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*International Workshop of Education on Digital Humanities Innovative
Application in the Big Data Era 2019 (WEDHIA 2019), as a Satellite  of DADA
2019*

http://www.dhcreate.nccu.edu.tw/wedhia2019.html

*December 3-6, 2019, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan*

*Organizer: The Teaching Resource Center of the Ministry of Education
Talent Cultivation Project for Digital Humanities at National Chengchi
University*



*Theme of the Workshop: **Digital Humanities and Digital Economy: Riding
the Second Wave of Consilience*

The international workshop WEDHIA is part of the 4-year *Talent Cultivation
Project for Digital Humanities (TCDH)* sponsored by R.O.C.’s Ministry of
Education. The project and the workshop are engaged in the idea of
consilience between science and the humanities.  While various efforts have
been tried before TCDH, the gulf between science and the humanities remain
blatant (Slingerland and Collard, 2011).  The current ICT and digital
revolution can either deepen the gap or, if properly channeled, facilitate
consilience.  It is the latter the essential goal of TCDH.  To do so, TCDH
runs a large-scale experiment by encouraging the novel course designs that
integrate digital technology into the education of the broadly defined
humanities.  In the meanwhile, WEDHIA is organized as a platform to connect
the international communities of scholars, pragmatists, and policymakers
with similar pursuits.

As WEDHIA 2018, WEDHIA 2019 will be held as a satellite event of the
International Conference of Digital Archives and Digital Humanities (DADH
2019 <https://dadh2019.conf.tw/site/page.aspx?pid=901&sid=1308&lang=en>).
The theme of this year is “*Digital Humanities and Digital Economy: Riding
the Second Wave of Consilience,*” as described below:

While many utopians and skeptics hopes and fears, respectively, the arising
of the ICT and the digital revolution, few would argue that the purview of
the humanities has extended beyond its conventional boundary and become
increasingly interdisciplinary.  The emergent cyberspace is not just a
reflective duplication of the humanities in the physical space.  It has
become a standalone dimension where humans “live” and nurtures a new, cyber
kind of humanities.  Furthermore, Humans’ thoughts, conversations, and
actions occurring and recorded in the “cloud”, in turn, affect their lives
in the physical space, which creates another new domain for the humanistic
scholars by working in these two spaces and their interactions.

What is said above about the digital humanities also applies to the digital
economy.   Cyberspace is no longer just to facilitate the physical market.
Cyberspace itself is a market.  What we see more is the intertwining
between the physical market and the cyber market.   In the cyberspace, the
development of ICT narrows, if not closes, the gap between humanities and
economy by making the recording of ordinary people’s lives possible and
thus flourishing the revealing of individuality in both the domains of the
humanities and economy.  To the former, this feature of ICT promotes the
bottom-up approach in humanities, such as the bottom-up history.  To the
latter, this feature makes customization one of the key competition factors
among enterprises, which in turn stimulates the return of economy to
humanities and narrative as described in *Humanomics* by Vernon L. Smith
and Bart J. Wilson (2019).

With the transformation and fusion mentioned above in mind, this workshop
will continue the theme of WEDHIA 2018 on investigating the pedagogical
innovation in humanities and its economic and social significances.
However, instead of the influence of ICT, this investigation will focus on
the impact of ICT on the interdisciplinary dialogues, collaboration, and
hence the consilience among science, humanities, and social sciences in the
era of big data.

We invite submissions of abstracts relating (but not limited) to the
following aspects of digital humanities and digital economy:

·       Consilience among ICT/digital humanities/digital economy

·       Democratization of programming and design in the courses of digital
humanities and digital social sciences

·       Course planning and curriculum design involving the application of
big data

·       Spatial humanities and spatial social sciences

Each of the four topics of interest will be briefly described as below.

*Consilience among ICT/digital humanities/digital economy*

The consilience has been used as the analytical framework to review the
essence of each course under the TCDH project.  In this conference, we will
continue the discussion on the consilience between science and the
humanities in the context of the current ICT and the digital revolution.
>From the pedagogical viewpoint, we welcome the submissions to address
innovative course designs that transform an old-fashioned course into a
modern one by not only using new methods but also exploring or experiencing
with alternative ontologies.  We also welcome the submissions to address
the division-of-labor issue in course planning and curriculum design,
specifically on the balance between the use of technology and the learning
and discovery of knowledge, as well as on the dynamics of the teaching
teamwork, i.e., the conversations and collaboration among instructors with
different disciplinary backgrounds, from science (engineering) to the
humanities, specifically in the ethos of the “two cultures” (Snow,1959,
1963).



