/ucfs-center-that-helps-preserve-share-history-awarded-national-grant/ Mon, 26 Oct 2020 12:00:56 +0000 /news/?p=114968 The grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities will help 麻豆原创鈥檚 Center for Humanities and Digital Research expand its impact in the digital age.

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History is a great teacher, but in the age of electronic media, making history accessible is almost as important as preserving it.

That鈥檚 where 麻豆原创鈥檚 Center for Humanities and Digital Research (CHDR) comes in. The center is made up of a group of faculty members and staff who help train humanities researchers to properly digitize what they are studying and make it readily available anywhere in the world. Sometimes thinking about how information and artifacts can be displayed digitally will mean collecting it a certain way, so getting faculty to think about electronic displays and communication is key to effective digital preservation.

Since 2007, the CHDR has helped strengthen several project proposals that have gone on to win funding and garner attention for innovative approaches to preservation. The effort has been successful. As 聽of July this year, the center has been involved in $2.7 million worth of funded grants. And this year, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) awarded the center a $193,736 Infrastructure and Capacity Building Challenge grant to expand its work. The independent federal agency is one of the largest funders of humanities programs in the United States, disbursing $30.9 million so far in 2020.

The NEH grant, which requires 麻豆原创 to contribute matching funds, will enable the expansion of a digital humanities collaboratory in 麻豆原创鈥檚 Trevor Colbourn Hall and update CHDR鈥檚 equipment to support collaborative research, digital preservation, digital access and public programming.

鈥淭he grant will help increase the number of faculty and students learning design, programming and digital archiving skills; generate new collaborative projects and scholarship; and accelerate institutional and public humanities programming,鈥 says Bruce Janz, a humanities professor and co director of the center with Professor Mark Kamrath.

Examples of projects that benefited from CHDR expertise include the:

  • Veteran鈥檚 Legacy Program
  • Charles Brockden Brown Electronic Archive
  • RICHES Mosaic Interface
  • Zora Neale Hurston Digital Archive
  • An online version of Samuel Johnson鈥檚 Dictionary, another NEH-funded project currently underway

CHDR also manages many of the journals within the College of Arts and Humanities. The CHDR team allows researchers to focus on their area of expertise without becoming technical experts.

English Professor Beth Young, who leads the Johnson鈥檚 Dictionary project, says CHDR support has been critical to the project from start to finish.

鈥淢eeting with CHDR inspired me to apply for this grant in the first place,鈥 she says. 鈥淎s I planned the project, the team helped me figure out what kind of technological infrastructure would be needed. And now that we are immersed in building the online dictionary, CHDR has been enlisting students in computer science to build software tools that will not only make our project less labor-intensive, but will help future researchers as well.鈥

In order to receive the challenge grant money, 麻豆原创 must raise an equal amount in philanthropy. With the help of the Provost鈥檚 Office, the College of Arts and Humanities plans to identify 鈥渄onor champions鈥 with interest in the humanities. Anyone wishing to contribute should contact Kara Robertson, director of advancement for the College of Arts and Humanities.

麻豆原创 faculty and staff also involved in the grant include Scot French, Amy Giroux, Connie Harper, Connie Lester, Mark Kamrath and Mike Shier.

The center also recently received approval as a 鈥淭ype 3鈥 center within 麻豆原创 acknowledges four types of centers and institutes. Previously CHDR was a type four, meaning it was based at the college. Moving up to three means it is recognized as a university-wide center.

English Professor Beth Young

鈥淐HDR is well positioned to be a driving force for future-facing research at 麻豆原创 because of the college鈥檚 interdisciplinary research focus, the research and grant success of our faculty, and our students’ desire to participate in digital humanities work through dissertation research and faculty-led projects like the Samuel Johnson Dictionary project,鈥 Kamrath says. 鈥淐HDR has played a leading role in the Florida Digital Humanities Consortium and will expand its public programming in the coming years.鈥

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WEBjohnsons-Dictionary English Professor Beth Young
麻豆原创 to Host International Conference on Digital Learning /news/ucf-to-host-international-conference-on-digital-learning/ Mon, 23 Oct 2017 15:11:10 +0000 /news/?p=79281 Collaborations of the digital and humanities worlds will be presented at an international gathering Nov. 3-4 at the 麻豆原创 to look at new ways of teaching and research in an age when many say the printed word is no longer the main medium for education and its distribution.

The conference for the annual Humanities, Arts, Science and Technology Alliance and Collaboratory [organizers pronounce the HASTAC acronym as “haystack”] will be hosted in Orlando for the first time by 麻豆原创 and the Florida Digital Humanities Consortium. The 10-year-old conference previously was held at Duke University, UCLA, University of Illinois, York University in Toronto, the Ministry of Culture in Lima, Peru, and elsewhere around the world.

