Genevieve Carpio's Pedagogical Portfolio: Teaching, Digital Humanities, and Diversity

Digital Humanities


The digital humanities is a critical tool for connecting students to historical investigation and racial formation. As a professor of Chican@ Studies at UCLA, my courses build upon an interdisciplinary list of readings and multimedia sources. The projects highlighted here examine the ways race and ethnicity are embedded in 21st century technologies and seek to build students' digital literacy. Through project-based learning assignments--including collaborative maps, blogs, and digital projection--students are encouraged to become active agents in the digital landscape. 

My training at the Institute for Media Literacy at the USC Cinema School (including "Teaching with Digital Media," "Digital Pedagogies," and "Digital Media Tools and Tactics") serves as a foundation to this work. I have continued to build my digital literacy through GIS training at Yale and UCLA, as a participant in THATCamp, and presenting on the uses of digital media in the classroom at the American Studies Association, the National Council on Public History, and the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West. In doing so, I seek to guide students through the process of writing, organizing, and sharing public facing projects.
 
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