The NYU Institute for the Study of the Ancient World and the Society for Classical Studies present
Digital Approaches to Teaching the Ancient Mediterranean
Friday, October 26, 2018
Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, Second Floor Lecture Hall
15 East 84th Street
212.992.7800
9:15 am First Session
Introduction
David Ratzan (ISAW)
Digital Creation as Expression: Examples from the Roman World
Sebastian Heath (ISAW)
Playing the Argonauts: Pedagogical Pathways through Creation and Engagement in a Virtual Sea
Sandra Blakely (Emory University)
11:15am: Second Session
Tom Elliott (ISAW), Moderator
The Poetics of Space: Applied GIS in the Classics Classroom
Sarah Bond (University of Iowa)
Programming without Code: Teaching Classics and Computational Methods
Marie-Claire Beaulieu (Tufts University) and Anthony Bucci (Tufts University)
12:30pm: Lunch Break
2:00pm: Third Session
Patrick Burns (ISAW), Moderator
Futures of Classics: Obsolescence and Digital Pedagogy
Lisl Walsh (Beloit College)
Digital Janiform: The Digital Object from Research to Teaching
Eric Poehler (University of Massachusetts)
Dissecting Digital Divides: Teaching, Writing, and Making Knowledge of the Mediterranean Past
William Caraher (University of North Dakota)
4:15pm: Panel Discussion
Helen Cullyer (Society for Classical Studies), Moderator
This conference is free and open to the public, but registration is required at: isaw.nyu.edu/rsvp
Please check isaw.nyu.edu for event updates.