Not classics-specific, but the materials for a few new courses along these lines have appeared since April:
Clio 3: Programming in History/New Media
http://lincolnmullen.com/courses/clio3.2014/
LIB 607: Digital Scholarship Methods
https://library.uoregon.edu/node/4570
History 9877A: Digital Research Methods
http://williamjturkel.net/teaching/history-9877a-digital-research-methods-fall-2014/
All best,
Andrew Dunning
PhD Candidate
Collaborative Program in Editing Medieval Texts
Centre for Medieval Studies
University of Toronto
> On 10 Nov 2014, at 11:33 AM, Charles E. Jones <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Last April I asked if anyone had taught courses (at the undergraduate level) in digital antiquity tools and skills and if so whether they would share share syllabi, or point to places where they're online.
>
> There were some interesting and useful responses, and I'm still interested in what you may have to offer
>
> What I guess I was hoping for is something along the lines of
>
> The Programming Historian http://programminghistorian.org
> "The Programming Historian is an online, open access, peer reviewed suite of about 30 tutorials that help humanists (though slanted towards historians) learn a wide range of digital tools, techniques, and workflows to facilitate their research. Despite the name, we do not focus exclusively on programming, but rather aim to provide guidance on a variety of digital methods and approaches."
>
> There does not seem to be anything specifically related to Classics or Antiquity there yet, so I'd urge those of you who have such things to contribute them if you can.
>
> Thanks,
>
> -Chuck-
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