鈥淭his conference is a venue where digital humanists from across the world and across disciplines come together to share their research, their pedagogical methods, and their experiences. This sharing of knowledge in both the practical and the theoretical allows us to broaden our own world,鈥 said Amy Giroux, managing director for the conference and a 麻豆原创 computer research specialist at the university鈥檚 Center for Humanities and Digital Research.

This year鈥檚 conference theme, 鈥淭he Possible Worlds of Digital Humanities,鈥 highlights new opportunities for digital humanities and allows attendees from the more than 400 member organizations an opportunity to discuss and explore new research and creative work. The program will include scholars from around the globe interested in topics such as the humanities across disciplines, gaming, social media, archives, and other fields. There will be roundtables, demonstrations, maker sessions, workshops, media art projects, and other sessions.

鈥淗aving the HASTAC annual conference at 麻豆原创 allows us to see the superb work being done in the digital humanities around the world, and to show off what we鈥檙e doing here at 麻豆原创 to help interpret our meaningful world using digital tools,鈥 said philosophy Professor Bruce Janz, conference director and co-director of 麻豆原创鈥檚 Center for Humanities and Digital Research. 鈥淗ASTAC has always focused on the ways education and society have changed and must adapt in the Information Age, and this fits into the forward-looking and socially conscious orientation of programs at 麻豆原创 such as Texts and Technology, Digital Media, and Digital History.鈥

One of the conference sessions asks: What can other disciplines learn from Digital Humanities and what can Digital Humanities learn from other disciplines?

鈥淭his particular panel is made up of a group of scholars who work both in traditional academia and also on the cutting edge of innovative digital spaces,鈥 Giroux said. 鈥淭hey hope to foster a good discussion on how digital humanities practitioners can grow within institutions which may not be as interested in supporting digital humanities work and how the current institutional level research infrastructure may need to be modified to allow digital humanities research to flourish.鈥

Many digital humanities projects draw from a number of disciplines including history, anthropology, computer science, data science, digital media, traditional media, and other fields.

For example, Giroux said, one project her team will present at HASTAC is ELLE, the EndLess Learner, a second-language learning video game in which her colleagues from the Office of Instructional Resources (Don Merritt), the Games Research Lab (Emily Johnson), and modern languages (Sandra Sousa and Gergana Vitanova) teamed up with a group of computer science undergraduate students to create a database-driven learning game.

鈥淚t is this type of inter/multi-disciplinary project that allows the digital humanities to emerge from many different fields,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he five of us will be doing a roundtable discussion on the project and the undergraduate students will be displaying the 2-D and 3-D versions of the project.鈥

Other 麻豆原创 students will showcase their research and work in front of the international audience and will serve as moderators at many of the conference sessions. HASTAC also has a scholars fellowship program, whose digital-age members blog, host online forums, develop new projects and organize events. 麻豆原创鈥檚 three HASTAC scholars 鈥 Nicholas DeArmas, Jennifer Roth Miller and David Morton from the Texts & Technology doctoral program 鈥 will host a professionalization workshop for conference attendees.

Some of the conference speakers are: Purdom Lindblad, assistant director of Innovation and Learning at the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities; Tressie McMillan Cottom, assistant professor of sociology at Virginia Commonwealth University; T-Kay Sangwand, librarian for UCLA鈥檚 Digital Library Program, and Cathy N. Davidson, distinguished professor of English and director of the Futures Initiative and HASTAC @ CUNY at the Graduate Center, City University of New York.

Tours for registered attendees also are scheduled for the Orange County Regional History Center, the Cornell Fine Arts Museum at Rollins College, and the Wells鈥橞uilt Museum of African American History and Culture.

The conference will be presented at several venues around campus and is open to everyone. Advance registration is encouraged, but registration also can be done at the door at Classroom Building I. For the schedule and registration, visit .

 

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VA Selects 麻豆原创 Historians to Archive Stories of Deceased Veterans /news/va-selects-ucf-historians-archive-stories-deceased-veterans/ Mon, 13 Mar 2017 15:59:10 +0000 /news/?p=76513 A 麻豆原创 team of scholars has been awarded a $290,000 contract from the National Cemetery Administration, an agency of the Department of Veterans Affairs, to archive the stories of veterans buried in the Florida National Cemetery for a new generation of students. 麻豆原创 is one of three universities selected to launch the NCA鈥檚 Veterans Legacy Program.