*Democratization of programming and design in the courses of digital
humanities and digital social sciences*

The second topic of interest is the democratization of science,
programming, and design.  Differing from the first topic of interest, this
one has a focus on students or learners.  We choose this topic because one
of the significant pursuits of TCDH is to guide each student to become a
designer or a maker, which is popularly known as the maker movement.
   Many tools used by our instructors are actually designed to facilitate
this democratization pursuit, including Scratch, Unity, APP Inventor 2,
Arduino, and even 3D printers.   While the idea to train everyone to be an
inventor or designer has been what many great early thinkers advocated,
such as Jean Piaget (1896-1980), Seymour Papert (1928-2016), and Mitchel
Resnick, it becomes more pressing now in `this second machine age’ when
many jobs will be handed over to smart technology (Brynjolfsson and McAfee,
2014).  In this topic, we welcome submissions on the use of the tools
designed for the democratization of science, games, designs, and software
development.  We also encourage submissions on the industrial implications
in the direction of the maker culture, maker movement, hackathon,
open-source economy, peer production, co-creation, fabrication lab,
placemaking, glocalization, and community design.



*Course planning and curriculum design involving the application of big
data*

Many courses have already exposed students to social medium data and
collaboration with big data enterprises. Nevertheless, the essence of big
data, from the scientific use to the ethical concern, is not easy to
harness not only for students but sometimes also for instructors.
  However, doubtlessly, big data brings in revolutions for both the
humanities and the social sciences; because of so, a new kind of humanities
and social sciences have been built upon the increasing availability of big
data.    It is time to pause for a moment to reflect upon the revolutionary
changes around us before we decide which direction to proceed further.  In
this topic, we welcome submissions to address all issues related to the use
of big data in the course designs, not just promises and progresses, but
also challenges and limitations.



*Spatial humanities and spatially integrated social sciences*

>From TCDH, we observed that spatial thinking has increasingly been the
attention of the humanistic scholars, yet it remains rather less noticed by
social scientists.  For the former group, tools like QGIS, ArcGIS, Google
Maps, Story Maps, and even UAV and drones become common.  On the other
hand, it is generally expected that we can do more with those tools in
social sciences.     In this regard, we welcome submissions to indicate the
opportunity of spatial thinking to social sciences and the pedagogical
strategies to advance the use of the spatial tools in courses of humanities
and social sciences.



References



Brynjolfsson, E., & McAfee, A. (2014). *The second machine age: Work,
progress, and prosperity in a time of brilliant technologies*. WW Norton &
Company.

Slingerland, E., & Collard, M. (Eds.). (2011). *Creating consilience:
Integrating the sciences and the humanities*. Oxford University Press.

Snow, C. P. (1959). *The two cultures and the scientific revolution. *Cambridge
University Press.



Snow, C. P. (1963). *The two cultures and a second look: An expanded
version of `The two cultures and the scientific revolution'*. Mentor Book.
New English Library.

Smith, V. L., & Wilson, B. J. (2019). *Humanomics: Moral sentiments and the
wealth of nations for the twenty-first century*. Cambridge University Press.



*Submissions (of the Abstract up to 500 words)*

All submissions should be made via the submissions page here
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeTYTuE_RRnbQYl4Ebr61OYy4O8F3E1Uit3P8xas3klY5dgIQ/viewform>.




*Post-Conference Publications*

For those who are interested in having their submissions be published in
the special issue of the journal *Complexity*, please follow the guideline
provided in the link

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/complexity/si/137909/cfp/



*Important Dates*

Abstract (up to 500 words): Oct 15, 2019

Acceptance Notification:  Oct 31, 2019

Registration: Nov. 20, 2019

(The presenting author of the accepted submissions will be waived of
registration.)

Conference:  Dec 3-Dec 6, 2019

Full Paper Submission to Special Issue: Dec 6, 2019

-- 

Headquarter of The Innovative Program for the Teaching of Digital
Humanities and Social Sciences

National Chengchi  University

No.64, Sec.2, Zhinan Rd., Wenshan Dist.

Taipei City 116, Taiwan (R.O.C.)

Tel:(886)-2-2939-3091#51477
http://www.dhcreate.nccu.edu.tw/
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