The project, led by Amelia Lyons, associate professor of history and director of graduate programs, will engage 麻豆原创 students in research and writing about veterans鈥 graves and monuments. In addition, 麻豆原创 faculty and students will collaborate with Central Florida schools to produce interactive curriculums for K-12 students and organize a field trip to the cemetery in Bushnell, which is the county seat of Sumter County.

Involving students of all ages in the project will engage the community with the service and sacrifice of veterans, and will give undergraduate and graduate students a real-life lesson in professionalization, Lyons says.

鈥淭his experience with primary research 鈥 from identifying the subject and stories, to analyzing the sources to produce a narrative and becoming a published author 鈥 is like no other,鈥 Lyons says.

鈥淟earning about the lives and stories of these soldiers is also teaching our students what a historian does,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t makes history real for them.鈥

Luke Bohmer, a history graduate student, recently participated in a field research day at the cemetery. 鈥淚t is vital to go to where the history is, whether it’s a cemetery or an archive. This is more humanizing and palpable than any statistic could ever be,鈥 he says.

Janelle Malagon, an undergraduate, says that she has 鈥渁lways had an interest in military history, and the VLP was a great hands-on experience where I had the unique opportunity to learn the stories of individual soldiers throughout American history.鈥

The corresponding website exhibit created by the research team 鈥 including Scot French, digital historian; Amy Giroux, a computer research specialist in ; and graduate student assistants 鈥 will use software to map the research virtually, and 麻豆原创鈥檚 RICHES Mosaic Interface to create a digital archive.

The public will also be able to participate in the project through an interactive element at the cemetery. Giroux will lead the team in the creation of an augmented-reality app, which will include student-authored biographies of veterans for visitors.

Students are already aware of the impact the program will have. Malagon says the digital components will allow relatives to learn something about their veteran in a way that would not have been possible without the technology available today.

The Florida National Cemetery is one of 135 cemeteries overseen by the VA. Team members recently visited the site to begin their research.

麻豆原创 researchers have already begun integrating assignments for the project into their graduate and undergraduate courses.

Students, including those in Lyons鈥 Modern Europe and the First World War class and Professor Barbara Gannon鈥檚 War and Society classes, are conducting research, searching for any documented history on the veterans whose graves will be selected.

Undergraduate students are excited to participate in the project.

Kristina Himschoot comes from a family with deep military roots.聽 Her parents met in the U.S. Air Force, and both her grandparents served.

鈥淭he VLP is becoming more important to me every time I learn something new about it,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have the utmost respect for this project.鈥

Anson Shurr expects he’ll draw a deeper, more personal connection with veterans through his research.

鈥淪eeing their graves in person, epitaph and all, is personal enough. But once you realize that in many cases they lived in the same town or street as you, or you see a surname you know, it really hits home,鈥 he says. He was particularly struck by the fact that people his own age put their lives and dreams on hold to fight in a war.

Kenneth Holliday, who is both a student and U.S. Army veteran, says that because April 6 marks the 100th anniversary of the nation鈥檚 entry into World War I, the research is especially timely.

鈥漌e are in the centennial of World War I. There is no better time to recognize the service of these veterans,鈥 Holliday says.

Graduate students in Professor Caroline Cheong鈥檚 Seminar in Historic Preservation course are helping to identify the graves and monuments to be included and are photographing the sites for both the webpage and the app.

French, associate professor and director of public history, is having students in his Viewing American History in the 20th Century class create interactive digital materials for use on the website. John Sacher, associate professor of history and liaison with public schools, is integrating the results of the project into K-12 curriculum that will be available for use in schools across the U.S.

In May, the 麻豆原创 team and local middle- and high-school students will travel to the cemetery as a kickoff event for the program. 麻豆原创 student researchers will interact with younger students at the cemetery, providing what Holliday sees as 鈥渁 much more personal connection on an individual level. Instead of remembering the major battles and the big names of military and political leaders, the students and local residents can remember that at the heart of the conflict were average people that all of us can probably relate to in some way.鈥

Gannon, who is also coordinator of 麻豆原创鈥檚 Veterans History Project, says that because the university engages with veterans and rich history in creating extensive interactive exhibits and web-based tools, the funding doesn鈥檛 come as a surprise.

Other schools selected by the VA鈥檚 National Cemetery Administration for the project are San Francisco State University and Black Hills State University.

鈥淭he award of these three contracts signifies the VA National Cemetery Administration鈥檚 dedication and commitment to providing enhanced memorialization and lasting tributes that commemorate the service and sacrifice of veterans,鈥 says Ronald Walters, interim undersecretary for memorial affairs.

The contracts are the first of many planned initiatives to engage educators, students, researchers and the general public through the Veterans Legacy Program. For more information, visit the on the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ website.

 

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麻豆原创 to Help K-12 Teachers Create Veteran-focused Classroom Projects /news/ucf-to-help-k-12-teachers-create-veteran-focused-classroom-projects/ Sun, 07 Aug 0225 16:39:45 +0000 /news/?p=131808 The 麻豆原创 Veterans Legacy Program, a partnership with the Department of Veterans Affairs鈥 National Cemetery Administration, received a new grant to help Florida schools teach students about veteran histories.

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Since the 麻豆原创 Veterans Legacy Program (VLP) began in 2017, Associate Professor of History Amelia Lyons has witnessed the program鈥檚 meaningful impact on students.

Established through the National Cemetery Administration (NCA), between 2017 and 2019, VLP harnessed 麻豆原创 student research efforts to create biographies of veterans buried in national cemeteries in Florida. In piecing together veterans鈥 stories, students gained historical insight while honoring forgotten legacies.

鈥淚 brought someone back to life who had been forgotten in life and in death,鈥 Lyons recalls a student who worked on the program saying.

麻豆原创 Associate Professor of History Barbara Gannon and history alum Gramond McPherson ’19MA during a Veterans Legacy Program event at St. Augustine National Cemetery in Spring 2019.

Now, thanks to a new grant from the Department of Veterans Affairs, that impact will extend beyond the university. Starting in 2023, 麻豆原创 students and faculty will partner with teachers at Florida K-12 schools to create VLP classroom projects. These projects will connect younger students with veterans’ stories through their local NCA cemetery.

鈥淲e are so pleased to be continuing our partnership with the NCA,鈥 Lyons says. 鈥淲e are expanding our work significantly, working to bring our successful pedagogical model for doing veterans history to K-12 and university faculty around the state of Florida.鈥

In June 2023, about two dozen Florida teachers will be invited to the 麻豆原创 Veterans Legacy Program Institute, a 10-day workshop held at the headquarters for the Florida National Guard, located in the historic St. Francis Barracks and the adjacent St. Augustine National Cemetery. Participants will create veteran biography assignments and design a tour of their local NCA cemetery using the St. Augustine National Cemetery as inspiration.

鈥淲e hope that holding this institute in St. Augustine, the state鈥檚 first settlement, will aid teachers in creating engaging lesson plans for students learning Florida history,鈥 says Barbara Gannon, associate professor of history.

Alison Simpson, command historian for the Florida National Guard, is partnering with VLP to provide the setting for the institute. She will also share expertise about St. Augustine鈥檚 history for participants planning class field trips to the area.

鈥淚 am really looking forward to this project, to collaborating with the team from 麻豆原创, both faculty and students, and sharing with educators from around the state some history of the Florida National Guard as it relates to their [local areas],鈥 Simpson says.

麻豆原创 history alum Matt Patsis ’14 ’20MA during a Veterans Legacy Program event at St. Augustine National Cemetery in Spring 2019.

Each teacher鈥檚 local cemetery tour will be unique and versatile, highlighting individual veterans whose histories fit with their grade level鈥檚 larger curriculum. The final learning materials created at the Institute will be posted on the maintained by (CHDR).

鈥淎s the digital humanities research hub for the College of Arts and Humanities, our center developed and maintains the VLP website,鈥 says Amy Giroux, director of CHDR. 鈥淭he current K-12 curricular materials will be expanded by our new institute.鈥

At the institute, 麻豆原创 alumni who previously worked on VLP will share their expertise through panels and one-on-one discussions. Meanwhile, current students will collaborate with teachers to prepare curriculum and conduct research on veterans buried in St. Augustine.

According to Lyons, this exemplifies how an education in the humanities prepares students for future careers.

鈥淰LP is an excellent teaching tool. Students learn real-world skills doing research and writing about veterans connected to their local area … [and] history,鈥 Lyons says. 鈥淥ur 麻豆原创 students who will be part of the 2023 麻豆原创 VLP Institute will gain professional skills, network with educators in our state and be part of a federal grant program. We are a great example of how connecting classroom education and real-world skills prepares our students for jobs and careers.鈥

According to Lyons, this program is especially impactful because it allows veterans who served our nation in life to continue their service by educating new generations. Meanwhile, it helps students understand the cultural context of the time a veteran lived.

鈥淰LP and this institute allow us to tell America鈥檚 story through the eyes of the veterans whose sacrifices made that story possible,” Gannon says.

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Gannon-and-McPherson-SANC-2019 Matt-Patsis-SANC-2019 麻豆原创 history alum Matt Patsis '14 '20MA during a Veteran's Legacy Program event in Spring 2019.